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Future of Business Schools

Future of Business Schools. An Analysis and Critique. Future Demand for Education. Demand for education will continue to grow Demand driven by economic growth and globalization Mature economies Business schools become more specialized, focusing on local needs Developing economies

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Future of Business Schools

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  1. Future of Business Schools An Analysis and Critique

  2. Future Demand for Education • Demand for education will continue to grow • Demand driven by economic growth and globalization • Mature economies • Business schools become more specialized, focusing on local needs • Developing economies • Strong growth in business professionals

  3. Globalization • Businesses are more international • Increased global competition • More complex • Need professionals trained in international business • Internationalization of business schools • Import model • Export model • Network model

  4. Import Model • Bring faculty, staff, and students from places around the world to the school campus • Instruction is in English • Successful – start a new international university • Not so successful – transfer an existing school into an international business school • National roots in country

  5. Export Model • Faculty and students attend a foreign country • University rents out facilities • Campus remains in original country • Expose faculty and students to different country and culture • Common method • Exchange programs with foreign universities

  6. Network Model • Create multi-site campuses around the world • Each campus is a full fledge campus • Ideally a campus should be located in all continents

  7. Network Model • Weakness • Keep campuses connected together • Not separate and distinct campuses • Knowledge and learning are spread among all campuses • Campus replicates itself in other countries • The same campus • Cultural does not change it

  8. Faculty Shortage • Recruiting top faculty a challenge for business schools • Demand for business education is increasing • Flat growth in new PhDs • Number of PhDs may be falling

  9. Why PhD Shortage • Good students are lured by MBA programs (Master of Business Administration) • Salaries are higher • 40% of PhDs work for industry • Higher salaries • Quicker promotions

  10. Ways Around PhD Shortage • Business schools can hire PhDs from other disciplines and train them in business • Social science • Business schools can hire more masters level instructors • Business school may have trouble managing PhDs and non-PhDs together • i.e. salaries

  11. Business School Programs • Programs • Undergraduate degrees • Graduate degrees • Executive training programs – executives at nearby corporations can attend night courses to complete a business master’s degree • Big money maker for business schools

  12. Business School Programs • Business programs include large amounts of quantitative skills • Some people want programs to include softer skills • Ability to work with others • Leadership abilities • Entrepreneurship abilities • Ethics (“Societal Values”) • Corporate responsibility

  13. Ethics • Could schools teach ethics? • Yes, then include some courses in ethics • No, then could screen students • Reject students with poor ethics

  14. Technology • Communications and information technology • Traditional classes will remain the same • Technology will complement business schools • Technology may allow students in developing countries to study in developed countries

  15. Technology • Business schools should incorporate • Videoconferencing • Students attend class at the same time, but in different locations • An online course • Homework via the internet

  16. Business School Funding • School funding • Government • Tuition • Program fees • Donations • Author predicts • Less government funding • Tuition and fees may be lower from competition • Less future revenue from executive programs

  17. Business School Funding • Donations • In United States • Private universities have large donations • Graduates of Harvard, Princeton, etc. have large salaries • Large corporate donations • Public universities varies, but usually 5% of students donate • Some may have a large corporate donation

  18. Business School Funding • Donations • Outside the United States • Very few people donate money to business schools • Author suggests • A country changes a law allowing donations to be tax free • International campuses will develop skills and methods to encourage students and corporations to donate • Expend management and faculty time to encourage relationships • Relationships foster donations

  19. Business School Governance • Business Schools will have to change governance • Donators should have say or feedback how school is operated • Large corporate donations • Alumni donations • Business education is more complex • Need experienced professionals to manage and administer programs

  20. Brand Building • Should school be • Research versus academics • National versus regional school • School has strong brand name • Distinguishes itself from competing schools • Attracts better corporate sponsors, faculty, staff, and students

  21. Brand Name • Want graduates to say “I went to…” instead of “I have a MBA.”

  22. The Future • Traditional – business school is a factory • The future • School is a knowledge and learning network • School is connected with campuses around the world • Retain alumni in the network after graduation • Turn education into a life prolong process

  23. The Future • Faculty are transformed into quasi-autonomous knowledge professionals • Faculty require flexibility to live and work away from their primary school campus • Not likely

  24. References • Hawawini, Gabriel. 2005. “The Future of Business Schools.” Journal of Management Development 24(9): 770-82

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