INSEAD
INSEAD is a non-profit, private university with locations in Europe (Fontainebleau, France), Asia (Singapore), the Middle East (Abu Dhabi, UAE), and North America (San Francisco, USA). As a graduate-only business school, INSEAD offers a full-time MBA program, an Executive MBA (EMBA) program, a Master in Finance program, a PhD in management program, a Master in Management[4] program and a variety of executive education programs.
Institut Européen d'Administration des Affaires | |
Motto | The Business School for the World |
---|---|
Type | Private business school |
Established | 1957 |
Endowment | €239 million[1] |
Chairman | Andreas Jacobs[2] |
Dean | Ilian Mihov[3] |
Academic staff | 250+ |
Students | 1,410 (~1,000 in MBA) (~300 EMBA) (~30 MFin) (80 in Ph.D.) |
Location | |
Website | insead |
INSEAD is known for its MBA program, which is taught in English and consistently ranked amongst the top 4 globally by Financial Times, along with those offered by Harvard Business School, Stanford Graduate School of Business and The Wharton School of University of Pennsylvania.[5] Its MBA program produced second most CEOs of the 500 largest companies globally, only after Harvard Business School’s,[6] and sixth most number of billionaires.[7] The MBA also educated 3 heads of state.[8]
As an institution, INSEAD is in top 20 universities that produce the most millionaires globally, in top 15 for individuals with net worth more than 30 million dollars, and is the only one among them that teaches only one field and only graduate education.[9][10] INSEAD alumni include the CEOs/Chairpeople of Credit Suisse, BP, Diageo, Ericsson, WPP, Lloyds Banking Group, LEGO, Philip Morris International and founders of companies such as L'Occitane, Octapharma, TransferWise, BlaBlaCar and Business Insider.
INSEAD was founded in France in 1957 by Georges Doriot, a French-American professor at Harvard Business School, and his two students, Claude Janssen and Olivier Giscard d'Estaing. In 2000, the school opened another teaching facility in Singapore. In 2012, INSEAD became a founding member of the Sorbonne University Alliance, moving toward a merger with other specialist institutions to create a top-tier multidisciplinary university.
Known for its high internationalism, INSEAD accepts no more than 10% of students of the same nationality and requires each student to speak 3 languages to graduate.
History
INSEAD was founded in 1957 by venture capitalist Georges Doriot (the "father of venture capitalism")[11] along with Claude Janssen and Olivier Giscard d'Estaing. Original seed money was provided by the Paris Chamber of Commerce.[12] The school was originally based in the Château de Fontainebleau, before moving to its current Europe campus in 1967.[13]
History
- 1957: INSEAD founded[14] as the first business school outside the US
- 1959: First MBA intake in Fontainebleau and first business school to offer a one-year MBA program
- 1960: First MBA class graduates[15]
- 1967: Opening of the school's first campus on the edge of the Forest of Fontainebleau (now called the 'Europe Campus')
- 1968: First Executive Education programme
- 1971: Creation of CEDEP, the European Centre for Continuing Education, on a site next to INSEAD in Fontainebleau
- 1976: Launch of the INSEAD Alumni Fund
- 1980: INSEAD Euro-Asia Centre opens in Fontainebleau
- 1983: MBA programme begins its dual intake (in January and September)
- 1987: Announcement of the INSEAD-Fundação Dom Cabral Partnership
- 1989: Launch of the PhD programme
- 1995: Launch of the first INSEAD Development Campaign,[16] which raised funds for permanently endowed chairs and research
- 2000: First business school with full campuses on multiple continents, with the Asia Campus opening in Singapore[17]
- 2001: Announcement of the INSEAD-Wharton Alliance[18] and first MBA participant exchanges
- 2003: Launch of the Executive MBA programme
- 2004: Opening of the Plessis Mornay Learning Space for Executive Education on Europe Campus
- 2007: INSEAD Centre opened in Abu Dhabi, primarily for research and executive education; launch of a dual degree Executive MBA with Tsinghua University in China[19]
- 2010: INSEAD's Abu Dhabi Center attains Campus status (Middle East Campus)[14]
- 2012: Launch of the Master in Finance specialized degree
- 2013: MBA participant exchange agreement with CEIBS launched[20]
- 2015: Inauguration of the Leadership Development Center in Singapore[21]
- 2016: First and only business school to achieve a ‘triple first’ in rankings – MBA, Executive MBA (Tsinghua-INSEAD EMBA) and Single School Executive MBA (INSEAD GEMBA) in the Financial Times 2016 rankings
- 2018: Launch of the Hoffmann Global Institute for Business and Society[22][23]
- 2020: Opening of the INSEAD San Francisco Hub for Business Innovation
Campuses
The original campus (Europe campus) is located in Fontainebleau, near Paris, France. INSEAD's second campus (Asia campus) is in the one-north district of the city-state of Singapore next to one-north MRT station. The third and newest campus (Middle East campus) is located in Abu Dhabi. Although located in Europe and Asia, INSEAD pursues the US model of a business school.[24] INSEAD has been a pioneer in setting up a multi-campus business school as a way to increase the global presence and nature of its faculty and curriculum.[25][26] A Harvard Business School case study, for instance, explores its approach to business education in a global context and how it functions with a multi-campus setting.[27]
Degree programmes
Business Foundations Certificate Programme
INSEAD in collaboration with Sorbonne Université offers the Business Foundations Certificate (BFC) programme tailored for recent master or PhD graduates from the sciences, medicine, humanities, engineering and law. The programme equips participants with a broad set of business and economics skills that optimally complement their graduate training. It also supports participants' transition to a business career and helps aspiring entrepreneurs to fulfil the goal of their own start-up by complementing their ideas with a solid foundation in business and leadership .
MBA programme
INSEAD's MBA participants can take the MBA's core courses at either or both of its Europe and Asia campuses[28] (as well as an MBA period at its Middle East campus). They follow the same core courses in parallel regardless of campus, and there are faculty who teach on both the Europe and Asia campuses as well as permanent faculty at each of the three campuses who live and work in the respective regions.[29] Approximately 20% of the class entered the MBA program with other graduate or professional degrees; including medical doctors, lawyers, and Ph.Ds.
INSEAD offers two MBA schedules per year: one starting in September which takes ten months to complete, and a 12-month promotion starting in January for students who want to complete a summer internship.[30]
The INSEAD MBA curriculum comprises required core courses and electives. The core covers traditional management disciplines including finance, economics, organizational behavior, accounting, ethics, marketing, statistics, operations management, international political environment, public policy, supply chain management, leadership and corporate strategy. There are 75 electives on offer[31] in areas such as accounting and control, decision sciences, economics and political science, entrepreneurship and family enterprise, finance, and organisational behavior, strategy, marketing, technology and operations management. Students are required to speak two languages upon entry and a third by graduation.
Executive MBA programme
INSEAD has two EMBA Executive MBA programmes. The Global Executive MBA (GEMBA),[32] and the Tsinghua INSEAD EMBA (TIEMBA).[33] Both EMBA programmes are master's-level degree programmes that take place on a part-time, modular basis.
The programmes offer experienced business executives an intensive 14–17-month modular course that takes place in modular periods (approximately every six to seven weeks). Each period on campus is between one and two weeks' duration. For the GEMBA programme the physical time on campus represents 12 weeks in total with participants going to all three campuses (Fontainebleau, France, Abu Dhabi, and Singapore). For the TIEMBA programme the physical time on campus represents 12 weeks in total with participants alternating between Tsinghua's campus in Beijing, China,[34] and INSEAD's campus in Singapore.
Both the GEMBA and TIEMBA programmes include a schedule of group coaching, 360-degree assessments and team activities designed to develop a leadership style, called the Leadership Development Programme.[35]
Executive Master in Coaching and Consulting for Change
The Executive Master in Coaching and Consulting for Change is a specialized master's degree. It provides a grounding in basic drivers of human behavior and the hidden dynamics of organizations. Integrating business education with a range of psychological disciplines, the programme enables participants to understand themselves and others at a fundamental level, which prepares them to assume roles in organisations, individual and organizational development and change management.[36][37]
Master in Finance
INSEAD's Master in Finance (MFin) teaches participants finance and accounting skills on a par with those taught in an MBA programme, and also offers leadership and management perspectives. The program is offered in a modular format over a 20-month period to allow professionals to study while continuing to work. Participants take time off from work for each of the six modules (2–3 weeks each) to take classes on campus, and continue working in between.[38]
PhD programme
The INSEAD PhD in Management is a doctoral degree in business to prepare students for a career in academia. It requires four to five years of full-time study - the first two years devoted to coursework, while from the third and fourth (or sometimes fifth) years dedicated to research and dissertation.[39] Students have the option to start their studies on either the Asia (Singapore) or Europe (France) campus,[40] and do an exchange in North America (USA) through the INSEAD-Wharton Alliance.[41] There are eight areas of specialization: Accounting, Decision Sciences, Entrepreneurship, Finance, Marketing, Organisational Behavior, Strategy, and Technology and Operations Management.[42] INSEAD offers fellowships, whereby students receive full tuition fee waiver, annual stipend and research support funding.[43]
Master in Management (MIM)
This 14 to 16-month programme has an innovative learning approach with an applied problem-solving orientation. It aims to empower the next generation of well-rounded, agile-thinking and innovative individuals who are ready to make a positive impact in today's society.
Executive education
INSEAD holds both company/firm specific and open enrolment executive education programmes at its locations in Europe, Asia, the Middle East and North America, as well as in partnership with corporate universities. Participants usually come from senior or top management, with many years of experience within their company or industry and younger 'high-potentials' identified as being key in succession strategies within their companies. Approximately 12,000 executives from over 125 countries undertake courses or programmes at INSEAD each year.[44]
In 2011, INSEAD launched an Executive Certificate in Global Management which is a formal recognition awarded to participants who complete at least three INSEAD global management and leadership programmes within a four-year period.[45]
Rankings and reputation
Business school rankings | |
---|---|
Worldwide overall | |
QS[46] | 2 |
Worldwide MBA | |
Business Insider[47] | 3 |
Economist[48] | 22 |
Financial Times[49] | 3 |
INSEAD is consistently ranked among the world's top business schools. Its MBA program has been ranked 1st globally in 2016 and 2017 in the Financial Times Global MBA Ranking, and 2nd in the 2018 ranking.[50] The dual degree Executive MBA with Tsinghua University is ranked 1st globally by the Financial Times. Moreover, INSEAD's standalone Global Executive MBA is ranked 7th in the same ranking.[51] INSEAD is ranked 1st globally in the CEO World Magazine 2017 ranking of the Best Business Schools in the World.
INSEAD has the second highest number of MBA alumni holding Chief Executive Officer positions in 2015 in the Financial Times Global 500, which is composed of the world's largest companies by market capitalization.[52]
In 2015, PitchBook Data ranked INSEAD 1st outside the US and 5th globally for the number of MBA alumni receiving venture capital funding, with over $6.1B raised. And, in 2016, the school's MBA program was ranked 5th worldwide for social and environmental impact by Corporate Knights magazine.[53]
In April 2019, INSEAD was furthermore ranked as best global business school by CEOWORLD magazine.[54]
In November 2019, INSEAD TIEMBA Programme was ranked as Nr.9 and GEMBA was ranked as Nr.19 in FT EMBA Ranking.[55] The Financial Times Rankings 2019 gave INSEAD the fifth place in Open Executive Education.[56]
Partnerships and alliances
INSEAD has exchange programmes with:
- Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania (alliance - launched in 2001)[57][58][59]
- Kellogg School of Management (MBA exchange programme - launched in 2010)[60]
- Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University in Washington, D.C. (dual-degree MA and MBA program - launched in 2011)[61]
- Tsinghua University (dual Executive MBA programme - launched in 2006)[62][63]
- CEIBS (China Europe International Business School) (Executive Education programme - launched in 2012, MBA exchange launched in 2013)[64]
- Sorbonne University (created in 2012 with INSEAD as a founding partner)[65]
- Art Center College of Design (launched in 2015)[66]
- Teachers College, Columbia University (launched in 2014)[67]
- HOUYI Institute of Advanced Education[68] - Post EMBA-INSEAD – Future Business Leadership Programme
Research
Centres of excellence
INSEAD has 15 research centres conducting research in different business and geographical areas. These include:
- Centre for Decision Making and Risk Analysis (CDMRA)[69]
- Emerging Markets Institute[70]
- Healthcare Management Initiative[71]
- INSEAD Africa Initiative[72]
- INSEAD Blue Ocean Strategy Institute[73]
- INSEAD Centre for Entrepreneurship (ICE)[74]
- INSEAD Corporate Governance Initiative[75]
- INSEAD eLab[76]
- INSEAD European Competitiveness Initiative[77]
- INSEAD Global Leadership Centre (IGLC)[78]
- INSEAD Global Private Equity Initiative (GPEI)[79]
- INSEAD Innovation and Policy Initiative (IIPI)[80]
- INSEAD Social Innovation Centre[81]
- INSEAD Social Science Research Centre (ISSRC)[82]
- INSEAD-Wharton Center for Global Research and Education[83]
- Learning Innovation Centre[84]
- Wendel International Centre for Family Enterprise[85]
- Women@INSEAD[86]
Teaching methods
Teaching methods at INSEAD include case studies, lectures, peer-to-peer learning, tutorials, group work, simulations and role-plays.
Case studies
The case method is largely used in the classroom as a teaching method. Business case studies authored by INSEAD professors are the second most widely used in classrooms by business schools globally, after Harvard Business School's case studies.
The business cases that have been designed at INSEAD have received many awards,[87] are made available in case clearing houses, and are used by many other business schools.
Business simulation games
Business simulation games are used by INSEAD. Many of them have been designed by INSEAD faculties, and used in many institutions, including:[88]
Innovation in education
A number of researches and initiatives are conducted at INSEAD to incorporate innovative learning approaches.
Centers conduct research in learning technologies and approaches such as:
- INSEAD CALT (the Centre of Advanced Learning Technologies)[91] has been involved in many research projects, and in particular projects funded by the research programmes from the European Commission on approaches such as business simulations, or learning communities.
- INSEAD Learning Innovation Centre[92] was funded to managing innovation in INSEAD programme design and delivery. For instance, INSEAD Learning Innovation Centre has introduced the use of the Second Life virtual world as an education tool.[93]
- INSEAD eLab[94] is the INSEAD center that connects research sponsors and external collaborators interested in the area of big data and data analytics with INSEAD's expertise in this broad area. INSEAD eLab conducts research and supports teaching focused on data analytics business solutions, tools, frameworks, and research insights that can help academics and practitioners better capitalise on the vast opportunities the "world of data" creates. To achieve this, the centre involves INSEAD faculty with specific domain expertise (e.g. in marketing, economics, operations, or finance), senior researchers from different fields, engineers and data scientists, and collaborators from other academic institutions as well as the private sector. The centre also uses state-of-the-art data analytics and collaborative software development platforms, which enable both advanced data analytics approaches and seamless collaboration within INSEAD as well as with other institutions and sponsors.
Notable People
INSEAD currently has nine F500 leaders.[95] The Alumni Association was founded by a group of alumni in 1961, and works in close partnership with INSEAD to provide services to the global INSEAD alumni community of 46,000+ members in 171 countries.[96] Many are members of the INSEAD International Alumni Association, which has 46 national alumni associations.[97]
In addition to the national associations, INSEAD alumni have formed clubs and groups dedicated to specific industries and activities.[98] These include the Hubert Society, Energy Club,[99] INSEAD Healthcare Alumni Network[100] and Salamander Golf Society.[101]
- Jusuf Kalla, two-time Vice President of Indonesia.
- Lucy Quist, Managing Director - Technology Transformation, Morgan Stanley.
- Johann Schneider-Ammann, Former President of Swiss Confederation.
- Najib Mikati, billionaire businessman and former Prime Minister of Lebanon.
- Börje Ekholm, current CEO of Ericsson
- Perry Lim, Chief of Defense Forces of Singapore
- Bill Morneau, Finance Minister of Canada
- Mamuka Bakhtadze, 13th Prime Minister of Georgia
- President and COO of Ayala Corporation
- Wopke Hoekstra, incumbent Finance Minister of Netherlands
- Eric Wiebes, incumbent Minister of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy of Netherlands
- Muriel Penicaud, French Minister of Labor
- William Hague, Former British First Secretary of State and Leader of House of Commons
- Peter Fudakowski, Academy Award Winner.
- Meera Sanyal, Former CEO of Royal Bank of Scotland, India
- Tidjane Thiam, Former CEO, Credit Suisse
- Henry Engelhardt, Founder, Admiral Group
- Philip Hampton, Chairman, J Sainsbury; Former Chairman, Royal Bank of Scotland Group
- Andrew Large, Former Deputy Governor, Bank of England
- Paul Marshall, Co-founder and Chairman, Marshall Wace
- António Horta Osório, CEO, Lloyds Banking Group
- Miguel Pais do Amaral, Entrepreneur, Quifel Holdings
- Huw van Steenis, Head of European Financials Services Research, Morgan Stanley
- Driss Ben-Brahim, Special Situations, GLG Partners
- Niall Wass COO at Wonga.com[102]
- Andrea Orcel, CEO, Banco Santander
- Jessica Uhl, CFO, Royal Dutch Shell
- Samir Arora, CEO & Chairman, NetObjects
- Paul Desmarais, Jr., Chairman and Co-CEO, Power Corporation of Canada
- Adam Goldstein, Former CEO, Royal Caribbean International
- Baron Robert Gillespie of Blackhall, OBE (born 1947), industrialist and author
- Philippe Harache, Former deputy CEO, Eurocopter
- Franz Humer, Chairman, Diageo
- Marius Kloppers,Former CEO, BHP Billiton
- Sebastian James, CEO, Boots UK
- Gary Wang, Founder and Former CEO Tudou
- Sam Laidlaw, CEO, Centrica plc
- Helge Lund, former CEO, Statoil and Aker Kværner, CEO, BG Group
- Sir Lindsay Owen-Jones, Former Chairman and current non-executive chairman, L'Oreal
- Antoine Rostand, President Schlumberger Business Consulting
- Kevin P. Ryan, Co-Founder & Former CEO, DoubleClick, CEO, Gilt Groupe
- Lord Simon of Highbury, Former Chairman and CEO, BP
- Roustam Tariko, Founder & President, Russian Standard
- Noel Tata, Managing Director, Tata International
- Tom Adams, Former Chairman & CEO, Rosetta Stone Inc.
- Erik Wachtmeister, Founder, aSmallWorld
- Jeff Goldstein, President, PriceGrabber
- Fernando Zobel de Ayala, President & COO, Ayala Corporation
- Peter Záboji, angel investor and entrepreneur
- Carolyn Fairbairn, Director-General, Confederation of British Industry
- Egil Hogna , President & CEO, Sapa Group
- Bernard Broermann, Founder, Asklepios Kliniken
- Joshua Oigara, CEO, KCB Group Limited
- Finn Rausing, Co-Owner, Tetra Laval
- Antoine Arnault, CEO, Berluti, and Chairman, Loro Piana
- Said Darwazah, CEO and Chairman, Hikma Pharmaceuticals
- Luca Desiata, CEO, SOGIN
- Niels Christiansen, CEO, LEGO
- Börje Ekholm, CEO, Ericsson
- Barney Harford, COO, Uber
- Antony Blinken, 71st United States Secretary of State
- Bob van Dijk, CEO, Naspers
- Nicolas Brusson, Co-Founder and CEO, BlaBlaCar
- Bill Morneau, Finance Minister, Government of Canada
- Will Hutton, Principal, Hertford College, Oxford
- Jan Jananayagam, Co-Founder, Tamils Against Genocide
- Jussi Pajunen, Mayor of Helsinki
- Jusuf Kalla, Vice President of The Republic of Indonesia
- Wolf Klinz, Member of the European Parliament
- Conor Lenihan, former Irish Minister of State
- Najib Mikati, Prime Minister of Lebanon
- Elena Panaritis, Member of Greek parliament
- Sam Rainsy, Member of Parliament of Cambodia
- Tioulong Saumura, Member of Parliament of Cambodia
- Prince Jean of Luxembourg
- Prince Friso of Orange-Nassau
- Johann Schneider-Ammann, 96th President of the Swiss Confederation
- Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands
- Perry Lim, Chief of Defence Force (Singapore)
- Jovita Carranza, Treasurer of the United States (Incumbent)
- Wopke Hoekstra, Dutch Minister of Finance
- Lucy Quist, President of African Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Ghana
- Colin Dyer, CEO, Jones Lang LaSalle
- Philip Hampton, Chairman, J Sainsbury former Group Finance Director, Lloyds TSB, BT Group, and British Steel
- Arthur Sadoun, CEO, Publicis groupe
- Mark Read, CEO, WPP
- Yves-Michel Marti, pioneer in Competitive Intelligence, CEO of The Baconian Company and Magentine
- Peter Fudakowski, 2006 Academy Award Winner for Best Foreign Film
- Andrew Noble, 2010 Winter Olympics Alpine Skiing
- Chaitanya Kalipatnapu, Co-Founder, Eruditus Executive Education
See also
- Blue Ocean Strategy - a book and strategy concept developed by INSEAD faculty
- Business school
- Executive education
- Management science
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- Betfair insider: Niall Wass macroaxis.com, 2013.
External links
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