
Bringing business education to Niger
Kader Kaneye, Co-President of the African Development University, talks about the challenges and rewards of his work to give Nigeriens a business education.
Access and download your free digital edition of the latest Business Impact issue.
The world of management education is getting bigger, not smaller, under the ongoing restrictions of Covid-19.
The new edition of Business Impact leads with full features of four Business Schools from four different continents:
Also featured: exclusive research into MBM admissions, levels of diversity and delivery around the world.
Download the latest Business Impact magazine today.
Kader Kaneye, Co-President of the African Development University, talks about the challenges and rewards of his work to give Nigeriens a business education.
A Cuban-American master’s in entrepreneurship graduate on how Business School has helped her company to support minority-owned businesses
Business education’s future will resemble the music industry, where individual songs can be downloaded à la carte without paying for a pre-determined selection, says Universidad Nebrija’s Dean, Fernando Tomé Bermejo
Schools must evaluate their purpose to survive disruption and contribute to shaping society, writes Angus Laing
Vlerick Business School has developed a method for assessing and improving inclusion within organisations, writes Katleen De Stobbeleir
Venture capitalists don’t ask male and female founders the same questions when making investment decisions, and hold a number of preconceptions, says the founder of a network aimed at empowering women
Business Schools must encourage collaboration rather that competition, in order to tackle the big social issues of the day, argues Zeynep Gürhan Canlı, Dean, College of Administrative Sciences and Economics, Koç University
How has business education developed and what does the future hold for Schools in Russia and the surrounding region?
When we tell ourselves someone is difficult, it can become a self-fulfilling prophesy. Jenny Bird and Sarah Gornall suggest taking a different approach
Technology can help Business Schools meet the evolving needs of their students. Alain Goudey outlines NEOMA Business School’s use of virtual reality in the classroom
Diversity is ‘a strength which opens opportunities’ and that’s why exposure to different backgrounds and ways of thinking is a firm focus for Céline Fauchot, Dean at France’s South Champagne Business School (SCBS), part of the Y SCHOOLS ecosystem
Telecoms entrepreneur, Peter Gbedemah, looks at why mentorship is back in vogue and reflects on the problems organisations face in implementing successful programmes that ensure equality of access
Could a subscription model be the radical game changer traditional Business Schools need? AMBA & BGA Chair, Bodo Schlegelmilch builds on the notion of ‘degrees for rent’ in Business Impact’s sixth edition.
In addition, there’s guest commentary and interviews on the following subjects:
How has the management education landscape been affected by Covid-19, and how are Business Schools working to move past the pandemic? Business Impact’s fifth edition canvasses Business School experts’ insights from Europe, Asia and the Americas.
The magazine also features:
In addition, there’s guest commentary and interviews on the following subjects:
Business Impact’s fourth edition explores the concept of integrating sustainability into business education from the perspective of senior Business School professionals, and features comments from St.Gallen, MIP, Imperial College Business School, and more.
There are also interviews with leading minds in business education, on topics that include:
This edition leads with new and original AMBA & BGA research into application and enrolment data for business master’s (MBM) programmes across the world.
It also features interviews with BGA validated and BGA member institutions in France, Spain and the Netherlands, as well as a look at what every business leader should know about geopolitics, and how one company is working to combat the adverse effects of fast fashion.
In this issue we explore the the navigation of change and negotiating nuances.
We hear about the merits of nurturing entrepreneurial ecosystems that go beyond university campuses and support regions as a whole, in an interview with Gerard George, Dean of Singapore Management University’s Lee Kong Chian School of Business.
In this issue we explore Business School internationalisation; developing a strong faculty and research culture; strategic corporate social responsibility; the first part of BGA’s ground-breaking research into Business Schools working to close the global poverty gap; and interviews with a selection of multi-national employers on the skills and qualities they’re looking for from business graduates.
Plus an exclusive interview with Indra Nooyi, Chairman of PepsiCo.