As discarded cheap, disposable clothing clogs the environment, the business model is coming under pressure. Probe the arguments with this ‘instant teaching case study’
Alumni earn $98,000 three years after course completion, latest FT data show
Finance masters courses teach importance of communication and teamwork
Tech lay-offs drive young people looking for a high-paying business career back towards the financial industry
Four leading finance professors discuss best practice, successful innovations, and important concepts and themes
Tools are set to make some skills redundant and free up time for more value-added tasks
Prof Winfried Ruigrok of St Gallen university examines the contentious issue of CEO remuneration
How this year’s league table was compiled
Why is the consumer goods group backpedalling on responsible-business targets? Explore the issues with this ‘instant case study’
Competitive haste raises questions about safe development of the technology. Explore the issues with this dean’s case study
A student facilities ‘arms race’ is driving investment in boutique hotel-style facilities
Protests over Gaza at the New York university have led to divisions and arrests. History professor Mark Mazower gives a first-hand account
How to mitigate fast fashion’s effect on the planet forms Part 5 of a series on business-school-style case studies about sustainability dilemmas. Read selected FT articles and answer questions on environmental, governance and social obligations
The FT’s 2024 ranking of the world’s top masters in finance programmes with analysis on the latest trends, data and key findings
Career blocks remain stubbornly in place. Plus: profile of Tina McKenzie, Northern Irish businesswoman; Elaine Bedell on leading the Southbank Centre; graduates and the AI tech boom; when grandma juggles working and childcare; cross-company mentoring
A growing number of organisations are encouraging and recruiting talent without degrees
The FT’s latest rankings of custom and open-enrolment programmes. Plus: focus on AI; development for female leaders; managing multigenerational workforces; alternative providers
How the twin rankings of custom and open-enrolment programmes were compiled
Which schools topped the tables for custom and open programmes — and what the data tells us
Executive courses are tackling tensions in workforces often spanning boomers and Gen Z
Human intelligence shaped organisations but it is no longer the only form at work
Business schools move to help leaders grasp technology’s implications ‘beyond the hype’
Data analysis reveals the strength of ESG teaching, median pricing and senior faculty involvement
Programmes developed with indigenous communities reflect cultures and priorities
New short-course tables show some reversal of post-Covid insistence on in-person training
Alternative providers are taking a big slice of the lucrative executive education market
Diversity is increasingly embedded in broader programmes, alongside courses for women
Many challenges remain before the fuel can play a full role in decarbonisation. Explore the issues with this ‘instant teaching case study’
An effect of the new technology ‘doesn’t have to be the removal’ of teachers from the classroom
VC money may be further away but regional start-up centres bank on local strengths to attract entrepreneurs
How should western policymakers use subsidies and tariffs to encourage drivers to switch? Probe the arguments with this ‘instant teaching case study’
This year’s FT ranking of courses comes as business schools and other higher education providers seek to meet rising demand for cheaper, more flexible and blended programmes from a broader cohort of students
Teaching case study: IP rebranding and the role of the digital ecosystem in adding brand value
How the Online MBA ranking of the top 10 programmes was compiled
Blended online MBA programmes and new platforms are enabling the collaboration deemed vital to learning
Lower costs and easier access fuel expansion in digital-only course providers
Undisclosed digital trials can affect workers, users, and society in ways that are ill-understood, academics warn
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