Wu Jiayu
BBA Student, 2022
Student Message - Leadership in Student Organization
Q: As Vice-Chairperson and Supervisor of the City University of Macau Student Union, what was the core belief that guided you in balancing both management and service roles?
A: I have always remained true to the original aspiration of being student-centered. I firmly believe that the value of a student organization does not lie in the glamorous surface of its activities, but in its ability to truly connect with students and solve their problems. This tangible service capacity comes precisely from the efficient integration and precise empowerment of various resources.
Q: How did you put this service-oriented mindset into concrete action?
A: To respond to the diverse needs of students, I worked with core members to build an exclusive SOP framework for resource management, and matched the resource lists of all departments one by one, ensuring that every resource was accurately delivered to where students needed it most. During the Bank of China Macau Summer Campus Program, we provided full-process support—from registration coordination and on-site logistics to the issuance of practice certificates—offering all-around backing for participating students. In preparing for the Campus Culture Festival, we polished the performance content with meticulous care, simply to better enrich students' extracurricular lives.
Q: How did you leverage Macau’s geographical advantages to create opportunities for students?
A: Leveraging Macau's geographical advantages, I strived to expand growth platforms for students by deepening cooperation between the Student Union and the Macao Federation of Students, securing more opportunities for them. Meanwhile, drawing on resources accumulated from my internships, I established links with student organizations in Beijing, Hong Kong, the UK and other regions, bringing back high-quality activities and advanced experience to inject new vitality into campus culture. This allowed students to access cross-regional high-quality resources and broaden their horizons without leaving campus.
Q: What did this service experience bring to you?
A: The overall planning and execution capabilities honed through serving students have become a solid foundation for moving forward. Now, I have received an offer for a postgraduate program at University College London—a program with an acceptance rate of only 2%, something I could not have dared to hope for four years ago. I have also been shortlisted for an interview for the Summer Internship in Advisory at EY.
Q: If you were to summarize your four years at City University of Macau, what would you say?
A: Looking back on my four years at City University of Macau, I can truly say it has been an extraordinary and remarkable journey.
Photo Credit
Yang Guoqing | MBA Student, 2025