Where Strategy Meets Humanity: The CBS MBA’s People-Centred Approach To Leadership

Copenhagen business school MBA

At Copenhagen Business School, Assistant Professor Julia Bodner helps MBA participants explore the human side of strategy – developing the skills to lead people in a world shaped by social changes, technological evolution, and geopolitical complexity.

At a time when no two months – let alone quarters – are the same in business, leadership is increasingly defined not by control but by connection. At Copenhagen Business School (CBS), Human Resource Management (HRM) is therefore less about administration and more about aligning people with purpose.

Where Strategy Meets People

Assistant Professor Julia Bodner teaches the MBA’s Strategic Human Resource Management course, which sits at the crossroads of strategy, leadership, and human behaviour. With a PhD from INSEAD and a research background in corporate strategy and organisation, she brings an analytical eye to the challenge of aligning the people within an organisation’s goal. 

For Julia, people management is not a question of charisma or personality; it’s a skill that can be learned, applied, and refined. “People skills are not something you’re simply born with – they can be learned or embedded in the organisation,” she explains. “If we understand incentives, structure, and culture as levers of strategy implementation, we can motivate and enable people to work towards a goal together, even as the world changes.”

Course Outline

The course explores how structure and culture can be designed to implement strategy effectively and motivate people accordingly, giving participants the conceptual tools to connect organisational design with human behaviour. 

“It’s about putting ideas into action – how you enable and motivate people inside the organisation to achieve their objectives,” Julia explains. Her approach reframes HRM as a discipline focused on implementation rather than policy: a toolkit for influencing how organisations think, adapt and deliver. “It sounds simple, but it’s crucial for success,” she adds. “We look at whether people are able to pursue those goals and whether they want to – and that depends on the systems, incentives and culture you put in place.”

Learning To Lead, Early On

Julia begins working with participants early in the programme, when they are still forming teams, habits, and networks. It’s an ideal moment to explore how collaboration really works. “I meet the participants quite at the beginning of the MBA journey,” she says. “I try to make sure that they are co-designers of their active learning environment and foster psychological safety, so that they can feel safe to make mistakes, learn from each other, ask for help, and contribute.”

The class itself becomes a model organisation: a living experiment in trust, communication and collective performance. Participants learn that managing people isn’t about purely formal authority; it’s about designing conditions that allow others to thrive. By the end of the course, many realise that the same levers apply whether they’re running a start-up team or a global business unit.

From Theory To Real-World Leadership

CBS’s MBA is known for its close integration of theory and practice, and Julia’s course embodies that philosophy. Each session moves fluidly between academic frameworks and practical experience: company case studies, life cases – where guest organisations present unsolved problems – and simulations that mirror executive decision-making.

“Companies are fundamentally complex, and they have to be different to achieve sustained competitive advantage,” she explains. “As such, we don’t just teach best practices — because they don’t work for all organizations in all contexts – we go back and forth between theory and practice to understand why and when something works.”

A class on people analytics, for instance, might turn into a boardroom simulation where participants decide how to allocate limited resources based on real-world employee data. “There are often trade-offs in business,” Julia says. “So we focus on recognising and managing them when they can’t be avoided.”

Through these simulated exercises, participants experience what it means to lead under pressure; making complex decisions that demand sound judgment, empathy and a clear understanding of organisational complexity.

A Classroom Designed With Intent

If Scandinavian education is known for collaboration, Julia’s teaching adds another dimension: structure. Every discussion is aligned with the course objectives. “It’s very intentional, very interactive,” she explains. “I tell participants why we do things a certain way, because research shows how those interactions improve learning.”

The course uses life cases to expose participants to genuine corporate challenges, alongside in-class experiments that test how teams build trust and psychological safety. As part of her teaching approach, which leverages research insights, Julia often varies seating plans to strengthen class cohesion, encouraging participants to work with different peers rather than the same groups each time.

That idea – seeing the classroom as a living organisation – captures CBS’s distinctive pedagogy: experiential, reflective, and rigorously human.

Science Of People Skills

MBA’s participants leave with a framework for thinking through complexity – one that encourages evidence-based leadership rather than gut feel. “Sometimes we celebrate intuition,” Julia says, “but I want participants to understand why something works. That’s what makes them ready for the next challenge.”

Reflection and applied analysis are also built into the experience, encouraging participants to test theories against real organisational challenges and develop their own approach to leadership.

It is one that proves invaluable as leaders navigate changes brought by AI, automation and hybrid work. The constant across all these shifts is the human element: how people interact, share knowledge and find purpose together.

Shaped By The Nordic Context

Copenhagen offers a uniquely Scandinavian backdrop for studying leadership. Danish workplaces tend to be egalitarian, and that ethos filters naturally into the MBA classroom. “Scandinavia has quite implicit structures and an approach to hierarchy that values consensus,” Julia says. “That allows organizations to coordinate based on shared norms and values, but as workplaces become more diverse in the cultural backgrounds and in the skillsets people contribute, making structures more explicit—and with that, more formal—can help in creating a safe space for divergence, achieving clarity around tasks, and alignment towards shared goals.”

For international participants, it’s a revelation: leadership here is built on trust developed through shared values and a quiet consensus – it is the common engine for collaboration in some Nordic settings. Julia believes the future of leadership demands expanding such an approach with some of the skills participants learn in her class. “As organisations become more global and the people who work in them more specialised,” she says, “we’ll need to design systems that help people work together even when they don’t share the same cultural or functional background. That requires leaders to have a range of conceptual instruments in their toolbox to achieve that.”

Finding Meaning In Management

Asked what makes the CBS HRM course distinctive, Julia says, “What’s special to the participants is that they have these fundamentals based on academic research to understand human interaction and behaviour better in groups.”

Her goal is for every participant to leave knowing how to influence outcomes that matter to them – whether those are commercial, social, or ethical. “They define what they want to influence,” she says, “and have the mechanisms to do it intentionally.”

That sense of acting with purpose rather than impulse runs through the CBS MBA, which aims to develop thoughtful leaders who understand that strategy and humanity are inseparable.


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Copenhagen Business School MBA

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