SPJIMR Case School 2026 brought together 27 management educators and researchers from across India for an intensive, output-oriented learning experience. Working in nine teams alongside nine industry protagonists, participants completed first drafts of real-world teaching cases and teaching notes, translating classroom concepts into tangible academic outputs.
The programme was designed to address a common challenge in faculty development workshops: participants often leave inspired but struggle to translate learning into finished work. Case School 2026 faculty facilitators Prof. Amol Dhaigude and Prof. Debmallya Chatterjee addressed this challenge by integrating the entire case-writing journey into the workshop itself.
The learning extended beyond methodology. Over five intensive and rewarding days, participants experienced the complete lifecycle of developing a field-based teaching case—from identifying a compelling dilemma to preparing a publication-ready case and teaching note.
Day 1: Laying the foundation
Day 2: Meeting the protagonist
Day 3: Case writing marathon
Day 4: Teaching note (TN) marathon
Day 5: Preparing for the future
Multiple field-based cases and teaching notes developed in just five days, along with a vibrant community of emerging case writers committed to creating impactful learning experiences.
Industry engagement remained central to the programme’s success. Nine organisational leaders and practitioners shared their experiences and strategic challenges, providing participants with access to authentic business situations. Their willingness to open their organisations to academic scrutiny enabled teams to create cases grounded in real-world complexity rather than hypothetical scenarios.
The workshop’s residential format played a critical role in seamless transition from structured sessions to informal discussions, peer reviews, and collaborative brainstorming, which often continued beyond the classroom.
Case School 2026 demonstrated that with the right structure, mentorship, and immersive environment, faculty development programmes (FDPs) can move beyond knowledge transfer and deliver measurable scholarly outcomes. For SPJIMR, its success represents an important step in strengthening India’s case-writing ecosystem.
Participants described the experience as an exercise in deeper listening, critical inquiry, and collaborative problem-solving. Several reflected on how the process challenged them to move beyond surface-level observations and unpack the underlying tensions that shape managerial decisions.
Reflecting on her experience, Mohini Arora, TA, Organisation and Leadership Studies at SPJIMR, noted, “The first thing that humbles you is the questionnaire. You go in thinking you’ll ask smart questions. You quickly realise the real skill isn’t in asking. It’s in listening. Listening for what isn’t being said. Listening for the tension hiding just beneath the polished answer. Every layer of the case—front-end, back-end, and teaching note—is really just one question in disguise: what does the reader need to feel right now?”
The live feedback and interactive learning, as well as the protagonist support provided.
The analogy of movies, and relating the concepts to them, makes the process so easy to understand and implement.
The session for case writing and teaching note was really good. In addition to this, I really liked the mapping of the case and the teaching note, and access to
real-life cases.
A key highlight was meeting the protagonist and collecting data. In addition, the rigorous deadlines helped us complete our cases section by section.
A great case study isn’t just a success story; it’s built around a pivotal, high-stakes decision point that forces students to think critically.
