The course teaches students comprehensive and specialised subjects in entrepreneurial leadership and management for various business situations; it develops skills in critical thinking and strategic planning for changing and fast-paced environments, including financial and operational analysis; and it develops competences in leadership, including autonomous decision-making, and communication with employees, stakeholders, and other members of a business. These generalized MBA insights are firmly rooted in a curriculum focused on innovation, social entrepreneurship,
finance, and technology
Throughout this module, students will learn the basic concepts of needs
analysis, investment policy, asset allocation, product selection, portfolio
monitoring and rebalancing. Students will assess the various types of
institutional investors, including pension funds and insurance companies
and develop skills related to the client management life cycle and portfolio
management as a process. The module will address the basic concepts,
principles, and the major styles of investing in alternative assets.
Additionally, students will learn about the impact of digitization on
investment strategies and the issues related to performance
measurement, transaction costs and liquidity risk, margin requirements,
risk management, and portfolio construction. Other topics addressed in
the module include quantitative investment strategies used by active
traders and methodologies to analyse them. Through the use of case
studies, students will learn to use real data to back-test or evaluate
several of the most successful trading strategies used by active
investment managers. As a result, students will learn to read and analyse
academic research articles in search of profitable and implementable
trading ideas.
The role of marketing management in organisations is to identify and
measure the needs and wants of consumers, to determine which targets
the business can serve, to decide on the appropriate offerings to serve
these markets, and to determine the optimal methods of pricing,
promoting, and distributing the firm’s offerings. Successful organisations
are those that integrate the objectives and resources of the organisation
with the needs and opportunities of the marketplace. The goal of this
module is to facilitate student achievement of these goals regardless of
career path.
Throughout the module, students will study various tools for generating
marketing insights from data in such areas as segmentation, targeting and
positioning, satisfaction management, customer lifetime analysis,
customer choice, product and price decisions using conjoint analysis, and
text analysis, and search analytics.
The focus of this module is to introduce concepts, skills, and strategies for
performing competitively in the business market where organisations
rather than households are the customers.
This module provides a managerial introduction to the strategic and
tactical aspects of business marketing decisions and marketing channel
strategy. Students examine the strategic concepts and tools that guide
market selection, successful differentiation in business markets, and
supply chain management. Students will examine how product and
service decisions are designed to deliver the B2B value proposition, how
pricing captures customer value, how value is communicated to and
among customers, and how marketing channels are used to make this
value accessible to target customers. Additionally, students will compare
and contrast how the strategic and tactical processes of developing and
managing value-generating relationships differ between B2B and B2C
markets. Moreover, students will also gain an understanding of how to
manage channel power, conflict, and relationships.
This module provides students with advanced methods needed to understand how a product will fit into a competitive market, and how to introduce the product into that market. This includes advanced research on the receptiveness of a market to the new product, as well as strategies for defining and finding the market that will be most receptive to the product. Students consider product introductions with the goal of what Marc Andreesen called ‘product/market fit’ - a ‘good market with a product that can satisfy that market.’ The module trains students to reflect upon and analyse a company’s go-
to- market strategy, and it provides students with sophisticated methods
of calculating customer acquisition cost, determining customer break-
even, and calculating customer lifetime value.
The purpose of this module is to give learners an opportunity to integrate all the knowledge from their programme of learning by developing a project in which they plan and implement a new product, service or process. Learners need to take a full and active role in all aspects of the project, and the selection of an appropriate management issue is crucial to success. Learners will cover a full range of management activities and roles, including resource and people management and implementation of change. The result needs to be a substantial report in a style appropriate for consideration by senior management.
In general terms, financial accounting is the measurement of economic
activity for decision-making. Financial statements are a key product of
this measurement process and an important component of firms’ financial
reporting activities.
The objective of this module is to help students become intelligent readers
of the financial reports of most publicly traded companies. Students will
learn the development, analysis, and use of these reports by focusing on
what these reports contain, what assumptions and concepts accountants
use to prepare them, and why they use those assumptions and concepts. A
solid understanding of the fundamentals covered in this module should
enable students to do well in more advanced finance and accounting
courses and to interview intelligently for jobs in finance, consulting, and
general management.
The module begins with the basic concepts of accounting. Students will
analyse the main financial statements: balance sheet, income statement,
statement of cash flows, and statement of stockholders’ equity. Particular
attention is paid to how these four statements relate to each other and
how they provide information about the operating performance and
financial health of a company. The module also covers specific items from
the financial statements and applies tools of analysis whenever possible.
In this module, students will develop specialised and multidisciplinary
capacities to generate creative solutions and alternatives to existing
business issues by refining their ability to lead processes that stimulate
and manage creativity in a business.
Students will reflect critically on templates and methods for designing,
implementing, and assessing processes that introduce creativity to real
work situations. The module will engage with both the theoretical
frameworks and practical methods or tools for cultivating practices of
creativity in response to real business challenges.
Ultimately, the module cultivates skills for autonomous managers to lead
creative projects, people, and ventures, and to oversee the processes that
keep them on track.
Managers require a broad array of negotiating skills to implement business solutions – this requires advanced knowledge of negotiation models, the competence to select the right strategy, and the tactical skills to achieve desired outcomes through negotiation In addition to studying key negotiation theories, the module develops skills in negotiation, providing students with the opportunity to test and improve their abilities through discussions that model negotiation scenarios, through the use of case studies, and through reflection and feedback. Students will review and test various approaches to negotiated conflict
resolution (at small personal scales and large organisational scales). The
module builds competencies in developing an effective professional and
personal style of negotiation.
This course covers core concepts in accounting, finance, and
microeconomics relevant to running a business.
The course begins with finance for business, including the time value of
money, the trade-off between risk and return, and arbitrage. It gives
managers a strengthened knowledge in finance that can be applied in
their professional careers. The topics covered include how to move cash
flows in time, the methods and principles of capital budgeting, valuation
of bonds and stocks, how to characterize risk and return, and options
pricing with applications to managerial decisions.
The course then builds on the student’s knowledge of finance to introduce
accounting and examines the subject from the viewpoint of users external
to the organization. Topics include transaction analysis; the accounting
cycle; financial-statement preparation, use, and analysis; revenue
recognition and cost measurement; present value; and problems in
financial-accounting disclosure.
This course concludes with microeconomic theory and its application to
problems faced by managers. Topics include supply and demand,
consumer behaviour, pricing when a firm has market power, and
contracts.
This module examines how leaders can most effectively use the resources of their team members to achieve business outcomes. The module develops managerial and leadership competences, focussing on how key improvements in the general strategy and techniques of managing people can produce outcomes more significant than isolated improvements to employee performance. The module provides students with concepts to support them across their careers as they continue to develop effective delegation, management strategy, and engagement with people inside of an organisation.
The role of marketing management in organisations is to identify and
measure the needs and wants of consumers, to determine which targets
the business can serve, to decide on the appropriate offerings to serve
these markets, and to determine the optimal methods of pricing,
promoting, and distributing the firm’s offerings. Successful organisations
are those that integrate the objectives and resources of the organisation
with the needs and opportunities of the marketplace. The goal of this
module is to facilitate student achievement of these goals regardless of
career path.
This module addresses how to design and implement the best
combination of marketing efforts to carry out a firm's strategy in its target
markets. Specifically, this module helps to develop the student's
understanding of how the firm can benefit by creating and delivering
value to its customers, and stakeholders, and develop skills in applying
the analytical concepts and tools of marketing to such decisions as
segmentation and targeting, branding, pricing, distribution, and
promotion.
Increases in product variety and customization in the past few years have posed challenges to firms in terms of delivering products to customers faster and more efficiently. With the prevalence of the usage of the Internet for business, electronic business transformations are occurring in every business. One of the fundamental enablers of electronic commerce is effective supply chain management. Thus, supply chain management has become the focus of attention of senior management in the industry today. This module considers management of a supply chain in a global
environment from a managerial perspective. The focus is on analysis,
management, and improvement of supply chain processes and their
adaptation to the electronic business environment.
In this module students will gain the capacity to understand how firms
work in a global context, incorporating a broad, future-oriented, systems-
based approach that incorporates data, information and insights from
diverse perspectives and sources. This module is designed to convey the
key concepts of strategic thinking and how they fit into the larger context
of management strategy and decisions. Students will be presented with
both the practical “how” and the fundamental “why” in the light of
contributions from behavioural science, economics, and statistics.
This module explores the key concepts of marketing and how they fit into the larger context of management strategy and operational decisions. It presents both the practical 'how' and the fundamental 'why' of marketing activities in the light of contributions from behavioural science, economics, and statistics. The module provides managers and business leaders with the understanding needed to manage and lead those who implement the marketing activities; the module provides concepts and processes for business leaders that seek to continue developing through future experiences or coursework in marketing. The module then focuses on managing processes. Theoretically, it models business functions as a network of actions that convert inputs into outputs. Process design is considered, including the volume and variety of system inputs and outputs - especially with respect to goods and services. Different inventory management and logistic systems are explored. Finally, forecasting and process optimisation are explored, strengthening managers ability to operate with finite resources.
This module will approach leadership by identifying practices that researchers and practitioners have shown to be the most effective. Through these processes, students will gain a broad range of skills. This module examines how leaders can most effectively use the resources of their team members to achieve business outcomes. The module develops managerial and leadership competencies, focusing on how key improvements in the general strategy and techniques of managing people can produce outcomes more significant than isolated improvements to employee performance. The module provides students with concepts to support them across their careers as they continue to develop effective delegation, management strategy, and engagement with people inside of an organisation. Specific topics covered include managing a diverse workforce; self-leadership; perception pitfalls; decision making; conflict resolution;
emotional intelligence; improving performance; team structure.
This module explores the international business environment in which
organisations operate. Throughout the module, students will examine the
structure and features of international markets, how organisations engage
with these markets, and how they respond to their complexities. Students
are introduced to useful theoretical and analytical frameworks that are
crucial to understanding the opportunities and risks derived from the
political, economic, social, technological, and institutional environment of
countries.
The module also addresses aspects of global institutions, such as the
World Trade organisation (WTO) and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF), which set global rules that affect business strategy and human
welfare.
In this module, students learn about the complex responsibilities facing
business leaders today. Through cases about difficult managerial
decisions, the course examines the legal, ethical, and economic
responsibilities of corporate leaders. It also teaches students about
management and governance systems leaders can use to promote
responsible conduct by companies and their employees, and shows how
personal values can play a critical role in effective leadership.
Additionally, this module is designed to deepen and extend students'
conceptual and practical understanding of leadership in organisations,
extending beyond the application of knowledge in practical judgements
that achieve business outcomes, to embrace wider social and ethical
considerations. The course is experiential and multidisciplinary, requiring
participants to reflect on the social and ethical responsibilities of leaders
in relation to their own experiences. It is designed to help students
discover insights about themselves as leaders, fostering the development
of self-awareness, including strengths and opportunities for personal
growth.
This course synthesises the multifaceted skills, knowledge, and strategic thinking acquired throughout the program, challenging participants to apply their expertise to real-world business challenges. Under the guidance of seasoned mentors and industry professionals, students will undertake a comprehensive, hands-on project that requires them to integrate concepts from various disciplines within the curriculum. From strategic planning and financial analysis to organisational leadership and ethical decision-making, the Capstone Project serves as a comprehensive test of the holistic business acumen developed during the program. Participants will not only hone their problem-solving abilities but will also demonstrate their ability to develop actionable solutions that align with contemporary business challenges. As a capstone experience, this course not only underscores the depth of knowledge gained during the program but also empowers participants to showcase their readiness to contribute meaningfully to the complex landscape of modern business. Elevate your strategic thinking, analytical prowess, and leadership skills as you embark on this transformative journey toward earning your degree.