Within each category are several subcategories, which are detailed in the table below. Programs are ranked on two broad measures: personal development/educational experience and career development. Alumni also reported their pre-EMBA and current salaries, from which average increases could be calculated. Around 8,000 of these questionnaires were completed, and from them the Economist gleaned the more quantitative measures, such as a rating of classmates, faculty, facilities and the like. The second questionnaire was circulated to current students and alumni from schools’ last three graduating classes. One questionnaire was filled out by business schools and included more quantitative measures, such as details of students and faculty, the number of overseas assignments required and statistics on alumni. The Economist collected data using two web-based questionnaires between March and May 2018. As long as the program was part-time and enrolled students with significantly more work experience than those on their full-time MBAs, they could declare it an EMBA and take part in the ranking. The Economist therefore allowed the schools themselves to classify their programs. There is some difficulty in defining exactly what constitutes an EMBA. Schools that operate a single EMBA across several of their own campuses (such as Chicago’s EMBA, which is taken in Chicago, London and Hong Kong) are treated as a single program. Joint degrees that are separate from schools’ standalone EMBAs are ranked individually.
The Economist has invited all the schools that are included in its annual full-time ranking to take part.
A total of 7 of the ten programs this year were also among the ten best in 2015. Yet, while some things do change, some stay the same. Two of the top ten are new entrants, including the University of California (US), Berkeley’s Haas Business School (US), and IMD Business School (Switzerland). Chicago Booth (US) teaches its EMBA at campuses in Chicago, London and Hong Kong. Three of the top ten programs are run jointly by schools in different countries, or continents: UCLA Anderson School of Management (US) and National University of Singapore Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University (US) and the WHU-Otto Beisheim School of Management in Germany and Kellogg's joint program with York University's Schulich School of Business in Canada. This global outlook extends beyond the nationality of students enrolled on EMBA programs. A quarter of Yale's class of 2019 are from outside the United States, hailing from 16 different countries. Yale's program is emblematic of the globe-trotting nature of executive education. On both, Yale excels, ranking first out of 65 programs for pre-MBA salary, quality of faculty, rating of culture and classmates, while the helpfulness of its alumni network was also thought of highly by students.Ĭheck out: 2017 Best US Business Schools Rankings
Yale School of Management (US) tops the ranking this year, up from tenth in 2015. These pricey, part-time courses for experienced managers are more popular than ever. This is the Economist's third ranking of executive MBA (EMBA) programs.