Financial Times publishes “European Business Schools 2020” ranking
@ESCP_bs ranked 8th European Business Schools by @FinancialTimes
The Financial Times has published its “European Business Schools 2020” ranking today (7 Dec), which ranks the top 90 graduate business schools in Europe.
ESCP Business School ranks 8th, which is an increase of 6 places from last year.
ESCP, therefore, returns to the Top 10 management schools in Europe, while ranking 4th in France, 2nd in the UK, Italy and Spain, and 1st in Germany and Poland.
ESCP ranks highly across the board, with most notably 2nd place for its Master in Finance, 7th for its EMBA, and 6th for its Master in Management.
Professor Frank Bournois, Executive President & Dean, adds “This fantastic result underlines the hard work carried out by the school to achieve and maintain excellence in all our programmes, in terms of academic content, faculty research, and student experience.”
The business school is also incredibly diverse, with 83% of its faculty being international, and 100% of its faculty having a doctorate. This is invaluable for the institution as it continues to teach students how to thrive in an ever more global business environment.
With this ranking, ESCP shows that it can tackle the global challenges related to the post-covid world (climate emergency, digital transformation…) in the best possible conditions.
NEOMA Business School is ranked 39th, an increase of 11 places from last year.
Among the French schools, the school is ranked 8th, gaining two places from last year.
These ranking results are based on the performance of several programmes including the MBA, Executive MBA and Masters in Management, as well as two rankings relating to Executive Education – Custom and Open programmes.
NEOMA’s Master in Management (PGE) programme ranked 23rd in Europe, notably appearing in the Top 5 in France. The school’s tailor-made (intra) programmes ranked 37th in Europe, and the Executive MBA ranked 48th in Europe.
“This result is a strong recognition of NEOMA’s excellence and materialises its ambition to be the innovative challenger of the biggest international Business Schools” says Delphine Manceau, Dean of NEOMA.
Responses