Showing posts with label IESE 申請. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IESE 申請. Show all posts

Thursday, March 5, 2015

MBA ニュース:IESE Business School, China Europe International Business School Launch New World Executive MBA

Spain’s IESE Business School has partnered with the China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) to launch the World Executive MBA.

The new program will feature modules on CEIBS and IESE campuses across five continents. Modules are scheduled to take place in Shanghai, Shenzhen, Barcelona, New York, Munich, Silicon Valley, Sao Paulo and in strategic locations in India and Africa. 
To cater to executives from a variety of regions, the program format will be blended. Residential modules at CEIBS and IESE campuses will complement online modules. Both courses taught as part of the residential modules and those taught online will follow the case study method and will be taught by expert faculty from both schools.
IESE and CEIBS have been partners in a range of programs for 20 years, including a Global CEO Program, a Global CEO Program for China and a joint PhD.

For more information, see the World Executive MBA.

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Start-up costs for MBA graduates pay off

MBA entrepreneurial grads—specifically those who launched startups during or soon after business school— can expect to make as much as their peers who follow more traditional career paths not long out of school, according to survey data collected as part of the Financial Times’ 2015 business school rankings research.
Of the 7,800 MBA graduates from the world’s top 100 business schools who responded to the FT, 22 percent had launched a start-up. Within three years of graduation, the average annual income of these entrepreneurs was $134,000, compared to $132,000 across the entire sample, the FT reports.
A mere 5 percent of startup founders reported an annual salary of zero three years out, though the FT points out that survey respondents did have an option to not reveal their income level, so the data may not fully reflect the financial risk taking faced by entrepreneurial grads. That said, of the companies launched by survey participants, 84 percent did report still operating a full three years later.
In general, startups launched by MBA grads tend to fare better than those launched by non-MBAs. Citing the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the FT noted that roughly 60 percent of new businesses survive three years, far less than the findings of the FT survey and less still than reports from individual business schools. At MIT Sloan, for example, 36 percent of the 2011 MBA graduates started a business, and 86 percent of those were still operating three years later, according to the FT report.
“Of course,” say business school professors. Startups launched by MBA grads do better because their founders have prepared for challenges within the classroom, IESE Professor Pedro Nueno told the FT. “If someone is prepared they are more likely to be willing to take a lower salary or cut back to maintain cash flow,” he said. “They tend to manage better than somebody who just sees an idea and launches without too much analysis.”
Nueno has been tracking the start-up success of his MBA students for several years and has found that 80 percent of those who started companies were still in operation five years after graduation. The majority of startups launched by his students are small—solo ventures or businesses with just a few employees. Still, Nueno has found that they earn as much if not more than their peers who went to work for large corporations, the FT notes.
The FT’s MBA survey revealed that a gender gap exists within entrepreneurship among MBAs, with only 16 percent of female graduates reporting starting a company, compared to 24 percent of male grads. But, notes the FT, “this divide is little different to the wider world of start-ups, in which male founders are more common the female ones.”
Not all survey respondents went as far as to say that business school itself was helpful with the practical matters of launching a startup (30 percent said no) or securing financing (60% disagreed). Likewise, enthusiasm for the value of business school’s alumni networks in the startup launching process was lukewarm. A third disagreed with the statement that alumni helped start their business and more than half (55%) stated that alumni provided no help with fundraising.
Both the success of MBA graduate founders as compared to their classmates in traditional fields and the startup survival rates varied from business school to business school, with institutions ranked in the top five for entrepreneurship teaching faring the best. For example, entrepreneur MBA grads from top-ranked Stanford Graduate School of Business reported average salaries of $190,506 three years after graduation, compared with $170,433 for fellow graduates who didn’t launch businesses.
Despite these encouraging statistics, entrepreneurship is still pursued by relatively few within business education, the FT noted. Taken together, the survey findings suggest that just 8 percent of the 2011 MBA graduate community currently makes an income solely from entrepreneurial ventures.

For more information, please see the Financial Times 

Saturday, August 2, 2014

MBA 二ユース: IESE Launches Corporate Finance MOOC

IESE, like many other leading business schools has just launched its latest Massive Corporate Finance Essentials. 
Open Online Courses (MOOCs) and has just launched its latest, called

It is designed for executives anywhere in the world who want to understand key financial issues related to companies, investors and their interaction with capital markets, the new course will be taught by IESE Javier Estrada.

The course is a series of six lectures lasting between 45 and 60 minutes each  on financial literacy and gain a better understanding of what is written in the financial press. 

No previous knowledge or preparation is required. 

The free course, available on the Coursera platform, will begin on September 29th and continue through November 10th. Participants who complete the course will be eligible for a Statement of Accomplishment. The course will be delivered in English.


Wednesday, September 4, 2013

IESE 2013-2014 Essay Topics Announced

IESE 2013-2014 Essay Topics

IESE Business School has posted its 2013-2014 essay topics within its online application.  The essay prompts are as follows:

Essay 1.
Describe your short-term and long-term career goals (Post MBA). (300 words)
Essay 2.
Please describe two substantial accomplishments and one failure in a professional or private endeavor. (600 words)
Essay 3.
I wish that the application had asked me… (200 words)

For more information about the IESE admissions process, visit the school’s website.








IESE Deadlines 2013-2014

IESE Deadlines 2013-2014

The 2013-2014 IESE application deadlines have been announced.

The four rounds of deadlines are as follows:
Round 1
Application Deadline: October 6, 2013

Decision Notification: December 9, 2013
Round 2
Application Deadline: January 5, 2014

Decision Notification: March 4, 2014
Round 3
Application Deadline: March 2, 2014

Decision Notification: May 6, 2014
Round 4
Application Deadline: June 8, 2014

Decision Notification: July 25, 2014

IESE recommends that all non-EU citizens apply before April.
She school’s admissions website.