Fun fact about Asif:
(1) Was accepted to Medical School directly from High School prior to even starting College. I subsequently authored a book on the experience.
(2) Have operated on professional sports players in every major American sports league: Football (NFL), Basketball (NBA), Baseball (MLB), and Hockey (NHL)
(3) Delivered a baby in a field tent while doing relief work in Haiti after their devastating earthquake in 2010.
Undergraduate School and Degree:
Wilkes University – Bachelor of Science (BS), with summa cum laude distinctions (1997)
Drexel University College of Medicine – Doctor of Medicine (MD), with alpha omega alpha distinctions (2001)
Temple University – Orthopaedic Surgical residency (2006)
Harvard Medical School – Hand, Upper Extremity, and Microsurgery Fellowship (2007)
I have 3 active engagements/employments:
During business school as an IE Brown Executive MBA student, I successfully balanced finishing my term as President of the Pennsylvania Orthopaedic Society while also coaching my son’s Flag Football team to the league championship.
Despite my humble beginnings, through hard work and with the support and love of my immigrant parents, I was able to achieve medical school admission directly from high school. My medical and surgical education ultimately came full circle when I graduated as a Surgical Fellow from Harvard Medical School. After my education, I was able to achieve the status of full professor within 10 years after publishing over 150 peer-reviewed scientific articles, and ultimately became the youngest partner and then the youngest Board member at the preeminent musculoskeletal practice nationally, the Rothman Institute.
Gayle Allard, Ph.D. – Professor Allard has a diverse and deep experience in teaching and practicing Economics. Moreover, she is engaging, charismatic, and approachable. She excelled in different educational settings including the classroom, online, and during case simulations. Moreover, she knew how to adjust her subject matter and teaching style to her student audience type.
I considered several Executive MBAs – including Duke, Cornell, and Penn. I ultimately chose and only applied to the IE Brown Executive MBA. I was drawn to the IE Brown program for its hybrid nature of both in-residence and online teaching, the drawing of two great educational traditions of both IE and Brown, the international perspective of the program, and its emphasis on social and corporate responsibility.
Far and away, what I enjoyed the most about my IE Brown Executive MBA program was the quality and caliber of my classmates, and the subsequent camaraderie and friendships developed within our cohort.
From a business perspective, the biggest lesson I learned during my Executive MBA is to deconstruct all business transactions to its component parts and critically determine its strengths, weaknesses, and leverage points. From a professional perspective, the biggest lesson I learned during my Executive MBA is to build teams of diverse experiences and perspectives to better approach business challenges.
In the middle of our first 2 week in-residence period in Spain, I made an unplanned flight back to Philadelphia on Saturday morning for a 26 hour stay-at-home returning on a red-eye Sunday evening, still arriving on time for our 9 a.m. class Monday morning. I made the 8-hour flight each way over the weekend for only barely a day at home for three reasons: First, it was to perform an unplanned urgent surgery on a patient of mine who was admitted to the hospital the week before. Second, I wanted to coach my son’s Flag Football team’s first playoff game. Third, I wanted to spend some time with my daughter who I am particularly close to who was very much missing me. Despite only sleeping a few hours in total over this weekend, it was a pleasure to do and represented in a weekend the juggle an Executive MBA student has to do balancing family, work, and education.
Be prepared for a challenging and enriching experience that will advance you professionally, intellectually, and personally. The key is time management and a desire to learn.
Online education is difficult for those having gone to school decades before in a traditional classroom setting and before modern online education. The transition is very doable with schools like IE Brown who have a strong online educational experience.
Missing our last in-residence time together and graduation in May in Providence.
Considering the amazing caliber of my classmates, it is truly hard to pick just one. However, if I had to, I would have to choose Cherise O’Kennedy. She is from Vancouver, a mother of three teenage boys, and a rising business leader. However, I admired her most because of the caliber of her comments in class and the quality and depth of her contributions online in our forums. Cherise never made a forum entry that was not well thought out, thorough, well referenced, and always value added. We all learned regularly by Cherise’s amazing contributions.
I was finding myself in more and more administrative and leadership roles, and I knew that my current medical and science training was inadequate to meet the challenge of these roles relative to finances, operations, and people management.”
To help the Rothman Institute as its Board members and the Rothman Foundation for Opioid Research & Education as its Director achieve maximal financial and philanthropic success, respectively.
Travel to all 7 continents and sail all 5 oceans …I am half way there.
“I am thrilled to write this recommendation for Asif Illyas, who was my student in the IE Brown Executive MBA. He is a truly unique student, the kind you hope you will encounter in class: a thoroughly self-made professional, highly-respected in his field, eager to learn about those disciplines he has not worked in, with the intelligence and humility that professors dream of finding in students! He was on top of all of the issues, passionate in the debates, aware of current events, and successful in applying abstract principles to them. If there is a profile that programs like ours seek to find, it is Asif´s. His success there makes him the ideal candidate for the Best and Brightest Executive MBA series.” Professor Gayle Allard, IE Business School.