Sep 25, 2015 - markets via cross-border recruitment and offshore ... Development of eLearning Capabilities. ⢠⦠...
BUSINESS SCHOOL ACCREDITATION, QUALITY, AND GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS ULRICH HOMMEL, EFMD/EFMD GLOBAL NETWORK
HUMANE Seminar Toulouse / 25 September 2015
THE BUSINESS SCHOOL SECTOR
Institutional Forms • Faculties of Business / Management / Social Science vs. Schools of Business / Management • University-Based vs. Stand Alone • Public vs. Private Non-Profit (Foundation Owned) vs. Private ForProfit (Stock Market Listed or Privately Held) Commonalities
Differentiators
• Provision of credence good, mostly to one-time ‘buyers’ • Academic, peer-reviewed research, which informs teaching • Participation in ‘rankings game’ • Similar curricular structure and pedagogy
• Funding model (endowment-led, subsidy-led, tuition-led) and financial slack • Governance (collegiate, management-led) • Educational focus (preexperience vs. post-experience) • Relevance of academic traditions, values and myths HOMMEL / HUMANE Seminar
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THE MODERN BUSINESS SCHOOL – A SUCCESS STORY?
• > 13,000 business schools worldwide • rapid demand growth in Asia, benefiting also mature markets via cross-border recruitment and offshore provision • emergence of ‘multi-campus business schools’ with global reach • Western business schools maintaining broad range of off-campus (collaborative) provision strategies (e.g. dual/joint degrees, franchising, validation) • further expansion with new delivery models (MOOCS, SPOCS, blended learning formats, etc.)
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THE MODERN BUSINESS SCHOOL – A STORY OF FAILURE?
Thomas Sattelberger Former Member of the Management Board, Deutsche Telekom/Continental/Lufthansa Former Vice President, EFMD
“LARGE BUSINESS SCHOOLS ARE LIKE THE WALKING DEAD…”
(Spiegel Online, 9 February 2012)
Richard Lyons Dean, Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley
“…CONFIDENTLY PREDICTS THE DEMISE OF BUSINESS SCHOOLS” (HALF OF THE WORLD’S BUSINESS SCHOOLS WILL BE OUT OF BUSINESS IN 5 TO 10 YEARS)
(Financial Times, 10 April 2015)
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THE BUSINESS SCHOOL – IN SEARCH OF FINANCIAL SUSTAINABILITY?
Fiscal Austerity • Fiscal cut-backs lead to lower university budget allocations
• …and reduce funding for university-based business schools
• …while giving role of “cash cow” for parent university more prominence
Structural Change
Corporatization
• Geographical shifts in demand & • shifts of customer preferences (e.g. online provision) & • competitive market entry (non-degree cream skimming) &
• Rankings game and globalizations fosters push for growth
• …leads to investment pressures and surplus squeezes
• …while increasing quasi-fixed costs
• …which leads to increasingly volatile revenues
• leads to surplus squeeze
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MARKETIZATION/CORPORATIZATION OF MANAGEMENT EDUCATION • • • • • •
Privatization & Deregulation Competitive Market Entry (e.g. For-Profits) Demand Volatility Up Rising Student Mobility Shift to Online Learning … Revenues
• Campus Upgrade • eLearning Platforms • Multi-Campus Operations • …
Investments
Surplus/Loss
• Fiscal Cutbacks • Privatization • University Tax Increases • …
Costs • • • •
Faculty Expansion Hiring Star Researchers Development of eLearning Capabilities … HOMMEL / HUMANE Seminar
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THE ‘RANKINGS GAME’ Level 1 Accreditation (“Certifiers”)
Level 2 Ranking (“Trusters”)
Tier 1 Tier 2
Triple Crown
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
• Tournament-Style Competition • Collective Prisoners’ Dilemma?
EQUIS AACSB AMBA EPAS CEEMAN …
1. Institutional 2. Program 3. Open/Customized Exec Ed Ø FT, Business Week, Eduniversal, … HOMMEL / HUMANE Seminar
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DISRUPTIVE ROLE OF TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
Course Offerings
Technology Platform § § §
Quality Assurance
Management
The MOOC Model:
MOOC-based teaching represents team-based activity to achieve scalability. Long-Term Role: Talent Identification vs. Degree Provision? Fuzziness of Business School’s Institutional Boundaries?
The For-Profit Model: Program Managers
Course Design Faculty
Delivery Faculty HOMMEL / HUMANE Seminar
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PERFORMANCE ORIENTATION
Illustration: Academic Research § External measurement will increasingly dominate (e.g. Web of Science) - Indicators: Impact factors, citation indicators, collaboration statistics - Research rankings based on personalized researcher IDs - Internal performance review based on enriched research statistics § Performance pressures on business school faculty will increase significantly in the years to come § Erosion of academic tenure, rising importance of ‘offtrack profs’
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STAKEHOLDER-ORIENTATION AND IMPACT Illustration: Impact of Faculty Research § Affordability of academic research will become an issue for many business schools - up to 50% of faculty staff time to be funded - requires access to subsidies or high-margin activities § Monetization of academic research? - production of derivative outputs (partnerships with media companies, publishing houses, etc.) - more focus on practically relevant outputs - feeding into corporate learning units more pro-actively § Increasing role of research impact (e.g. UK) § Is research in the future mainly team-based? § Effect on open source nature of research, academic freedom
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THE INTERNATIONALLY NETWORKED BUSINESS SCHOOL • SKEMA model: foreign campus locations for educational service delivery (satellites) • IESE model: Full-scale business schools as affiliates • IE model: Large number of foreign offices (>25) as facilitators for student recruiting, program delivery, etc.
• INSEAD model: Full-scale campus operations spread around the globe
Main Campus
Satellite Campus/Local Office HOMMEL / HUMANE Seminar
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THE STRATEGICALLY NETWORKED BUSINESS SCHOOL
• Outsourcing of key functions (recruiting, admissions, placement, marketing, etc.)
• Shared joint ventures to build up strategic platforms
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SHAPE OF BUSINESS SCHOOL SECTOR IN THE FUTURE?
Premium Sector (ResearchBased) Premium Fringe (alliance-based, mixed research) Teaching-Focused Business Schools (also engaged in applied/industry research)
§ Greater reliance on operational revenues for financing § Greater performance volatility (risk taking and risk management) § Management layer in business school growing progressively § Nature of professorial work will change fundamentally (network facilitators/ operators)
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DISRUPTION AHEAD – THE (NAÏVE) ECONOMIC INTERPRETATION? “BACK TO VOCATIONALISM” ORGANIZATIONAL DIVERSITY
§ Disappearing financial slack “STUCK IN THE MIDDLE”
“FALLEN ANGELS”
§ Tournament-style competition § Risk management deficiencies § Corporatization of business schools
“MARKET SMART”
§ Leadership instability “BOILING FROGS”
§ Commodification of management education
“FAT & HAPPY”
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IS ROLE OF ACCREDITORS CHANGING?
§ How to accommodate new market entrants? § How to deal with rising institutional complexity (multicampus operations, collaborative provision)? § How to protect fundamental academic values (rather than acting as a barrier to entry and change)? § How to respond to the increasing fragmentation of educational provision?
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