高清福利片

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Strength in numbers

13 November 2023
Jonathan O鈥橳oole, Master of Business Administration (2022)
A secure job that you enjoy and that uses your skills well is an attractive proposition. Yet restlessness arrived for Jonathan O鈥橳oole all the same. He took a chance that changed his career and the place he called home.
Jonathan O'Toole in front of the quad

When Jonathan O鈥橳oole was in school in Limerick, Ireland鈥檚 economy was growing so powerfully it was dubbed the Celtic Tiger. A few years later, when he was deciding on his future career, the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (GFC) had ended all that.

鈥淚 always wanted to become a solicitor, and I actually did law and accounting in university,鈥 says O鈥橳oole in his warmly Irish accent. 鈥淏ut Ireland was still recovering from the crash. It was a weird time generally, and there weren鈥檛 a lot of opportunities in law.鈥

Luckily, he had a solid plan b. Many of O鈥橳oole鈥檚 relatives were accountants who鈥檇 always wanted him to join the family accounting tradition, which he finally did. His embrace of numbers over words soon saw him working with the international business services company, Deloitte, in the Dublin office of their corporate finance division.

He enjoyed the work and was there for nearly five years. It cemented his numbers skill set but O鈥橳oole found himself thinking about his future and what he really wanted it to be. He felt that his parents had worked hard so he could have choices in life, and he needed to make something of that.

鈥淚 always kind of promised myself that if I could, I'd jump back into study again with maybe a Master of Business Administration (MBA),鈥 he says. 鈥淪ome of that was about career progression, but it was also a life decision. I wanted it to give me the chance to live in another part of the world.鈥

Where exactly he didn鈥檛 know, so he threw his MBA net wide applying to universities in the US and the UK, as well as the University of Sydney. He had a number of acceptances but chose Sydney.

With all the phone calls I had with the University faculty, they seemed to have a strong duty of care. They gave me really useful insights and perspectives on leveraging an MBA to help you thrive in modern working environments
Jonathan O鈥橳oole

Then there was what the course itself offered. 鈥淚 didn't need an MBA with a big financial focus - I had that from my work. But the Sydney course was mostly around leadership, innovation, strategic thinking, critical analysis. It all pushed me towards choosing the University of Sydney.鈥

The only problem was COVID. With the world in COVID lockdown, O鈥橳oole鈥檚 studies began online from Ireland. The time difference meant he couldn鈥檛 view some of the lectures live but the remote study brought some benefits.

鈥淭he lecturers would keep a bit more of an eye on you, and the group sessions with them would be a bit smaller so you could ask more questions,鈥 O鈥橳oole says, adding that the progress continued when he arrived in Sydney and he was able to meet his cohort, lecturers and mentors in person. He found this improved his networking opportunities and it confirmed that he鈥檇 chosen the right MBA to do.

Being exposed to real-world problems and people from different career backgrounds and countries completely changed my problem solving and how I communicate with people. It gave me the ability to ask the right questions.
Jonathan O鈥橳oole

As it turned out, asking the right questions was at the heart of the next role O鈥橳oole took on as he moved to Sydney and into the field of Transaction Strategy & Execution (TSE) with EY-Parthenon, a global business strategy consultancy that is part of the Ernst & Young group. As a member of the TSE team, O'Toole works extensively on value creation projects that help clients achieve their strategic objectives with a focus on driving growth and optimising operations.

The deep understanding that O鈥橳oole needs for this doesn鈥檛 come from company management giving rote answers to standard questions. He needs the insights and honesty that can only happen through a trusting connection. To do this he uses the dynamics of communication that he learned through his MBA.

鈥淢uch of my prior work was done from a desk, but now I love the stakeholder engagement side of things,鈥 says O鈥橳oole. 鈥淏y really talking with people you get to know the business pain points, the big stuff and the small.鈥

By conducting analysis and research, valuable insights emerge that allow O鈥 Toole and his team to give organisations what they need for informed decision making to drive meaningful transformation. O'Toole does this as he engages with clients and EY-Parthenon colleagues both domestically and internationally.

鈥淚鈥檝e had people I work with comment on how quickly I build a rapport with clients, which is really good to hear,鈥 says O鈥橳oole. 鈥淎fter a long period focussed mainly on accounting and finance I鈥檝e worked hard to improve my communication and interpersonal skills. It鈥檚 made my professional relationships much stronger and more productive.鈥

O鈥橳oole is grateful that his career shift has gone so well, and he is loving his new life in Australia (鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 such a brave move though. I already had big support system, including my sister being here鈥). However, he does have two reservations.

鈥淚 really miss my family, of course. But another heartbreaker is missing the rugby at home,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou just can鈥檛 replicate the excitement of my team Munster playing in a European cup game.鈥

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