Jump to content

Samsung Global Scholarship Program

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Samsung Global Scholarship Program (Samsung GSP or GSP) is a talent program of Samsung Electronics (SEC). Focusing on the goal of having talented personnel with strong business skills, leadership potential and career aspirations, SEC recognized the compelling need for high-quality leaders, hence the Global Scholarship Program was created to nurture a very selectively compiled group of individuals, who later in the long run might become leaders ("Future Global Leaders") of the various SEC subsidiaries around the world, replacing the Korean-national management layer (what is the usual practice at the chaebol). It differs from Samsung Scholarship, formerly known as Samsung Lee Kun-hee Scholarship for supporting exceptionally talented Korean university students for global education in mostly STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) fields.

Divided into two paths, both programs originally select participants who demonstrate academic excellence and leadership potential and provides them with unique opportunities for further professional development. Starting from 2011, GSP-SKK instead contains employees working in the subsidiaries. The program also provides young leaders with a unique international network through which they can share ideas, learn from established leaders, work collaboratively and address global challenges. By exposing participants to the complex issues and opportunities arising from an increasingly interdependent global economy, the program aims to expand perspectives and enhance skills critical for leadership in a changing world.

Scholarship program

Each year 15-25 individuals from different parts of the globe are offered to take part in the program that has two distinctive paths: an engineer and an MBA track:

  • GSP (M.S. Program) through Seoul National University (SNU)
  • GSP (M.B.A. Program) through SungKyunKwan University's Graduate School of Business (SKK GSB) [in collaboration with MIT Sloan]

The (Global) MBA program is notable for its diversity and pioneer nature. It was built and now run together with MIT Sloan since its foundation, and it was the first global English-only MBA program in Korea. Selected GSP students currently study for three semesters. It used to be four semesters, including a possibility of spending a semester at one of SKK GSB's top partner universities in the U.S. (MIT Sloan, Columbia, Northwestern's Kellogg, Michigan's Ross, Dartmouth's Tuck or Indiana's Kelly). SKK GSB Global MBA has been recently ranked by the Financial Times as the #1 MBA in Korea, Top 10 in Asia and 45th worldwide.

The significance of the program can also be seen from the wide range of students who, as it was already in the first years, came from the leading companies including Cheil Communications, Amore Pacific, Woori Bank, POSCO, SK, Kyobo, Everland, Bosch, KTF and several Samsung subsidiaries.

After graduation, participants are offered various responsibilities at Samsung Electronics and although some elected to follow a different career path (at management consultancies, for instance) many participants stayed with SEC.

Participants

Samsung Engineering Program

Selected in 2004

  • Abhinav Arora (India)
  • Alexey Sidelnikov (Russia)
  • Feng Xingguang (China)
  • Pankaj Agarwal (India)
  • Sergey Seleznev (Russia)
  • Veronika Kondratieva (Russia)
  • Vidyesh Kumar Jha (India)
  • Shiva Ram Krishna (India)
  • Huang Ren (China)
  • Liu Wei (China)
  • Zhang Xiaojie (China)
  • Bao Xiaoyan (China)
  • Li Zhenmin (China)

Selected in 2005

  • Hai Liu (China)
  • Ji Limin (China)
  • Liao Lingling (China)
  • Maria Samokhina (Russia)
  • Andrey Serov (Russia)

Selected in 2006

  • Venkata Krishna Prasad Arava (India)
  • Lochan Verma(India)
  • Guo Chunxu (China)
  • Liu Jiakun(China)
  • Kirill Moklyuk (Russia)
  • Chetan Raj] (India)
  • Singhal Nitin (India)
  • Alexey Sokolov (Russia)
  • Stanislav Belogolov (Russia)
  • Yu Wang (China)
  • Xiaolin Xi (China)
  • Feng Zhu (China)

Selected in 2007

  • Kiran Tharanath (India)
  • Abhishek Joshi (India)
  • Manish Kumar (India)
  • Sumit Srivastav (India)
  • Arseny Vitaljevich Povolotsky (Russia)
  • Artem Shamsuarov (Russia)
  • Sergey Georgievich Menabde (Russia)
  • Mao Shunfu (China)
  • Miao Hui (China)
  • Liu Yu (China)
  • Zhang Hairong (China)
  • Ji Yang (China)

Selected in 2008

  • Subhojit Chakladar (India)
  • Ivan Koryakovskiy (Russia)
  • Alexey Bodrov (Russia)
  • Dmitry Vengertsev (Russia)
  • Nikolay Kuznetsov (Russia)
  • Stepan Tulikov (Russia)
  • Xing Nan (China)

Selected in 2009

  • Rahul Singh (India)
  • Nalin Chakoo (India)
  • Liu Jin (China)
  • Alexei Boev (Russia)
  • Nikolay Burlutsky (Russia)
  • Nikita Kozhukhov(Russia)

Selected in 2010

Selected in 2012

  • Husam Fahmi (Iraq)
  • Maria Bortnichenko (Russia)
  • Evgeny Kornev (Russia)
  • Sergey Lyubich (Russia)
  • Felix Penningsfeld (Germany)
  • Rajeev Ranjan (India)
  • Tushar Sandhan (India)
  • Sukanya Sonowal (India)

Selected in 2013

  • Kamil Adamczewski (Poland)
  • Mattheus Miranda (Brazil)
  • Anish Tamse (India)

Selected in 2014

  • Pankaj Thorat (India)

Samsung & Korea University Graduate School of International Studies Program

Selected in 2002

  • Ma Saiyou (China)
  • Liu Song (China)
  • Kunal Agrawal (India)
  • Supriya Chatterji (India)
  • James Ryan Jonas (Philippines)
  • Dorota Jachimek (Poland)
  • Anna Sawińska (Poland)
  • Krittawit Krittayaruangroj (Thailand)
  • Suchitra Wanatanakul (Thailand)

Selected in 2003

  • Jing Jing (China)
  • Piyush Kunnapallil (India)
  • Karen Khristine Natividad (Philippines)
  • Jakub Dubaniewicz (Poland)
  • Anna Wasiela (Poland)
  • Michelle Yip (Singapore)
  • Tri Tung Nguyen (Vietnam)

Samsung MBA Program

Selected in 2004

  • Dominika Dor (Poland)
  • Ilya Fedotov (Russia)
  • Olga Gordeeva (Russia)
  • Akshay Gupta (India)
  • Li Meng (China)
  • Pawel Rokicki (Poland)
  • Tamás Szekeres (Hungary)
  • Narumol Pichedpun (Thailand)
  • Xu Tao (China)
  • Zhang Xiao (China)
  • Chen Yanyan (China)
  • Stephanie Wong Tzu En (Singapore)

Selected in 2005

  • Aalisha Chand (India)
  • Nguyen Thuan Dat (Vietnam)
  • Oksana Gladushyna (Ukraine)
  • Mishakova Olena (Ukraine)
  • Péter Hanti (Hungary)
  • Ding Jie (China)
  • Lu Jing (China)
  • Peter Komornik (Slovakia)
  • Ambrus Kovács (Hungary)
  • Saurav Singla (India)
  • Trinh Khac Toan (Vietnam)
  • Poramet Visetruangrote (Thailand)
  • Zhang Xu (China)
  • Liu Xuan (China)
  • Song Yaning (China)
  • Igor Kurilin (Russia)

Selected in 2006

  • Nikita Andriyashin (Russia)
  • László Bánhegyi (Hungary)
  • Feng Jin (China)
  • Renju John (India)
  • Dénes Korsós (Hungary)
  • Jenny Luna (Philippines)
  • Mihaela Marinitu (Romania)
  • Nguyễn Minh Thư Nhiên (Vietnam)
  • Kvetoslava Polcová (Slovakia)
  • Gustaf Rössner (Sweden)
  • Çınar Şahin (Turkey)
  • Petr Shchekochikhin (Russia)
  • Vadim Sukhovey (Russia)
  • Nussaraporn Sumretphol (Thailand)

Selected in 2007

Selected in 2008

  • Yukti Garg (India)
  • Varun Swaminathan (India)
  • Famuyiwa Opeoluwa (Nigeria)
  • Phan Thi Kim Duyen (Vietnam)
  • Nguyen Thi Thu Ha (Vietnam)
  • Alexandra Podrumaru(Romania)
  • Viktors Ivanovs (Latvia)
  • Amir Gorgan (Canada)
  • Mehdi (Cyrus) Tabatabaei (Iran)
  • Adeline Quek (Singapore)
  • Suzanne Otieno (Kenya)
  • Xijie Li (China)
  • Quan Sun (China)
  • Olga Alexandrovna Egorova (Russia)
  • Seif El-Din El-Hakim (Egypt)
  • Kalamkas Mambeteyeva (Kazakhstan)

Selected in 2009

  • Ritesh Chugani (India)
  • Amr Mostafa (Egypt)
  • Gustavo Nakano Athayde Franca (Brazil)
  • Silvia Manami Kawamura (Brazil)
  • Samuel Odhiambo (Kenya)
  • Joaquin Melendez Sanchez (Colombia)
  • Luciana D'Abramo (Argentina)
  • Ezenwanne Chima (Nigeria)
  • Wang Rui (China)
  • Alper Gul (Turkey)

Selected in 2010

  • Pedro Costa (Brazil)
  • Victor Valdes(Chile)
  • Ayoub Derdabi (Morocco)
  • Eleonore Fontaine (France)
  • Daniel Tuckman (United States)
  • Divesh Sooka (South Africa)
  • Marina Voskoboynikova (Russia)
  • Osama Elobeid (Sudan)
  • Jiayue Tao (China)

Selected in 2011

Selected in 2012

  • Jenny Shull (United States)
  • Robert Hodges(UK)
  • Roberto Jimenez(Spain)
  • Nguyen Van Quynh (Vietnam)
  • Viet Thanh Pham (Vietnam)
  • Sandeep Gupta(India)
  • Pankaj Narayan (India)
  • Andriy Baranovskyy (Ukraine)

References