New Articles

Top 7 Supply Chain Management M.B.A. Programs

employment supply

Top 7 Supply Chain Management M.B.A. Programs

U.S. News & World Report is out with another best Supply Chain Management M.B.A. Programs edition for 2023. Graduates go on to work in sectors as varied as food production to health care and these are the top 7 programs in the nation: 

  • Michigan State University (Broad)

The Eli Broad Graduate School of Management at Michigan State leads the nation in graduate degrees in supply chain management. The school is located in close proximity to an automotive hub – Detroit – and takes plenty advantage of the physical resources, expertise, and brain power at Fiat Chrysler, Ford, and General Motors. 

  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Sloan)

One of the most impressive facts from the Sloan School of Management is that 83.8% of graduates upon graduation are employed. The supply chain management/logistics program prepares graduates for a career not just locally, but abroad as well. MIT is known for its global focus so if a career abroad is of interest, Sloan is a wise choice. 

  • Arizona State University (W.P. Carey) 

Out west the W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State comes in number three. Carey is one of the largest business schools in the country with nearly 2,000 graduate students and 300 faculty. Within supply chain management/logistics, students can choose to pursue an M.B.A. either part or full-time as well as evening, executive, and online tracks. 

  • University of Tennessee – Knoxville (Haslam) 

While Haslam’s overall business offers are fewer than others on this list, the M.B.A. program leans heavily into supply chain management/logistics. Outside of the classroom students have access to organizations such as the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals, industry-specific boot camps as well as case competitions. There is also an executive M.B.A. specialization available in Global Supply Chain.  

  • Ohio State University (Fisher)

The Max M. Fisher College of Business is one of the more affordable in-state options in the country for an M.B.A. with a concentration in supply chain management/logistics. Ohio State offers a full and part-time program as well their popular executive program. By graduation, approximately 77% of graduates of the full-time program are gainfully employed. 

  • Carnegie Mellon University (Tepper)

The mini-semester system was pioneered at the Tepper School of Business – four quarters of 6.5-week classes. Not only is a production/operations management concentration available, but students can also earn a joint M.B.A./JD through the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.  

  • Pennsylvania State University – University Park (Smeal)

Rounding out the top 7 is another Pennsylvania school – the Smeal College of Business. Penn State is a large school with its pros and cons. The supply chain management/logistics concentration counts on a firm network of private sector partners state-wide and does a great job placing graduates in attractive positions upon graduation.  

University of South Carolina

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA’S INTERNATIONAL MBA PROGRAM RANKS SURPRISINGLY HIGH

Having grown up in a rural Utah community where cows outnumbered people, Ryan Nielsen quickly followed his high school graduation with two years as a Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints missionary crisscrossing bustling South Korea. 

The experience convinced Nielsen that his life’s focus should be international as opposed to local. He came back the U.S. to pursue an International MBA at the Darla Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina, where he undertook an immersion in China.

The International MBA was an opportunity to learn strategic thinking, operations, marketing and all the different aspects of business—with an added bonus close this his heart. “That my wife and newborn child could join me and share that experience was profound,” Nielsen says in Moore School promotional materials.

Before graduation, he learned about a leadership development program at the Bank of America. He applied, got accepted and remains with BofA as the vice president of Information Security in Charlotte, North Carolina, where he mitigates the global complexities of information security governance.

“Business school gave me direction,” Nielsen says now. “I didn’t really have a career before my MBA. I had jobs.”

He is not the only one who recognizes the superiority of the Moore School’s International MBA program. So does U.S. News & World Report, which places the program at the top of its 2020 list of the “10 Best Business Schools for an International MBA.” 

That’s impressive when you consider the University of South Carolina program placed ahead of such heavy hitters as the Harvard Business School, the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business and the University of California at Berkeley’s Haas School of Business. 

U.S. News & World Report gave the South Carolina program the edge because, “Moore offers a language track for its International MBA students, which includes an immersion experience in France, Germany or Mexico and requires students to develop foreign language skills.”

The full rankings follow:

1) University of South Carolina (Moore)

2) (Tie) Harvard Business School

2) (Tie) Georgetown University (McDonough)

4) New York University (Stern)

5) University of Pennsylvania (Wharton)

6) Columbia University, New York 

7) University of Michigan – Ann Arbor (Ross)

8) (Tie) George Washington University

8) (Tie) Florida International University

10) University of California – Berkeley (Haas)

What is also amazing about Moore School’s finish is the program ranks much lower on a prominent list of the best global MBA programs around the world—a list that ranks the other schools on the U.S. News & World Report collection much higher.

Global Trade has in the past shared the rankings of QS (Quacquarelli Symonds Limited), the world’s leading global higher education analyst. The QS portfolio includes its flagship website, TopUniversities.com.

What follows are the top 10 on QS Global MBA Rankings 2020: 

1) (Tie) Penn (Wharton)

1) (Tie) Stanford University

3) (Tie) INSEAD, Fontainebleu Singapore

3) (Tie) MIT (Sloan)

5) Harvard Business School

6) London Business School

7) HEC Paris

8) University of Chicago (Booth)

9) University of California – Berkeley (Haas)

10) Northwestern University (Kellogg)

The Moore School does not land on a particular number in the QS Global MBA Rankings but within a range: 141-150. That places the program lower, according to the QS brain trust, than the University of North Carolina (Kenan-Flagfler) at No. 57 and North Carolina State University (Jenkins) at No. 95.

The snub and Carolina border wars continue: Business Insider in September published the top 50 schools from the QS Global MBA Rankings 2021. The University of South Carolina does not make the cut, but Duke University’s Fuqua program in Durham, North Carolina, does, at No. 21.

Here the top 10 for 2021, according to QS:

1) Stanford Graduate School of Business

2) Penn (Wharton)

3) MIT (Sloan)

4) Harvard Business School

5) HEC Paris

6) INSEAD, Singapore

7) London Business School

8) Columbia Business School

9) IE Business School, Madrid, Spain

10) University of California – Berkeley (Haas)

_____________________________________________________________________

U.S. News & World Report 10 Best Business Schools for an International MBA: usnews.com/education/best-graduate-schools/top-business-schools/

QS Global MBA Rankings 2020: topuniversities.com/university-rankings/mba-rankings/global/2020 

Business Insider The 50 Best MBA Programs in the World: businessinsider.com/best-mba-programs-in-the-world-2020-9#10-uc-berkeley-haas-grads-earn-an-average-post-graduation-salary-of-130k-to-140k-41

learning

How Lifelong Learning Is Becoming A New Version Of The MBA

When higher education looks back on 2020 in decades to come, the year of the pandemic could be viewed as a turning point for MBAs and other advanced degrees.

COVID-19 forced a nationwide experiment in online learning, and one lesson stemming from that experiment maybe that furthering your education doesn’t necessarily need to mean paying high tuition to earn a formal post-graduate degree.

“We all need to be lifelong learners if we hope to achieve our goals and lead a fulfilling life,” says Kimberly Roush, founder of All-Star Executive Coaching (www.allstarexecutivecoaching.com) and co-author of Who Are You… When You Are Big?

“But that can mean many things, and because of the pandemic I think it’s become even more clear that the ways we approach educating ourselves don’t need to be stuck in the notions from the past of how learning takes place.”

Harvard’s and Columbia’s business schools are already adding certificates and lifelong learning to their programs. Instead of immersing themselves in a degree program for a compact period of time, students have the option to stretch their learning out over years, latching on to what meets their current needs.

That kind of approach fits well with the goals and lifestyles of many business leaders, says Roush. She offers a three-month group-coaching program for executives in transition called “Back In the Game,” which provides business leaders with a chance to continue learning and honing skills to help reignite careers thrown off track by the pandemic.

Roush has advice for those who want to keep adding to their knowledge base throughout their careers, whether that’s done through a certificate program, a one-time online class, coaching sessions, or a more formal degree:

Think deeply about yourself and your goals. Allow yourself the time and space to reflect and get off autopilot so you can be deliberate and intentional as you move forward, Roush says. “We tend to be all about drive and action,” she says. “Reflecting on ourselves is something that often gets overlooked. In some cases, people don’t have the tools to do it effectively.”

Strive to be a learner, not a knower. Some people are “knowers” and others are “learners,“ Roush says. “Knowers feel compelled to know the answer, a sign of an insecure ego,” she says. “In today’s world, of course, it’s impossible for any one person, or any one leader, to know it all. Knowers operate more out of control than out of curiosity. They do not really lead so much as they manage.” Lifelong learners, on the other hand, have a predisposition to be curious. “They have a healthy ego,” she says, “so they have no problem saying, ‘I don’t know the answer, but let’s figure it out.’ ”

Recognize that your joy for learning can impact others. When business leaders are learners, this creates more of a partnership approach with employees, who feel empowered as a result. “The focus is on working together,” Roush says. “It all stems from that natural curiosity. By asking ‘what’ and ‘how,’ leaders encourage more conversation—and more learning by everyone.”

Understand that self-improvement doesn’t always involve major change. Roush has worked with many executives who made adjustments in their careers, but those adjustments need not be dramatic.  “Often, people have been deliberate about their career choice and love their field; they just have gotten caught up in a part of it that they don’t like,” she says. “Sometimes, it’s just a matter of getting back to their roots and remembering what they love about their job and allowing themselves to focus far more on that. You don’t necessarily have to make the big right turn and completely change what you’re doing. You’re not necessarily on the wrong path; you may just have hit a rough stretch or don’t know exactly where you are.”

“Great coaches are always still learning too,” Roush says. “I’m constantly looking for new opportunities to learn and grow and I get to learn from every person I coach – we learn together.  One thing I always want to do is spread the word about the power that resides within each of us if we reach for our potential.”

____________________________________________________________

Kimberly Roush is the founder of All-Star Executive Coaching (www.allstarexecutivecoaching.com), which specializes in coaching C-level and VP-level executives from Fortune 100 companies to solo entrepreneurs. She also is co-author of Who Are You… When You Are Big? Roush, a former national partner with a “Big 4” public accounting firm, brings more than 30 years of business experience to her coaching including extensive work with C-suite executives, boards of directors, and audit committees. She offers a program called Back In the Game (BIG), which is a three-month group coaching program for executives in transition. Roush also is a keynote speaker and leadership facilitator, and is a Charter Member of ForbesSpeakers.