[email protected]
Vienna, Austria
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
Community
Apply
  • MBA Programs
    • Online MBA
    • Online Executive MBA
  • Study Programs
    • International Business Administration
      • Language Department
    • International Management and Leadership
    • Strategic Finance and Business Analytics
  • Student Affairs
    • International
    • Jewish Environs
    • Career Center
      • Job Market
    • LBS Student Union
    • Student Elections
    • Diversity
    • Alumni
  • Innovation Center
  • Apply
  • Student Services
    • Academic Calendar
    • Scholarship
    • Academic Honors – Certificate of Excellence in the German Language Awards
    • Academic Honors
    • Library
    • Research
  • About Us
    • Founders
    • People
      • Executive Management
      • Council
      • International Business Administration
      • International Management & Leadership
      • Strategic Finance & Business Analytics
      • Online MBA & Executive MBA
      • Admission Office
      • Research Office
    • LBS Vision & Mission
    • Strategy
    • Quality Management
      • Educational Training Contract
    • Data Protection

Empowering Tomorrow’s Innovators: LBS Partners with Dr. Omri Bergman (Google) and Venturecake to Accelerate Student Startups

Lauder Business School (LBS) is proud to announce a strategic collaboration with Dr. Omri Bergman, Head of Strategy & Operations CEE at Google Vienna and Venturecake, Austria’s first co-owned startup accelerator and innovation platform.

Recent Posts

  • Reaching the next level of distinction and raising the bar again: LBS celebrates its membership in the AACSB, reaffirming our commitment to global excellence.
  • Hats off to our 2022 Bachelor’s cohort!
  • Empowering Tomorrow’s Innovators: LBS Partners with Dr. Omri Bergman (Google) and Venturecake to Accelerate Student Startups
  • From Uniforms to Boardrooms: Investments, Leadership, and Finance with Johannes Koller, Managing Director at Unicredit Bank Austria and Schoellerbank
  • Banking on the Future: MMag. Gerda Holzinger-Burgstaller, CEO and CFO of Erste Bank Oesterreich at LBS

Recent Comments

  • izmir escort bayan on Hello world!
  • atasehir elektrikci on Hello world!
  • petek temizligi on Hello world!
  • yalova bayan escort on Hello world!
  • kayseri Escort on Hello world!

Archives

  • August 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • November 2023
  • July 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • February 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • June 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • November 2012

Categories

  • Career Center Events
  • Career Center News
  • Completed Research
  • Events
  • Events featured
  • Events Feed
  • Fireplace talks
  • Home
  • Home Featured
  • Home Feed
  • Innovation Center
  • International Office
  • Internships
  • Jobs
  • Jobs for Graduates and Alumni
  • Jobs for Students, Graduates and Alumni
  • News
  • Program Activities
  • Research
  • Traineeships
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

logo

Address: Hofzeile 18-20, 1190 Vienna
Email: [email protected]
Admissions: [email protected]
Phone:+43 1 369 1818

Academic Coordination
Monday through Thursday:
9.00 – 15.00
Resident Permit Services:
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday:
9.30 – 17.00
Friday:
9.30 – 13.30
About Admission

LBS

Lauder Business School

Hofzeile 18-20
1190 Vienna
[email protected]
[email protected]
+43 1 369 1818

 

Office hours:
Mon – Thurs: 10:00-16:00
Fri: 11:00 – 13:00

Study Programs
International
Career Center
Innovation Center
Vision & Mission
News
Apply
Impressum
Alumni
Community
Say Hello
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Follow
  • Vienna
  • Emergency Numbers
  • Partners
  • Data Protection
  • Impressum

© 2025 All right reserved.

© Lauder Business School | Web Development By Insticore

Accessibility by WAH
Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Have written a high quality master theses with their supervisor’s assistance;
  • Have improved the theoretical and empirical parts of their thesis in line with their supervisor’s comments and guidance;
  • Got feedback from an independent thesis reviewer through a double-blind procedure and also implemented it.

 

 

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • improve their understanding of financial markets, securities and the investment process by becoming active participants in the markets;
  • develop the ability to analyze investments and make investment decisions,
  • understand how to apply security analysis techniques in real-functioning capital markets; and
  • gain practical experience in trading securities.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Have a good understanding of the core functions of a Bank’s Treasury Department
  • Know how to prepare a liquidity plan,
  • Work out solutions for specific business challenges, e.g. liquidity gap,
  • Be familiar with financial market instruments,
  • Be able to identify, analyze and measure relevant risks (liquidity, interest rate, F/X),
  • Apply risk management tools/strategies,
  • Be familiar with regulatory guidelines (liquidity, interest rate)
  • Get an insight into Asset-Liability Management (ALM)
  • Understand how a bank is set up and run

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Know the content of the ESRS and understand the context of the relevant legal frameworks
  • Have a good understanding of sustainable finance and its stakeholders,
  • Be familiar with relevant regulatory guidelines,
  • Understand sustainable finance instruments (financial and capital markets),
  • Learn how to issue a bond/select an investment product,
  • Identify quality standards,
  • Be able to analyze and measure sustainable risks,
  • Apply adequate business strategies,
  • Have a broad and practical range of knowledge on managerial problems related to Sustainability Management,
  • Gain an understanding of patterns in Sustainable Business Model design,
  • Know, understand, and reproduce key concepts and patterns in Sustainable Business Model Design
  • Apply the concepts/take-aways to business/economics-related settings in diverse economic contexts,
  • Reflect on these concepts and their managerial and everyday implications,
  • Understand the relevance and the implications of the business cases discussed in class,
  • Know and understand biases and the implicit contributing factors to Sustainability Management, be able to reflect and elaborate on their relevance and ways to overcome them,
  • Identify and explain historical context, theory, processes, and practices of Sustainability Management taking global perspectives on concepts, instruments, and stakeholders into account

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Do extensive research in the specific field,
  • Gather and filter the appropriate data for the project,
  • Select and apply appropriate analytical tools and concepts,
  • Interpret and evaluate the results,
  • Employ scientific research methods in small- to medium scale quantitative and/or qualitative studies,
  • Create strategies in order to resolve business- and economics-related problems,
  • Critically reflect upon the takeaways of a project/analysis in light of the limitations,
  • Reflect upon the analyses,
  • Conduct a major project (project management skills) individually,
  • Organize communication processes with numerous stakeholders,
  • Present the research project in a focused, professional and convincing manner,
  • Solve a major business problem for a renowned business company.

 

Upon successful completion of the course:

  • Students should be aware of the significance of scientific work in general, and proposal writing in particular.
  • Students should have acquired a thorough understanding of the formal and technical requirements of the research proposal for the Master Thesis.
  • Students should be able to translate these requirements into written assignments of the course
  • Students should be able to translate these requirements into their proposals
  • Students will have discussed best-practices and potential problems based on the presented assignments
  • Students should be in a position to synthesize the knowledge acquired through practice, discussion and feedback in a Master Thesis proposal.
  • Students should be able to apply the acquired knowledge in order to accomplish a Master Thesis.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Know the different international rating agency criteria for banks and regional governments;
  • Grasp the relevant rating factors, and understand how they are interconnected and influence each other;
  • Judge the ratings of different sectors, such as for example sovereign ratings or the relationship between bank ratings and regional government ratings.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Interpret statistical information correctly;
  • Be able to generate basic R code;
  • Be able to implement R in generating a meaningful and correct statistical output;
  • Use basic and advanced concepts of statistics to make correct inferences and conclusions.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • describe the main parties involved in international trade and export transactions and can identify and classify the risks involved in these type of transactions
  • distinguish between the different main payment instruments in international trade (e.g., documentary collection, letters of credit), can explain the underlying process flows of each instrument and can name the main documents requested in international trade
  • describe the main risk mitigation instruments in international trade (e.g., guarantees, credit insurance) and can illustrate how these instruments are applied in international practice
  • distinguish between non-structured and structured trade finance instruments (e.g., Factoring, Forfaiting, Supply Chain Finance, Pre-Export Finance, Inventory Finance, Borrowing Base Finance), can explain the specific functionalities of each instrument and are able to give examples of their application in an international context
  • explain the role of ECAs (Export Credit Agencies) in an international context and can apply the Export Guarantee and Financing Schemes offered by the Austrian OeKB
  • describe the basic characteristics of a project financing structure, can explain the main purpose of such a structure, and can illustrate the role of the involved parties

 

Upon completion of the course, students are expected to:

  • understand the principles of integrated software systems in general and ERP systems to understand how financial elements in a business organization inter-related
  • understand and maintain transactional and master data in ERP systems,
  • execute finance and controlling related tasks in a S/4HANA system.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  •  Apply and interpret basic concepts of descriptive statistics;
  • Apply probability theory to managerial decision analysis and interpret the results;
  • Explain and apply basic inferential statistics and interpret the results.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Understand consumer behavior.
  • Understand firm behavior.
  • Understand the assumptions underlying these concepts
  • Understand how to apply economic principles to a range of policy questions.
  • Use economic tools to analyze economic policies.
  • Understand fiscal policy and inflation

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • Understand, apply, and replicate Investment Banking Basics.
  • Identify the key service lines under investment banking.
  • Comprehend the strategic rationale behind Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A).
  • Learn about the Sell-side M&A Process
  • Study the Buy-side M&A Process.
  • POstulate post-acquisition considerations.
  • Comprehend selected Accounting and Legal Aspects of M&A.

 

 

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • have broad and practical understanding of the asset management industry and its participants
  • have a broad and practical understanding of the foundations of investment selection and management.
  • create and “pitch” a global equity portfolio
  • maintain, update and report on a global equity portfolio
  • analyse and explain its performance inof a portfolio
  • know how to research business data and fundamentals, and apply this to analyse the risk and return characteristics of an investment
  • be prepared for subsequent courses related to investment and asset management in their Masters programme.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Have an overview of the different sub-fields of Data Science,
  • Be able to perform data cleansing on heterogeneous data sets,
  • Be able to identify different architectures and select accordingly,
  • Be able to identify appropriate models for the problem at hand,
  • Be able to perform adequate business analysis to specify the necessary requirements,
  • Be able to suggest appropriate reporting environments to visualize information from data,
  • Be able to construct a reporting environment that tells a business story with data.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to :

  • Have a comprehensive understanding of EU financial law
  • Be knowledgeable of the EU bank regulatory framework
  • Understand the core principles of financial contracts and financial transactions
  • Be knowledgeable of institutional and product requirements for financial institutions
  • Be able to apply the concepts of legal reasoning

 

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:
– Basic usage of Bloomberg to monitor instruments and portfolios
– Understanding the nature of different kinds of securities, how they work and what opportunities and risks they may entail
– Be able to advise customers in a way appropriate to the investment and investor involved keeping in mind aspects of business policy and compliance
– Know the different key figures, documents and ratios of shares / bonds / funds and how they are interpreted during the valuation process
– Know where and how instruments are traded / choosing the right place and “best execution”
– Understand how the sale of various security products affects bank business.
– Being aware of the strong linkage between economic figures and the selection process of shares / bonds

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Have an in-depth understanding of Markowitz Portfolio Theory, CAPM, Efficient Markets;
– Have an in-depth understanding of the limitations and empirical testability of these theories;
– Realize potential anomalies arising in financial markets;
– Apply common forecasting models.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Be able to map (as-is) processes/operations and redesign/re-engineer (to-be) them with the help of the BPMN 2.0 tool;
  • Evaluate the tradeoffs, the pros and cons of the new process in light of the relevant KPIs;
  • Know, understand, and reproduce key behavioral concepts and decision-making aspects;
  • Reflect on these concepts and their managerial and everyday implications;
  • Design a basic economic experiment and know the corresponding methodological tradeoffs;
  • Conduct and present a comprehensive project related to the aforementioned topics;
  • Reflect on other projects.

The course addresses the following topics and questions:

  • Behavioral Economics
    • What does it mean to be human? rational animal vs. bounded rationality, social preferences
    • From neoclassic economic theory to behavioral finance
    • Psychology of decision making, biases and heuristics, limits to arbitrage, efficient markets vs. empirical anomalies
  • Alternative Investments
    • Active vs passive investing, hedge funds vs mutual funds, manager selection, business cycle, and trading strategies
  • Portfolio management
    • From CAPM to modern portfolio theory, active portfolio management, and Black-Litterman
  • Machine Learning and Investment Management
    • Introduction to machine learning
    • Introduction to applications of machine learning in investment management and trading strategies
  • Applications
  • Examples in Excel format

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • understand and adequately apply the international standards of auditing
  • be capable of performing risk analyses based on annual reports
  • be skilled in planning substantive audit procedures
  • understand the concept of audit materiality
  • be able to formulate and interpret audit opinions

 

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • Apply basic functions and operations with data in MS Excel

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • know the concepts and framework of strategic management
  • understand how top management issues require the integration of all functional areas of business
  • be able to describe the various models and methods used to conduct external and internal analysis
  • be able to discuss corporate and business level strategies within the context of multiple business segments
  • be able to apply strategy frameworks to a given business situation
  • when faced with an unstructured business situation (through a case), be able to identify the key factors driving problem or situation, the additional information needed to understand the situation, and to set priorities for decision and action

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Use statistics to solve business-related problems;
  • Use spreadsheet software for statistical analysis;
  • Apply and interpret basic descriptive statistics;
  • Apply and interpret basic inferential statistics;
  • Apply and interpret the simple linear regression model.

 

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • understand and apply the sales process as a series of interrelated steps
  • categorize different types of buyers and discuss distinguishing factors
  • apply sales communication as a collaborative process
  • describe and interpret different forms of verbal/nonverbal communication
  • deliver effective sales dialogues, presentations and elevator pitches
  • relate and apply the theoretical concepts learned in class to real-life business situations

By the end of this lecture, the theoretical basis is freshed up for planning, controlling and closing the consulting projects, and learning via applied project management enabled.

Also, advanced topics such as “the design of PM processes, project risk & project crisis management, the project-oriented organisation” have been studied.

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • have a strengthened awareness about the importance of self-leadership, self-control and self-reflection
  • learn to reflect on their personal values and beliefs regarding a meaningful personal and professional life
  • create a personal career vision
  • self-assess their abilities and skills, set up a personal development plan
  • use supportive tools to explore their own personality, reflect on it and identify key interest areas
  • explore career options and set up a career plan
  • define their personal brand and set up a personal business model canvas
  • produce “tools/materials” communicating their skills, abilities, personal assets for potential employers: Career canvas, CV/resume, cover letter, visual CV, application video
  • practice job interviews in different roles (interviewer, interviewee, observer)
  • build awareness on the importance of a happy and healthy working culture
  • learn about tools, methods and ways to deal with stress and stay resilient

 

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • understand goals, structure and areas of “organizational behavior (OB)”
  • get an overview on respective fields of study and their practical relevance
  • obtain knowledge about characteristics of human behavior
  • understand individual differences as a consequence of nature, personality, attitudes and values
  • learn about different models how motivation occurs
  • acquire an understanding about what causes “job satisfaction” and the impact on organizational effectiveness
  • understand the necessities and benefits of a diverse workforce
  • learn about characteristics, norms and dynamics of teams
  • reflect on own experiences on what makes a team effective
  • learn how teams communicate and decisions are made
  • experience how team-spirit is built and fostered in practice
  • understand the different characteristics of organizational structures
  • get to know about the differences of mechanistic versus organic organizational models
  • understand the basic elements and artefacts of an organizational culture
  • learn how culture impacts organizational effectiveness
  • discuss and learn how change can be “managed”
  • get knowledge about most commonly used change models
  • learn and discuss how “change” could/should be organized in practice and what methods/interventions can be applied
  • learn about principles of the social systems theory and constructivism
  • reflect about the implications of social theory in team- and organizational development

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • Recap and reinforce their basic math skills, which are essential for success in other courses within their Master’s program.
  • Demonstrate proficiency in fundamental mathematical concepts that form the foundation for more advanced topics in various disciplines.
  • Apply mathematical principles and techniques to solve problems in fields like economics, finance, engineering, and statistics.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • be able to appreciate the role of marketing within organizations.
  • be able to properly identify and select markets for which specific products will be targeted.
  • explain the basic functional aspects necessary to formulate an integrated marketing plan. This includes Consumer Buying Behavior, Environment, Marketing Research, Product Management, Promotion, Channels of Distribution and Pricing.
  • be able to develop a high-quality marketing plan.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Have broad and practical knowledge on managerial problems related to (micro-)economics,
  • Gain a conceptual understanding of microeconomics-related phenomena,
  • Know, understand and reproduce key behavioral concepts and decision-making aspects,
  • Apply the concepts to both general and business/economics-related settings,
  • Reflect on these concepts and their managerial and everyday implications,
  • Solve basic numerical examples related to supply, demand, elasticities, market structures, price discrimination, externalities, public goods, profit calculation, break-even analysis, etc.
  • Know how to conduct a basic economic experiment and the corresponding methodological tradeoffs,
  • Understand the relevance and the implications of the practical examples and the games they play with the lecturer
  • Know and understand biases and the covered behavioral factors, be able to elaborate on their relevance and the exact ways how to overcome them.

 

Upon completion of the course students will be able to:

  • Understand the strategic decisions that organizations make and have an ability to engage in strategic planning.
  • Understand the concepts, principles and practices associated with strategy formulation and implementation.
  • Integrate and apply the knowledge gained to the formulation and implementation of strategy from holistic and multi-functional perspectives.
  • Analyze and evaluate critically real life company situations and develop creative solutions, using a strategic management perspective.
  • Conduct, present and argue a credible business analysis and support a decision making process

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Apply macroeconomic theories to the analysis of newspaper articles from business magazines
  • Discuss the differences between the major macroeconomic schools of thought
  • Define, explain, and apply the concepts of GDP, economic growth, business cycle, inflation, unemployment, exchange rates
  • Discuss demographic challenges and their probable impact on business models
  • Critically examine the potential conflicts between economic growth and the environment and possible consequences for business

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • Acquire a professional and extensive understanding of leadership
  • Recognize the difference between management and leadership
  • Comprehend the purpose and development of leadership
  • Understand the significance of independent leadership styles and theories
  • Have knowledge of the most significant leadership skills and competences
  • Understand effective leadership and motivational principles
  • Apply self-leadership and management techniques in practice

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • have an overview of business law concepts in a practical, real-life environment;
  • identify several potential problems in a business context;
  • have a preliminary analysis and suggestions to solve legal issues;
  • be aware of how to avoid certain legal pitfalls;
  • develop an understanding for different legal systems;
  • understand legal terminology and partly use it;

 

By the end of the course students will have achieved the following:

  • An opportunity for the interaction and integration of international business management knowledge;
  •  A knowledge of, and experience with, decision making techniques appropriate to the international business environment;
  • A knowledge of case analysis techniques leading to decisions and actions;
  • A knowledge of appropriate techniques to assist in case analyses;
  • Exposure to actual business situations through case study analyses of real-life global business situations;
  • An opportunity to improve written skills as well as presentation skills through preparation of case study analyses;
  • An opportunity to improve oral participation and discussion skills through class activities.
  • An opportunity to have a framework for application and integration of management concepts in the international marketplace;
  • An opportunity to further deepen knowledge of management practices in multinational organizations:
  • An opportunity to increase awareness of the various external environments of international marketing (economic, cultural and legal/political) and their impacts upon management;
  • An opportunity to raise awareness and deepen one’s knowledge of how people from many cultures work together and compete with one another;

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  •  Have a broad and practical range of knowledge on managerial problems related to Sustainability Management
  • Gain an understanding of patterns in Sustainable Business Model design
  • Know, understand, and reproduce key concepts and patterns in Sustainable Business Model Design
  • Apply the concepts/take-aways to business/economics-related settings in diverse economic contexts
  • Reflect on these concepts and their managerial and everyday implications
  • Understand the relevance and the implications of the business cases discussed in class
  • Know and understand biases and the implicit contributing factors to Sustainability Management, be able to reflect and elaborate on their relevance and ways to overcome them
  • Identify and explain historical context, theory, processes, and practices of Sustainability Management taking global perspectives on concepts, instruments, and stakeholders into account

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • work with the Bloomberg Terminal Software and the Bloomberg Excel Add-In
  • find, analyze, interpret and explain data from Bloomberg for different asset classes
  • find, interpret and validate news in Bloomberg
  • analyze publicly traded companies with Bloomberg data
  • analyze, interpret and illustrate macroeconomic data
  • understand bonds, fixed income derivatives and analyze fixed income securities
  • have acquired the Bloomberg Market Concept and ESG certificates

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • Be able to build businesses
  • Identify tangible challenges within particular industries
  • Cultivate ideas in a collaborative environment
  • Validate business ideas
  • Have proficiency to visualize and test ideas
  • Be able to find financing sources for early-stage businesses
  • Adequately prepare and deliver pitches

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • be able to use cost-revenue information in support value-creation and decision-making in business enterprises and other organisations.
  • be able to Interpret and Use Financial Statements to gain insights into the Financial Standing and Operating Efficiency of individual businesses/organizations.
  • comprehend fundamental accounting concepts/principles and their importance to financial reporting
  • have a sound knowledge of the structure of Financial Statements, i.e., Income Statements, Balance Sheets, Statements of Cash Flows

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

• understand the time value of money concept.
• perform financial calculations.
• apply methods used to evaluate investments.
• determine an organization’s cost of equity and its cost of debt.
• determine the weighted average cost of capital for an organization, whether it is in the public or private sector, and know how to use it in an investment appraisal.
• analyze and value capital market instruments (e.g. shares and bonds)
• explain and apply the three main methods of company valuation – asset (book) value, market multiples and discounted cash flow.
• appreciate the merits and disadvantages of each technique.
• decide on the most appropriate method or methods of valuation according to the circumstances – regulation, new issues, privatization, merger and acquisition or restructuring.
• classify M&A transactions.
• plan and manage the liquidity of a firm.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Have general knowledge of Business Process Management
  • Be able to understand the BPM-Lifecycle and carry out on a basic level some of the steps included such as of Process Identification & Discovery / Process Modeling / Process Redesign
  • Understand the term Quality and the different approaches in products and services
  • Have general knowledge of Total Quality Management
  • Know different approaches in TQM (e.g. Quality Circles, Continuous Improvement, Kaizen)
  • Have general knowledge of performance measurement frameworks, self-assessments, audits & reviews in Quality Management

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will understand:

• why fallacies make arguments deceptive
• different types of fallacies
• the differences between deductive and inductive reasoning
• the forms and standards of inductive and deductive thinking
• that debate provides preparation for effective participation in a democratic society
• that debate offers preparation for leadership
• that debate offers training in argumentation
• that debate provides for investigation and analysis of significant contemporary problems
• that debate develops proficiency in critical thinking
• that debate is an integrator of knowledge
• that debate develops proficiency in purposeful inquiry
• that debate develops the ability to make prompt, analytical responses
• that debate develops critical listening
• that debate develops proficiency in writing
• that debate encourages mature judgment
• that debate develops courage
• that debate encourages effective speech composition and delivery
• that debate develops social maturity

will have had practice in developing these skills:

• evaluating and critiquing arguments using standards of argument construction, identification of fallacies, tests of reasoning and source credibility
• producing arguments that adhere to the standards of argument construction and avoidance of fallacies
• researching and preparing an argumentative assignment
• researching, selecting and developing appropriate background and supporting materials to support arguments with the consideration for the audience
• expressing ideas skillfully with respect and sensitivity for their audience
• delivering speeches from a limited set of notes and within a specified time frame
• engaging in civil dialogue to define and explain socially significant topics

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • understand the nature of academic writing in business studies
  • gain a solid and enhanced understanding of the academic writing discipline
  • apply knowledge by performing a literature research and critical reading including the organization of sources
  • develop skills of reading and reviewing literature
  • reproduce techniques of paraphrasing, summarizing, and referencing/quoting
  • internalize and apply scientific standards at LBS

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • Gain an overview of risk management principles
  • Apply mathematical pricing & valuation methods
  • Utilize statistical methods for risk management • Implement market risk methods such as Value at Risk, var-covar method, hist.sim method, monte carlo method
  • Apply credit risk methods including tactical/operative credit RM methods
  • Employ strategic credit risk methods, e.g. Credit VaR, CreditRisk+, Merton Method
  • Utilize operational risk methods

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

Python

  • Design and program Python applications
  • Utilize lists, tuples, and dictionaries in Python programs
  • Identify Python object types
  • Apply indexing and slicing to access data in Python programs
  • Define the structure and components of a Python program
  • Compose loops and decision statements in Python
  • Construct functions and pass arguments in Python
  • Build and package Python modules for reusability
  • Perform reading and writing of files in Python
  • Employ exception handling in Python applications for error handling

Pandas Operations

  • Implement slicing on the data frame
  • Merge and join data frames
  • Perform concatenation of data frames
  • Modify the index of data frames
  • Alter column headers
  • Process time series data
  • Apply Statistics and Machine Learning concepts using base Python
  • Utilize Pandas for data manipulation
  • Apply scikit-learn for Machine Learning tasks

Structured Query Language (SQL)

  • Comprehend a RDBMS and its functionalities
  • Differentiate between using files and RDBMS
  • Understand the relational model
  • Conceptualize data through the relational model
  • Apply basic relational algebra operators with set semantics
  • Express queries using SQL
  • Create tables using SQL
  • Recognize primary key and foreign key relations
  • Compose SQL aggregation queries involving GROUP BY and HAVING clauses

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • understand the relevance of projects and project-orientation;
  • define and plan a project in a sequential way, considering a multi-methods approach;
  • apply project management methods for identifying the project stakeholders and for planning the project scope, the project schedule, the project resource and cost plan;
  • use project plans as instruments of communication and of leadership as well as for documentation and for decision-making;
  • distinguish between “must”- and “can”-project management methods;
  • define the appropriate level of detail for project planning, to understand the difference between sequential, agile and hybrid working in projects;
  • gather an insight of agile working in projects, with special focus on scrum;
  • understand the requirements for the certification as Project Management Associate according to pma/IPMA Level D®;
  • understand the requirements for the certification as Professional Scrum MasterTM level I (PSM I) according to Scrum.org.

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • Possess a sound understanding of the legal frameworks of both financial regulation and financial supervision
  • Demonstrate the ability to apply concepts of both financial regulation and financial supervision to case studies, such as derivatives markets, credit rating agencies, and FinTechs
  • Engage in stimulating critical thinking regarding the concepts and methods of financial regulation and financial supervision
  • Comprehend the core principles of macro- and micro-prudential oversight of financial markets
  • Acquire knowledge of institutional and product requirements for firms resulting from financial regulation

Upon completion of this course, students will be able to:

• understand the theoretical foundations of research
• distinguish different research designs, research approaches, research methods and research instruments
• identify a research topic, frame and structure the research problem, determine the research design, select adequate means of measurement and plan for data collection
• design research practicalities from problem formulation to choosing a suitable methodology and drawing conclusions
• relate and apply the theoretical foundations learned in class to their own research project

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Be able to understand and apply empirical methods in finance and economics utilizing R.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Have a broad and practical knowledge on economics-related problems,
  • Know, understand and reproduce key features and concepts of financial regulation,
  • Understand the relevance and the implications of interdependencies between financial sectors and supervisory fields,
  • Know, understand and reflect on current supervisory issues and challenges, be able to elaborate on their relevance

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Use the following concepts on a theoretical and experiential basis: observing, sensing, perceiving, thinking, labeling, describing, defining, interpreting, facts, inferences, generalizations;
  • Maintain awareness of one’s own thinking– feeling–perceiving–inference-making process;
  • Know how clear thinking depends on “staying awake” to what is;
  • Understand how clear thinking depends upon word clarity;
  • Judge the concepts and complexities of assumptions, opinions, and viewpoints;
  • See how the concepts are mental experiences, how they are problematical when confused with facts;
  • Understand how viewpoint bias frames and shapes information;
  • Recognize the meaning of conscious and unconscious viewpoints;
  • See why arguments are supported claims;
  • Know how reasons differ from conclusions;
  • Recognize what questions to ask in analyzing arguments;
  • Be able to know and apply the following skills:
    • Suspending thinking in order to freshly sense and gather data;
    • Achieving clarity about the words you use;
    • Describing the obvious evidence without substituting labels and interpretations;
    • Not confusing facts with inferences;
    • Providing evidence to support a generalization;
    • Recognizing the mental formation of assumptions, opinions, and viewpoints;
    • Assessing assumptions, opinions, and viewpoints for strengths and limitations;
    • Identifying underlying assumptions and value assumptions in discourse;
    • Separating opinions from facts;
    • Recognizing hidden opinions within evaluative words;
    • Identifying any source and its viewpoint characteristics;
    • Analyzing a news frame;
    • Assessing the relative reliability of a source;
    • Recognizing the characteristics of propaganda;
    • Identifying conclusions and separating them from reasons;
    • Identifying reports and separating them from arguments;
    • Articulating the question at issue;
    • Analyzing arguments.

 

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

Part I – Introduction
• Explain the rationale for doing valuation
• Address issues of bias, complexity, and uncertainty

Part II – Intrinsic Valuation
• Establish the foundations of intrinsic valuation
• Differentiate between valuing a business and valuing the equity in a business
• Calculate the risk-free rate
• Utilize approaches for estimating equity risk premiums
• Apply approaches for estimating beta values
• Define debt and derive the cost of debt
• Estimate and adjust cash flows
• Determine growth and derive a terminal value
• Understand the purpose and specifications of an LBO model compared to DCF

PART III – Practical Valuation Example
• Calculate a valuation by applying the cost of capital approach and adjusted present value approach

Part IV – Relative Valuation
• Value using multiples
• Identify determinants of ratios
• Choose a peer group and suitable multiples
• Differentiate trading versus transaction multiples

Part V – Asset Based Valuation (optional)
• Calculate liquidation value
• Compare book value versus business value

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Know the concepts and framework of strategic management
  • Be able to demonstrate how top management issues require the integration of all functional areas of business
  • Know how to discuss the results of research that links strategic variables to firm performance
  • Be able to describe the various models and methods used to conduct external and internal analysis
  • Have the ability to discuss corporate and business level strategies within the context of multiple business segments
  • When faced with an unstructured business situation (through a case), be able to identify the key factors driving problem or situation, the additional information needed to understand the situation, and to set priorities for decision and action.
  • Be able to prepare a written analysis of a business situation

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Be able to operate with and interpret accounting figures based on IFRS;
  • Comprehend consolidated financial statements of a banking group
  • Be able to account for PPE, investment properties, intangibles, and financial instruments;
  • Synthesize proper appliance of fair value and amortized cost models.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • understand the scope of financial institution activities, tasks and associated risks,
  • have the capability to perform risk analysis and apply rating considerations,
  • define, control and monitor key performance indicators.

Upon completion of this course, the students will be able to:

  • Demonstrate an understanding of:
    • The case method itself
    • How to read a case
    • How to analyze a case
    • How to discuss a case
    • How to structure a report on a case
  • Exhibit knowledge and understanding of the material contained in each case, along with methods and techniques for analyzing each case, and comprehension of underlying business & financial concepts.
  • Apply this knowledge and understanding from preparation to discussion, analysis, and summary.
  • Utilize the capacity to make judgments regarding case material and alternatives based on individual preparation and knowledge gained from class discussion.
  • Possess exceptional oral and written communication skills.
  • Showcase advanced learning skills encompassing case preparation, utilizing methods and techniques from all aspects of the field of study, and integrating in-class discussions for the final written case summaries.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Make decisions based on acquired knowledge and information provided,
  • Analyze economic conditions and changing market environments,
  • Adjust business strategy based on KPIs,
  • Manage their case bank as a team,
  • Understand the relevance and the practical implications of decisions,
  • Apply key behavioral concepts and decision-making theory in practice,
  • Know and understand influencing factors on banking business models,
  • Reflect on performance achieved and present findings and learnings of the simulation experience.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • Understand the different needs of clients in different types of banking systems and segments
  • Comprehend impacts of sustainable finance on products and services
  • Grasp how services and products changed facing banking regulations (consumer protection, anti money laundering, compliance, ..)
  • Understand the challenges of lending money and how credit risk can be processed
  • Comprehend the influence of new technologies and security requirements
  • Acquire insights into cash management and the future of cash and cards / payment systems SEPA, online banking
  • Gain knowledge about wealth management and securities incl. value of real estates, fixed and mobile assets
  • Obtain an overview of treasury products overview

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Gain a semi-advanced understanding of purchasing, outsourcing, inventory management, operations planning, transportation and logistics, forecasting, operations strategy, lean six sigma, supply chain coordination, and circular supply chains, etc.
  • Apply the appropriate KPIs in operations/supply chain management,
  • Recognize problems related to the aforementioned fields,
  • Apply in-depth analytical tools and concepts to solve those problems,
  • Create solutions to complex SCM-related problems (in Excel),
  • Put the operations strategy into the context of the overall corporate strategy,
  • Understand the relevance and the implications of operations management and their influence on other fields such as finance, marketing, sales, HR, etc.,
  • Work out solutions to specific business-related dilemmas and calculation problems.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • Have a broad and practical knowledge on Statistics-related problems
  • Know, understand and reproduce key concepts of Statistics
  • Demonstrate rationality when interpreting Statistics
  • Analyze datasets in SPSS
  • Answer simple statistical questions with ease
  • Understand and recognize the relevance and the implications of the misuse of Statistics

 

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • Develop the ability to analyze businesses using diverse financial and quantitative techniques from various sources.
  • Acquire skills in Strategic Analysis and Quantitative Business Analysis, encompassing Financial Analysis, Investment Analysis, Reporting Analysis, and the Four Pillars of Success Analysis.
  • Construct a comprehensive analysis of a prominent global company/business throughout the course.
  • Present the detailed analysis to a hypothetical incoming CEO of the business.
  • Master the research of business and financial data and fundamentals and effectively apply this knowledge to analyze the selected company/business.
  • Be evaluated based on the quality of research and the presentation of their conclusions.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Possess a comprehensive and practical understanding of managerial challenges concerning international negotiations.
  • Acquire insight into global negotiations influenced by diverse cultural norms and conflict resolution approaches.
  • Grasp key behavioral concepts and decision-making factors integral to steering negotiations effectively.
  • Apply acquired concepts and takeaways to business and economics scenarios within various cultural contexts.
  • Engage in reflective thinking about these concepts and their implications in both managerial and everyday contexts.
  • Comprehend the significance and implications of the business cases discussed during the course.
  • Recognize and understand biases and their implicit influences on negotiations, and proficiently reflect on their relevance and methods for overcoming them.
  • Identify, explain, and discuss theories, processes, and practices related to negotiation, conflict resolution, and relationship management.
  • Assess the importance of various factors impacting negotiations, encompassing specific issues, stakeholder positions, interests, relationships, and group dynamics.
  • Formulate and execute effective negotiation strategies and tactics tailored to diverse scenarios.
  • Identify cultural and national identity attributes essential for cross-cultural or global negotiations, ensuring adequate preparation for successful agreement outcomes.

Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
• Understand the major elements of competitiveness
• Understand and analyze the role of clusters for wealth creation
• Understand and analyze determinants of productivity at firm, region and national level
• Conduct a study and evaluate the microeconomics of strategy and economic development of a certain region / cluster.

 

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • Be acquainted with the evaluation criteria for their master theses, along with the associated rules and regulations.
  • Have a clear understanding of the evaluation criteria for the Master Commission Exams and the corresponding rules and regulations.
  • Participate in and complete the objective test provided by Peregrine Academic Services, leading to a reflection on the skills they have acquired during their study program.
  • Receive constructive feedback on their ongoing projects and possess the capability to effectively incorporate this feedback.
  • Emphasize the linkage of empirical findings to the outcomes of the literature review.
  • Critically assess the results they obtain and ensure alignment with the objectives of the study.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Possess basic knowledge of essential facts, terminology, concepts, principles, and theories in the field of Accounting.
  • Understand accounting core concepts, tools, and terminology for management accounting’s role in planning, control, and decision-making.
  • Address complex, unstructured business problems spanning multiple functional areas.
  • Utilize primary financial statements for informed decision-making, including assessing earnings trends and quality.
  • Apply accounting information, both financial and qualitative, to plan, implement, control, and decide on enterprise activities.
  • Engage in managerial decision-making involving costing, pricing, profit planning, budgeting, responsibility accounting, and performance evaluation.
  • Evaluate and analyze profitability effectively.
  • Solve problems related to break-even analysis and cost-volume-profit analysis.
  • Analyze profitability trends and quality.
  • Distinguish between relevant and irrelevant costs for effective decision-making.
  • Identify costs that matter for decisions, considering concepts like sunk costs, opportunity costs, and differential costs.
  • Make informed short-term or tactical decisions.
  • Analyze short-term decisions, such as make-or-buy choices, segment retention or discontinuation, and special orders.
  • Prepare selected budgets proficiently.
  • Create a cash budget and develop Flexible Budgets.
  • Apply Responsibility Accounting concepts to enhance budgetary control practices.

 

 

 

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • Develop awareness and recognition of the fundamental nature of digitalization.
  • Gain proficiency in working with the Raspberry Pi, a versatile and affordable computing platform, across various applications.
  • Participate in group discussions and effectively explain concepts to peers.
  • Handle critical situations under cyberattacks.
  • Identify and understand potential threat vectors arising from cloud computing.
  • Categorize, differentiate, and discern approaches for solving everyday challenges using existing open-source solutions like Machine Learning (ML), Artificial Intelligence (AI), and ChatGPT.
  • Visualize chains of nodes using Raspberry Pi.
  • Foster a collaborative community among diverse working groups to validate transactions.
  • Compare AI and machine learning techniques.
  • Implement AI and machine learning solutions in practical use-cases.
  • Present these use-cases to other workgroups for assessment and rating.

 

Upon completion of this course, students should be able to:

  • understand the role of the international marketing function within a firm
  • identify the range of foreign market entry strategies and its influencing factors
  • discuss the influences on the degree of standardization or adaptation
  • understand the relationship and interdependency of the international marketing mix for foreign markets
  • design and analyze marketing communications across the globe in diverse environments
  • relate and apply the theoretical concepts learned in class to real-life business situations

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Have learnt about the objectives and key areas of Human Resource Management (HRM)
  • Get to know HR stakeholders, -roles and how Human Resources is organized
  • Reflect on HRM key challenges in practice
  • Understand the objectives of talent acquisition in the context of talent management
  • Have learnt about talent acquisition strategy and how this links into HR planning
  • Have learnt how to build an employer brand and about different sourcing strategies and methods
  • Acquire an understanding on the objectives and challenges of recruiting
  • Obtain knowledge about the recruiting process, the connected risks and costs
  • Have learnt about the variety of selection tools and their accuracy to make good/bad hiring decisions
  • Experience job interviews, learn about biases and structured interview techniques
  • Understand the objectives and principles of performance management and reflect on the challenges and criticisms of performance management
  • Understand the fundaments of learning
  • Have learnt about the objectives, methods and challenges of talent management
  • Understand how competencies are defined and learn to practice employee feedback and conduct an employee development dialogue
  • Learn about the objectives and components of total reward management
  • Understand the basic concepts of variable pay and the link to performance management
  • Learn and reflect on the effect of agile transformation on Human Resources

Upon completion of this course, the students will be able to:

• Describe and apply lean product development approaches (“Job to be done”, ICE, …).
• Design and adapt product ideas to meet customer expectations (experiments, A/B testing, …).
• Use tools (landing pages, ads, …) to test and evaluate ideas and concepts quickly and efficiently.
• Use techniques (interviews, cohorts, …) to develop personas and find a target audience.
• Recognize how to cross the chasm from niche marketing to mass adoption.
• Write extraordinary stories that resonate with customers.
• Use the sheer endless choice of channels to share those stories.
• Define, measure, run and validate social media advertisements, including paid ads, public relations and modern growth hacks.
• Interpret and assess the outcome of past marketing efforts

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Understand the principles of integrated software systems in general and ERP systems, in particular, to understand how commercial and logistics elements in a business organization inter-relate,
  • Understand the structure of an ERP system in transactional data, master data and customizing,
  • Understand how the customization of an S/4HANA system works especially with regards to the organizational structure/elements,
  • Be able to maintain master data in an S/4HANA system,
  • Apply and execute procurement and sales and distribution processes in an S/4HANA system.

 

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

• Grasp the following concepts on both theoretical and experiential levels: observing, sensing, perceiving, thinking, labeling, describing, defining, interpreting, facts, inferences, and generalizations.
• Understand the potential for maintaining self-awareness within one’s own thinking-feeling-perceiving-inference-making process.
• Recognize the correlation between clear thinking and maintaining active awareness of the present.
• Understand how clear thinking is connected to word clarity.
• Acquire an understanding of concepts related to assumptions, opinions, viewpoints, and their complexities.
• Comprehend the distinction between mental experiences and problematic confusion with facts.
• Understand how viewpoint bias influences information framing and shaping.
• Grasp the concept of conscious and unconscious viewpoints.
• Understand the nature of arguments as supported claims and differentiate reasons from conclusions.
• Learn analytical techniques for assessing arguments and identifying fallacies.
• Recognize and evaluate seventeen informal fallacies through definitions and examples.
• Gain insight into the forms and standards of inductive and deductive thinking.
• Understand empirical reasoning, the scientific method, hypothesis, probability, and causal reasoning.
• Comprehend the differences between deductive and inductive reasoning and their interaction.

Additionally, students will practice and develop these skills:

• Suspend thinking to observe and gather data.
• Achieve word clarity.
• Describe evidence without introducing labels and interpretations.
• Distinguish facts from inferences.
• Provide evidence to support generalizations.
• Assess assumptions, opinions, and viewpoints for their strengths and limitations.
• Identify underlying and value assumptions in discourse.
• Differentiate opinions from facts.
• Recognize hidden opinions in evaluative language.
• Identify sources and their viewpoint characteristics.
• Analyze news frames.
• Assess source reliability.
• Recognize propaganda characteristics.
• Identify conclusions and reasons within arguments.
• Differentiate reports from arguments.
• Articulate the central issue in question.
• Analyze arguments and detect fallacies.
• Evaluate deductive arguments for validity and soundness.
• Identify hidden premises.
• Apply different standards to inductive and deductive reasoning.
• Conduct research and prepare argumentative assignments.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Develop a clear understanding of the case method itself.
  • Learn how to effectively read and comprehend case studies.
  • Acquire the skills to thoroughly analyze case studies.
  • Develop the ability to engage in meaningful discussions about case studies.
  • Learn how to structure comprehensive reports on case studies.

The successful student will display:

  • Knowledge and understanding of the content within each case study, including methods and techniques for analysis and underlying business and financial concepts.
  • The capability to apply acquired knowledge from preparation through discussion, analysis, and summarization.
  • Proficiency in making informed judgments on case material and alternatives based on personal preparation and class discussions.
  • Superior oral and written communication skills.
  • Advanced learning skills, encompassing case preparation techniques from all areas of study, active participation in class discussions, and the final synthesis of each case study in written form.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Make decisions based on acquired knowledge and information provided;
  • Analyze economic conditions and changing market environments;
  • Adjust business strategy based on KPIs;
  •  Manage their business as a team;
  •  Understand the relevance and the practical implications of decisions;
  • Apply key behavioral concepts and decision-making theory in practice;
  • Know and understand influencing factors on banking business models;
  • Reflect on performance achieved and present findings and learning of the simulation experience.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Demonstrate the role of budgets and how plans impact these
  • Identify the priority and role of costs
  • Identify elements of cost and the process of their compilation
  • Define appropriate characteristics for quality
  • Establish how performance aspects of new business projects can be managed
  • Determine the inputs, constraints, outputs and mechanisms
  • Identify the major issues facing entrepreneurs
  • Identify the features of a scope control system
  • Appreciate the work break structure as a method.
  • Recognise the benefits of constructing a process map
  • Demonstrate the importance of stakeholder management
  • Recognize different process models in software development
  • Identify the elements of a control system appropriate to a particular project
  • Determine the key performance measures that will be controlled by the system
  • Select appropriate tools and techniques to enable such control
  • Provide a structure for the identification, definition and solution of problems
  • Identify appropriate tools which can be brought to bear at different stages of the problem-solving process
  • Understand some of the changes in modern management thinking in the area of decision-making

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • Acquire proficiency in creativity methods and tools to foster innovative thinking.
  • Demonstrate competency in idea generation and validation techniques for identifying promising business concepts.
  • Gain practical experience in prototyping opportunities to refine and test business ideas.
  • Develop skills in iterative thinking and working to adapt and improve entrepreneurial endeavors.
  • Understand various financing sources available for early-stage businesses.
  • Benefit from entrepreneurial mentorship, receiving guidance and insights from experienced entrepreneurs.
  • Master pitch preparation and delivery, effectively communicating business ideas to potential stakeholders.

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

Part I – Introduction (chapter 3)

  • Explain the idea of maximising Net Present Value.
  • Calculate the no-arbitrage price of an investment opportunity.
  • Understand and apply the concept of value additivity.
  • Calculate the value of a risky asset, using the Law of One Price.

Part II – Time, Money, and Interest Rates (chapters 4, 5 and 6)

  • Calculate the present value and future value of cash flows, annuities, perpetuities with and without growth.
  • Evaluate time value of money problems when cash flows are not annual.
  • Given cash flows and present values or future values, compute the Internal Rate of Return.
  • Compute and calculate with the Effective Annual Rate and the Annual Percentage Rate.
  • Calculate the value and the yield to maturity for coupon and zero-coupon bonds.
  • Explain and apply the concept of the yield curve.

Part III – Valuing Projects and Firms (chapters 7, 8 and 9)

  • Describe and apply decision rules for NPV, payback period, IRR, profitability index, and incremental IRR.
  • Identify and calculate relevant cash flows for a capital budgeting problem out of given facts.
  • Calculate the total return of a stock, given the dividend payment, the current price, and the previous price.
  • Compute the stock value of a firm that pays dividends versus repurchasing shares.
  • Use comparable firm multiples to estimate stock value.

Part IV – Risk and Return (chapters 10, 11 and 12)

  • Define and calculate mean, variance, standard deviation, volatility, variance, covariance and correlation.
  • Calculate the beta of investment with a portfolio.
  • Describe the relationship between volatility and return of individual stocks.
  • Define idiosyncratic and systematic risk and the required risk premium for taking each on.
  • Use the Capital Asset Pricing Model to calculate the expected return for a risky security.
  • Calculate the weighted average cost of capital.

Part V – Capital Structure (chapters 14, 15 and 17)

  • Understand the implications of Modigliani / Miller Propositions I and II
  • Calculate the cost of capital for levered equity according.
  • Calculate the market risk of a firm’s assets using its unlevered beta.
  • Calculate the interest tax shield and describe the effect of a leveraged recapitalization.
  • Discuss and calculate the effect of dividend payment or share repurchase.

Upon completion of the course, the students are expected to:

  • Apply marketing concepts to international operations.
  • Analyze international business situations/problems and provide effective recommendations.
  • Present comprehensive and thorough written analyses.
  • Identify appropriate sources of information for analyzing international business decisions

    Furthermore, students will further incorporate the following abilities:

  • Define the difference between international trade and investment.
  • Distinguish between different types of national markets.
  • Describe the difference between absolute and comparative advantage.
  • Identify factors that increase one’s competitive advantage.
  • Define the various accounts in the balance of payments.
  • Describe the various means for settling accounts between countries.
  • Define sovereignty and describe the tools available to a sovereign country.
  • List and define the types of political risk facing an international business.
  • Define the major empirical dimensions of culture.
  • Evaluate countries regarding the nature of their cultural differences and the resulting impact on managerial style.
  • Describe the procedures and approvals required when exporting products to another country.
  • Identify and define the various types of regional economic integration.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Have a comprehensive understanding of EU financial law;
  • Be knowledgeable of the regulatory framework, in particular within the EU;
  • Understand the core principles of financial contracts;
  • Be knowledgeable of institutional and product requirements for financial institutions stemming from EU financial regulation;
  • Be able to apply the concepts of legal reasoning.

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:

  • Understand the defintion and scopes of corporate governance systems
  • Understand different measures of federal authorities to audit and assess the systems
  • Understand approaches, reportings and toolssets of Compliance and Risk management
  • Understand whistleblowing systems and the new directive that came in force Dec. 21
  • Understand the perspective of shareholders vs perspective of the regulator
  • Understand compliance management approaches
  • Understand AML, market manipulation and new markets different scenarios on attempted manipulation of capital markets –front/parallel running, crossing, scalping, cornering, wash sales challenges and instruments of Compliance officers influence of new technologies – internet currency
  • Understand recognition of crime and terror financing

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  •  Understand the time value of money;
  • Explain the concept of arbitrage and the law of one price;
  •  Assess the relationship of risk and return;
  • Justify the valuation of bonds;
  • Justify the valuation of stocks;
  • Reproduce basics in portfolio theory;
  •  Conduct estimation of cost of capital;
  •  Apply the capital asset pricing model;
  • Explain capital structure and the Modigliani / Miller theorem;
  •  Describe payout policy.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Understand the components of the financial environment;
  • Be able to explain and calculate risk and returns in stand-alone and portfolio contexts;
  • Understand, discuss and apply the Capital asset pricing model (CAPM), its underlying assumptions and component parts;
  • Evaluate and calculate credit and interest rate risk;
  • Determine the value of fixed income securities;
  • Determine the value of equity securities;
  • Be able to identify, evaluate and calculate the components of and the cost of capital;
  • Be able to discuss capital structure theories, evaluate the choices and constraints surrounding capital structure decisions and determine optimal capital structure for companies;
  • Be able to make investment decision based on evaluating and comparing on different investment appraisal techniques;
  • Forecast financial statements and use different corporate valuation techniques.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Understand why change is both a creative and a rational process;
  • Understand the importance of organizational images and mental models;
  • Identify different images of managing and of change outcomes;
  • Understand environmental pressures propelling organizations towards change;
  • Understand the distinction between first-order and second-order change;
  • Understand the role of diagnostic models;
  • Understand and identify reasons for resistance to change;
  • Understand the organization development (OD) and change management approach to change;
  • Understand how successful communication processes will vary depending on the stage and type of organizational change;
  • Identify and outline different images of managing and of change outcomes;
  • Outline alternative concepts of change;
  • Identify a range of common changes that confront organizations such as downsizing, introducing new technologies, and mergers and acquisitions;
  • Articulate arguments about why not all organizations are affected equally by such pressures;
  • Outline a range of issues internal to organizations that push them towards change;
  • Recognize the strengths and weaknesses of various approaches to the management of resistance to change;
  • Gain an awareness of the interaction between forces for stability and forces for change;
  • Be familiar with a variety of issues that emerge at the “front line” for those charged with managing the changes;
  • Appraise your ability to engage with such changes in the future;
  • Reflect upon your own approach to managing change.

Upon completion of this course, the students are expected to:
– Have broad and practical understanding of the asset management industry and its participants,
– Have broad and practical understanding of the foundations of investment selection and management,
– Create a global equity portfolio, which they will need to maintain, update and report upon regularly during their Masters programme at LBS, and then analyze and explain its performance in the fourth semester,
– Be able to research business data and fundamentals, and apply this to analyse the risk and return characteristics of an investment,

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Have broad and practical understanding of the asset management industry and theoretical foundations of investment selection and management;
– Create and analyze a small portfolio of investments;
– Be able to apply factual knowledge, analyze the risk and return characteristics of investment and derive a judgment for evaluating different asset classes;
– Establish a general understanding of the asset management industry and its participants;
– Raise awareness for the key topics shaping the industry in the current environment.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Analyze the professional opportunities in the field of Social Media;
-Decide which channels to choose;
-Set up and advertise company pages in social networks;
-Create content and campaigns and measure the impact on defined goals;
-Judge professional social media content from the viewpoint of the target “consumer”.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

  • Plan digital marketing activities to achieve a range of objectives and outline how they can be implemented;
  • Are able to understand and perform basic SEO;
  • Set up and manage SEA;
  • Understand the analysis of data using Google Analytics;
  • Perform and implement A/B testing;
  • Strategize & target highly specific audiences using social media;
  • Set up and manage email-marketing communications;
  • Understand the importance of influencer marketing (incl. briefing and relationship management). 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course, students will

– Have learned to understand the basics and the background of integrated marketing communication in various environments.

– Have analyzed, developed and applied techniques of analyzing companies’ business and market environment in terms of IMC

– Understanding the process of turning a company’s IMC strategy into creative, effective, efficient actions and results

– Preparing a company’s internal organization to successfully perform integrated marketing communication

– Understanding the entire interplay of marketing, brand, PR, sales, (social) media, CRM strategies

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course students will be able to

– sharpen language into an effective tool

– understand the importance of network analysis and networked communication

– take into account the importance of negotiation preparation

– apply the principles of negotiation psychology

– understand the difference between strategy and tactics

– identify and utilize roles in negotiations

­­– distinguish between different personality types and apply negotiation tactics accordingly

– negotiate in different settings

– realize their own strengths and weaknesses in negotiations

Learning outcomes

The aim of Business German III, IV and V is to develop students’ understanding of the key concepts and principles necessary to achieve level B2 as outlined by the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) with a clear focus on Business German, so that by the end of the 5th semester, students will be able to:

-understand and talk about business topics such as organizations, advertising, brands, human resources, international markets, leadership, etc.

-understand and write business correspondence for a variety of situations

-understand and make business-related telephone calls in a variety of situations

-take part in business meetings and negotiations

-understand, prepare and give a presentation on a business-related topic

Learning outcomes

The aim of Business German III, IV and V is to develop students’ understanding of the key concepts and principles necessary to achieve level B2 as outlined by the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) with a clear focus on Business German, so that by the end of the 5th semester, students will be able to:

-understand and talk about business topics such as organizations, advertising, brands, human resources, international markets, leadership, etc.

-understand and write business correspondence for a variety of situations

-understand and make business-related telephone calls in a variety of situations

-take part in business meetings and negotiations

-understand, prepare and give a presentation on a business-related topic

Learning outcomes

Upon completion of this course students will be able to

– Know, reproduce and understand the key concepts of ecological economics and green growth

– Apply the concepts to both general and business settings

– Reflect on how to reconcile ecological sustainability and business dynamics

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course, the you will be able to:

– Recognize, define, and discuss the terminology, concepts, principles, and theories taught in this cultural psychology

– Identify and apply appropriate terminology, concepts, principles, and theories from the course when analyzing factual situations with cultural psychology

– Develop reasonable solutions to cultural psychology problems using appropriate terminology, concepts, principles, and theories from the course.

– Discuss the relevance and application of the concepts, principles, and theories used in cultural psychology to contemporary events.

– Identify and discuss the interrelationships among the concepts, principles, and theories used in the different areas of cultural psychology.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course students will be able to:

– describe the foundation and topics of HRM

– know, reproduce and apply key concepts and techniques of modern HRM

– explain and develop the different steps of a talent management process

– Analyze different HRM methods and their outcome

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Know and be able to apply several tools in order to analyze the operations of companies;

– Have a broad and strategic understanding of operations analytics and management;

– Be able to implement actions based on the analysis;

– Execute business process management and reengineering;

– Understand the role of automatization in business;

– Select and apply and understand the respective implications;

– Prepare descriptive, predictive and prescriptive analyses;

– Conducting segmentation, targeting and positioning (STP) based on data and their interpretation;

– Apply a data-driven marketing mix;

– Use specific analytical methods for retail and wholesale data;

– Make managerial decisions based on data and their respective interpretation;

– Forecasting consumer behavior with useful tools;

– Understand how strategic decisions interact with other functional areas.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Have a good understanding of the various tools/techniques associated with problem/opportunity identification,

– Have an understanding of the current state; the methods required to identify, validate and document this condition as such,

– Identify the future state and to come up with models that the desired outcomes are continuously verified, validated and documented,

– Perform a rudimentary gap analysis and any/all necessary exercises tied to a thorough feasibility study,

– Identify the initial scope and be able to perform continuous revisions based upon the information that is unveiled during one’s assignment,

– Be able to create a stakeholder list, perform a stakeholder analysis, initiate a stakeholder strategy and ensure that stakeholder management is performed in an efficient and effective manner,

– Ensure the elicitation process be performed in a meaningful way; including elicitation approach, planning, scheduling, execution, analysis and as input for the solution exploration phase,

– Be able to efficiently ascertain, demonstrate and document all meaningful solution options,

– Based on the listing of all possible solutions, perform the tools and techniques required to establish a short-list of the most viable solutions,

– Execute an effective decision assessment, evaluation, and selection process;

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of the course students will be able to

– Discuss the role of project financing in a corporate environment

– Explain how tools and techniques utilized in project financing can add value to the firm

– Compare and contrast project financing arrangements

– Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of project financial arrangements

– Analyze the risks involved in project financing

– Evaluate the techniques used to manage the risks associated with project financing arrangements

– Describe practical problems of project financing using specific examples

Learning outcomes

At the end of the B1 Level students will be able to

– understand the main points of clear standard input on familiar matters regularly encountered in work, school, leisure, etc.

– deal with most situations likely to arise while traveling in an area where the language is spoken.

– produce simple connected text on topics that are familiar or of personal interest.

– describe experiences and events, dreams, hopes and ambitions and briefly give reasons and explanations for opinions and plans.

 

Reading Skills:

Students are able to understand factual texts on subjects related to their interests that consist mainly of high frequency everyday or job-related language. They can recognize significant points in straightforward newspaper articles on familiar subjects and can understand the description of events, feelings and wishes

Written Skills:

Students at this level can write simple texts on topics which are familiar or of personal interest by linking a series of shorter discrete elements into a linear sequence. They can write personal letters describing events, experiences and impressions.

Oral skills/Speaking and Understanding:

Listening: They are able to understand the main points of clear standard speech on familiar matters regularly encountered in work, school, leisure, etc. They can understand the main point of many radio or TV programmes on current affairs or topics of personal or professional interest when the delivery is relatively slow and clear.

Spoken Production: They can keep going comprehensibly in order to describe experiences and events, dreams, hopes and ambitions and can briefly give reasons and explanations for opinions and plans. They are able to narrate a story or relate the plot of a book or film and describe reactions.

Language skills:

Used to + infinitive • Past Simple and Present Perfect • Neither / so do I • Modal verbs • Reported speech • First, second conditional • Adverbs of manner and modifiers • Relative clauses • Adjectives and their connotations • Present Perfect Continuous • Look + adjective, look like + noun • Be able to/ can/ manage to • Passives • Past Perfect Simple • Have and have got • Be allowed to and be supposed to • A / few and a / little • Although / in spite of / despite • Question tags

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Know and be able to apply several tools in order to analyze the operations of companies;

– Have a broad and strategic understanding of operations analytics and management;

– Be able to implement actions based on the analysis;

– Execute business process management and reengineering;

– Understand the role of automatization in business;

– Select and apply and understand the respective implications;

– Prepare descriptive, predictive and prescriptive analyses;

– Conducting segmentation, targeting and positioning (STP) based on data and their interpretation;

– Apply a data-driven marketing mix;

– Use specific analytical methods for retail and wholesale data;

– Make managerial decisions based on data and their respective interpretation;

– Forecasting consumer behavior with useful tools;

– Understand how strategic decisions interact with other functional areas.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Recognize the general concepts of the governance framework of organizations;
– Compare the corporate governance structure regarding organizations in different industries and different regions and comprehend the global dimension of corporate governance;
– Illustrate the significance of risk management principles for good governance;
– Develop a keen awareness of the undesirable consequences of weak corporate governance practices and provide recommendations for mitigations;
– Explain the influence of major constituents on such governance framework within given circumstances;
– Evaluate the relation of performance and governance of an organization;
– Categorize responsibilities of organizations to different stakeholder groups and judge on corporate (social) responsibility;
– Distinguish best-practice and pitfalls based on readings and group work assignments;
– Demonstrate the acquired knowledge and skills in a qualified understanding of reports on corporate governance issues in popular media and participation in professional discussions;

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Recognize the general concepts of the governance framework of organizations;
– Compare the corporate governance structure regarding organizations in different industries and different regions and comprehend the global dimension of corporate governance;
– Illustrate the significance of risk management principles for good governance;
– Develop a keen awareness of the undesirable consequences of weak corporate governance practices and provide recommendations for mitigations;
– Explain the influence of major constituents on such governance framework within given circumstances;
– Evaluate the relation of performance and governance of an organization;
– Categorize responsibilities of organizations to different stakeholder groups and judge on corporate (social) responsibility;
– Distinguish best-practice and pitfalls based on readings and group work assignments;
– Demonstrate the acquired knowledge and skills in a qualified understanding of reports on corporate governance issues in popular media and participation in professional discussions; – Know generally accepted practice in the design, development, implementation, maintenance and continual improvement of a compliance program;
– Comprehend the position of a compliance management system in the governance framework of an organization;
– Apply the acquired knowledge to various regulatory requirements;
– Examine and combine the elements of a compliance management system to the extent appropriate to the internal and external context of an organization;
– Evaluate the approach of global corporations to compliance management, determine best practice and pitfalls and the application of this approach to other types of organizations;
– Consolidate all steps in a comparative analysis regarding the compliance approach of organizations in different industries;
– Be attentive to the need of compliant behavior in the conduct of business activities for minimizing the risks of failure and avert harm from the organization;
– Recognize the benefits of knowledge and skills in compliance management for their future career after graduation;
– Adapt the acquired knowledge and skills resulting in a qualified understanding of reports on non-compliant behavior in popular media and the ability to participate in professional discussions.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Have a detailed knowledge of Performance Evaluation and Budgetary Control;
– Be able to apply Variance Analysis as part of the Control Loop in management control;
– Comprehend and be able to apply operational level performance management concepts of Profit Centers, Investment Centers and corresponding measures of performance;
– Comprehend and be able to apply performance-related concepts in Activity-Based Management;
– Be able to use financial statements to evaluate business performance.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Appreciate the value of entrepreneurship and innovation outcomes for economic renewal and rejuvenation in a variety of organizational contexts;
– Understand the process of entrepreneurship and of creating new ventures;
– Have the ability to carry out the preparatory work necessary to develop a business idea, draw up a business plan and present it in front of an audience;
– Have the ability to implement, operate and monitor the execution of this process.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Do extensive research in the specific field;
– Gather and filter the appropriate data for the project;
– Select and apply appropriate the appropriate analytical tools and concepts;
– Interpret and evaluate the results;
– Employ scientific research methods in small- to medium scale quantitative and/or qualitative studies;
– Create strategies in order to resolve business- and economics-related problems;
– Critically reflect upon the takeaways of a project/analysis in light of the limitations;
– Reflect upon the analyses;
– Conduct a major project (project management skills) individually;
– Organize communication processes with numerous stakeholders;
– Present the research project in a focused, professional and convincing manner.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Use skills, frameworks and knowledge in entrepreneurial finance (similarly to traditional corporate finance, yet more focused on cash flow, returns, and recognizable value);

– Recognize an opportunity worthy of financing;

– Value an opportunity;

– Understand the difference between the funder’s perspectives and those of the company being financed;

– Appreciate the difference between venture capital, private equity, early stage, and traditional financing sources;

– Approach a venture capital source and present your idea;

– Use different financing techniques;

– Use strategic partnering.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Be familiar with the basic concepts of operations and supply chain management;
– Be able to describe the key capabilities of a supply chain;
– Apply concepts, conduct analyses and evaluate scenarios in the field of purchasing, inventory management, logistics, planning, forecasting, etc.;
– Have a good understanding of how company strategy impacts its supply chain/operations capabilities;
– Be able to apply operations and supply chain management concepts when analyzing and improving a company or a specific problem.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Have an unbiased picture of one’s skills, personality, and values;

– Recognize how interviewers perceive particular words, meta-communication, and specific behavioral patterns;

– Assess candidates pros and cons;

– Have a good understanding of how particular jobs and candidates might match;

– Develop your career roadmap.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Have a broad and practical knowledge on Statistics-related problems;

– Know, understand and reproduce key concepts of Statistics;

– Demonstrate rationality when interpreting Statistics;

– Analyze datasets in SPSS;

– Conduct statistical tests, basic and intermediate analyses in statistics with SPSS;

– Answer simple statistical questions with ease;

– Understand and recognize the relevance and implications of the misuse of Statistics.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Define and explain Strategic Human Resource Management;
– Compare HRM & SHRM;
– Recognize the advantages and limitations of the different approaches to SHRM;
– Identify and explain the major features of strategic recruitment and selection;
– Analyze how recruitment and selection can be developed to fit a variety of strategic scenarios;
– Understand the place of recruitment and selection as well as the value of testing and work samples;
– Identify and explain the major features of strategic human resource development (SHRD);
– Analyze the significance of the learning organization and knowledge management to SHRD;
– Explore whether training initiatives become more extensive as examples of HR strategies;
– Assess the strategic impact of training and development policies and practices;
– Define performance management and discuss how it differs from performance appraisal;
– Set effective performance appraisal standards;
– Explain and illustrate the problems in order to avoid them in appraising performance;
– Evaluate the major criticisms towards performance management;
– Create and apply a performance appraisal;
– List the basic factors determining pay rates;
– Define reward management and strategic reward management;
– Explain the factors that have led to the increased interest in strategic reward management;
– Identify some of the key background issues relevant to the internationalization of businesses;
– Define strategic international human resource management (SIHRM) and identify its key components;
– Illustrate how intercountry differences affect HRM;
– Discuss the use of Locals vs. Expats;
– Identify important issues in training, appraising and compensating international employees;
– Explain how to implement a global HRM program;
– Discuss how small business HRM is different from large businesses HRM and how small size can improve the SHRM processes.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Receive a Master’s degree (MA) in Strategic Finance and Business Analytics from Lauder Business School.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Recognize, define, and discuss the terminology, concepts, principles, and theories taught in this organizational behavior course;
– Identify and apply appropriate terminology, concepts, principles, and theories from the course when analyzing factual situations with organizational behavior problems;
– Develop reasonable solutions to organizational behavior problems using appropriate terminology, concepts, principles, and theories from the course;
– Evaluate the quality of their proposed solutions to organizational behavior problems against appropriate criteria, including organizational constraints;
– Discuss the relevance and application of the concepts, principles, and theories used in organizational behavior to contemporary events;
– Identify and discuss the interrelationships among the concepts, principles, and theories used in the different areas of organizational behavior.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Recognize, define, and discuss the terminology, concepts, principles, and theories taught in this organizational change course;

– Identify and apply appropriate terminology, concepts, principles, and theories from the course when analyzing situations involving change;

– Develop reasonable solutions to change management problems using appropriate terminology, concepts, principles, and theories from the course;

– Evaluate the quality of their proposed solutions to change management problems against appropriate criteria, including psychological and organizational constraints;

– Discuss the relevance and application of the concepts, principles, and theories used in change management to contemporary business;

– Identify and discuss the interrelationships among the needs of organizations and of their members and other stakeholders in change.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Have a broad and practical knowledge of economics-related problems;

– Know, understand and reproduce key concepts of behavioral economics and decision-making;

– Apply the concepts to both general and business settings;

– Reflect on these concepts and their managerial implications;

– Understand the relevance and the implications of the practical examples and the games, situational tasks they participate in with the lecturer;

– Digest and critically reflect upon scientific articles in the field of behavioral economics;

– Recognize and apply relevant concepts of social psychology to business settings;

– Know and understand biases and the covered behavioral factors, be able to elaborate on their relevance and the exact ways how to overcome them.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Understand the benefits and boundaries of project management;
– Be able to differentiate between processes, projects, and programmes;
– Be able to understand projects as social systems;
– Be able to identify the main project success factors such as context-thinking, business-case thinking, and social competences;
– Be able to apply main project management methods.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Know generally accepted practice in the design, development, implementation, maintenance and continual improvement of a compliance program;
– Comprehend the position of a compliance management system in the governance framework of an organization;
– Apply the acquired knowledge to various regulatory requirements;
– Examine and combine the elements of a compliance management system to the extent appropriate to the internal and external context of an organization;
– Evaluate the approach of global corporations to compliance management, determine best practice and pitfalls and the application of this approach to other types of organizations;
– Consolidate all steps in a comparative analysis regarding the compliance approach of organizations in different industries;
– Be attentive to the need of compliant behavior in the conduct of business activities for minimizing the risks of failure and avert harm from the organization;
– Recognize the benefits of knowledge and skills in compliance management for their future career after graduation;
– Adapt the acquired knowledge and skills resulting in a qualified understanding of reports on non-compliant behavior in popular media and the ability to participate in professional discussions.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Receive a Master’s degree (MA) in International Management and Leadership from Lauder Business School.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Understand what a business model is and how it works;

– Analyze business processes using several models (resources, processes, requirements, etc.);

– Know what can be achieved with effective business intelligence;

– Know how to conduct a business analysis;

– Apply several analytical methods and understand their relevance/caveats at the same time;

– Grasp the importance and the implications of Big Data and Data Mining;

– Visualize data and their interpretation powerfully.

 

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Develop their understanding of the core and current frameworks, theories, and tools and to assess their relevance to the issues of the twenty-first century leading and managing;
– Explain and discuss different perspectives on, and approaches to, managing and leading in different organizational and cultural contexts;
– Critically engage with management frameworks, theories, and tools in order to select and adapt techniques and approaches appropriate to given management contexts;
– Discuss and analyze the context in which business and management takes place, and to develop approaches on how to work confidently across sectoral and national boundaries;
– Develop interpersonal and conceptual skills that will assist in the use of ideas and frameworks to make sense of, and to work with, organizational complexity;
– Challenge their own knowledge, thinking and practice by reflecting upon it critically in the light of the ideas encountered, and through debates with others.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Comprehend fundamental accounting concepts/principles and their importance to financial reporting;

– Acquire a sound knowledge of the several functions of Financial Accounting;

– Have a detailed knowledge of the structure of Financial Statements, i.e. Income Statements, Balance Sheets, Statements of Cash Flows;

– Be able to prepare a set of Financial Statements.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Understand why it is crucial to know your customer (KYC Checks);
– Work out different scenarios on attempted manipulation of capital markets –front/parallel running, crossing, scalping, cornering, wash sales;
– See how services and products changed facing banking regulations (MAD/MAR II, MiFID II, anti-money laundering, etc.);
– Grasp the challenges and instruments of Compliance officers;
– Judge the influence of new technologies – internet currencies;
– Recognize crime and terror financing – anti-money laundering;

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Understand the concept of “shadow banking” and the respective regulatory responses;
– Know the practical, contractual and regulatory aspects of securitization;
– Know the practical and regulatory aspects of money market funds;
– Understand the core (regulatory and contractual) principles derivatives and structured finance;
– Be familiar with the European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) and corresponding regulations in the U.S.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Define business- and economics-related problems of practical relevance individually;
– Do extensive research in the specific field;
– Gather and filter the appropriate data for the project;
– Select and apply appropriate the appropriate analytical tools and concepts;
– Interpret and evaluate the results, – Create strategies in order to resolve business- and economics-related problems;
– Critically reflect upon the takeaways of a project/analysis in light of the limitations;
– Reflect upon the analyses;
– Know what a consultant does;
– Understand the value added of consulting;
– Conduct a major project (project management skills) individually;
– Provide fact-based, critical and constructive feedback on others’ projects;
– Present the research project in a focused, professional and convincing manner.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Demonstrate, grasp and apply explicit and practical knowledge relevant to private banking and wealth management;

– Be prepared for a career in private banking in their respective home countries;

– Understand and apply explicit and practical knowledge relevant to private banking and wealth management;

– Demonstrate the ability to discern client needs and provide suitable financial solutions making use of a range of products (securities, loans, insurances, term deposits) and investment fundamentals (modern portfolio theory);

– Have an overview of the relevant regulatory and tax changes and be able to explain these in an advisory setting;

– Grasp the particularities of the main private banking topics within the context of the countries/regions in which they intend to live and work.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Have a broad and practical knowledge on real estate investment after passing this course;
– Recognize and evaluate the determinants of value: individual property characteristics, market conditions of supply and demand, capital market influences, public policy effects;
– Be familiar with the legal and regulatory environment in various markets: property rights and limitations, leases and other contracts, land use regulations;
– Understand the roles and responsibilities of the “players” in the marketplace;
– Estimate the value of income-producing properties;
– Understand sources of capital and the basics workings of the real estate capital markets;
– Determine a basic capital structure for a property acquisition including the amount, cost, and other market terms for debt;
– Explore societal challenges and opportunities that result from the inherent tension of individual versus communal rights and responsibilities.

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Understand what a business model is and how it works;

– Analyze business processes using several models (resources, processes, requirements, etc.);

– Know what can be achieved with effective business intelligence;

– Know how to conduct a business analysis;

– Apply several analytical methods and understand their relevance/caveats at the same time;

– Grasp the importance and implications of Big Data and Data Mining;

– Visualize data and their interpretation powerfully;

 

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Prepare descriptive, predictive and prescriptive analyses;

– Conducting segmentation, targeting and positioning (STP) based on data and their interpretation;

– Apply a data-driven marketing mix;

– Use specific analytical methods for retail and wholesale data;

– Make managerial decisions based on data and their respective interpretation;

– Forecasting consumer behavior with useful tools;

– Understand how strategic decisions interact with other functional areas.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Understand the nature of different types of securities, how they work and what opportunities and risks they may entail;
– Be able to advise customers in a way appropriate to the investment and investor involved, keeping in mind aspects of business policy and compliance;
– Know the different key figures, documents and ratios of shares/bonds/ funds and how they are interpreted during the valuation process;
– Know where and how instruments are traded, choosing the right place and “best execution”;
– Understand how the sale of various security products affects bank business;
– Be aware of the strong linkage between economic figures and the selection process of shares/bonds.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Understand and differentiate between different types of financial institutions as well as their role as intermediaries in the financial market, structures, tasks and business areas;
– Understand and apply essential concepts in the field of financial markets and financial institutions;
– Explain different types of financial markets and basic products;
– Explain the role of financial market participants (e.g. commercial banks, rating agencies, etc.);
– Explain the overall impact of tax and regulatory frameworks for financial institutions in the market.

Upon completion of this course, the students will:

– Understand the business cycle of an open economy in an AS-AD model framework;
– Analyze the current cyclical situation of economies by applying standard macroeconomic models and deriving implications for monetary policy;
– Understand the theory of optimum currency areas;
– Know the history of the European integration process;
– Assess the costs and benefits for countries to join a monetary union as well as the net effect;
– Know various exchange rate regimes;
– Be able to judge countries’ choice of exchange rate regimes and assessment of the sustainability of this choice;
– Understand the goals and effects of monetary policy strategies and of monetary policy instruments;
– Understand the monetary policy challenges during the global financial crisis and the corresponding monetary measures;
– Be able to link various types of crisis and to derive sources of spillovers and/or feedback loops;
– Be able to draw lessons from the experience during the global economic and financial crisis;
– Be able to assess the specific weaknesses and macroeconomic imbalances of EU crisis countries;
– Understand the trade-offs of financial globalization, the financial cycle and the impact on financial stability;
– Understand the interactions between monetary policy and macro-prudential policy.

Learning Outcomes

At the end of the semester students will be able to:

Written skills:

– summarize highly nuanced and sophisticated texts

– produce comparison and contrasts of advanced texts

– plan and structure an argument/investigation drawing on a wide variety of sources

– incorporate summary, paraphrases and quotation effectively in their text

– write a structured and referenced argumentative essay

– critically engage with a wide variety of texts, both academic and literary

– write creatively using a wide range of basic techniques

– write a review article

– write flash fiction/descriptive scene

Oral skills/Speaking and Understanding:

– summarize and react to academic texts

– defend arguments

– use a range of different appeals to convince audiences of an argument

– respect and engage constructively with the opinion of others

Language skills/vocabulary:

– use advanced techniques such as parallelism to increase the emphasis and clarity of their writing

– understand an increased range of specialized and less common vocabulary

– be aware of different styles and their importance

Learning Outcomes

– Consolidation of productive and receptive knowledge of the romanization system Hanyu Pinyin.

– Consolidation of correct pronunciation of the sounds and tones of modern Chinese.

– Independent and creative use of the Chinese language in various situations.

– Consolidation of knowledge of the structure of Chinese characters.

– Handwriting skills of commonly used Chinese characters.

– Reading of texts written in Chinese characters pertaining to various situations.

 

 

Learning Outcomes

 

By the end of the second semester, students will be able to conjugate active verbs (paal,hifil, piell, hitpael) in the present tense, recognize and use simple syntactic structures; read and write shorts texts, few sentences about different topics

 

Learning Outcomes

 

This course will lead students to the A1/ 2 level of competence following the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages.

Learning Outcomes

 

This course will lead students to the, A1 level of competence following the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages.

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

 

By the end of the first semester, students will be able to conjugate active verbs in the present tense, recognize and use simple syntactic structures; read and write texts with non-compound sentences.

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of the semester students will have acquired the following skills:

Written Skills:

– write simple formal and informal texts

 

Oral Skills

– discuss a problem

– give advice

– express agreement or disagreement

– describe a picture in detail

– express wishes and hypothetical ideas

 

Grammar Skills:

– form subordinate clauses with the infinitive

– declinate adjectives

– form the conditional

 

Students will possess significant knowledge of vocabulary relating to:

– the time

– problems of everyday life

– partnerships and love

– jobs for men vs. jobs for women

– work in the course of time

– schools and education

Learning Outcomes

The goal of the Practical Professional Training (course) is to acquire real work experience in business-framework by applying the acquired theoretical knowledge. The Practical Training will offer students opportunities to additionally acquire practical skills required for entering the labor market as well as experience in: working in companies (e.g. responsibility, working under pressure, acquiring new skills); strengthening the suitability of students’ personal characteristics (e.g. time management, activity planning, evaluation of suitability of job, strengths and weaknesses); strengthening the suitability and level of students’ acquired knowledge (skills related to students’ education – communication, technological skills, etc.; university knowledge). Furthermore, the PPT will offer potentials for students’ future careers (career management skills, creating contacts, networking, etc.).

Learning Outcomes

The course will lead students to the A2.2 level of competence (following the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages).

Learning Outcomes

By the end of Hebrew 5, students will have completed a introduction to the grammar and basic syntactic structures of modern Hebrew. They will also be able to converse on a number of topics and to discuss simple critical ideas.

Learning Outcomes

Learning outcomes A2+:

After successfully completing this course, students will be able:

– to understand newspaper articles and reports on contemporary problems, economic and business issues as well as specialized texts in the own professional field;

– to understand radio and TV reports spoken in standard language;

– to understand complex speeches and lectures in the own professional field;

– to write corporate history, complex business reports, graph descriptions, meeting summaries, information letters, offers, confirmations;

– to communicate easily during stays in Russia, to participate in talks on familiar topics;

– to make complex telephone calls (requests, providing information), to establish business contacts, to make a product or firm presentation, to conduct negotiations, to make contracts.

After successfully completing this course students will have a profound basis to pass the Certification Exam B1 Business Russian and obtain an internationally recognized certificate.

Learning Outcomes

– Consolidation of correct pronunciation of the sounds and tones of modern Chinese.

– Independent and creative use of the Chinese language in various situations

– Consolidation of knowledge of the structure of Chinese characters.

– Handwriting skills of commonly used Chinese characters.

– Reading of texts written in Chinese characters pertaining to various situations.

– Social Business Chinese: intercultural and language competence for business cooperations with China

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course students will be able to:

– write clear and effective academic texts

– compare opinion effectively from a wide variety of sources

– prepare the sections of a BA thesis

– express their analysis of evidence clearly

– present information

– compare literature

– write an abstract

– write a research proposal

 

Learning Outcomes

The course will lead students to the A2.1 level of competence (following the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages).

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Students will be able to use verbs in the future tense. They will be able to converse on a variety of subjects from everyday life and to share/ describe their ideas. They will be able to read simplified texts.

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this semester students will have acquired the following skills:

Written Skills:
– write an autobiographical text
– write a story in the past tense
– write a variety of communicative documents
– write texts relating to the working environment

Oral skills:
– talk about work experience and career plans
– leave a formal phone message
– talk about festivities and customs
– talk about conditions and consequences
– recognize and express emotions
– formulate goals
– discuss a problem
– give advice

Grammar skills:
– form the conditional
– form the passive voice
– use the dative with verbs and prepositions
– form if clauses
– form relative clauses
– recognize the genitive

Students will possess significant knowledge of vocabulary relating to:
– education, professional training, work
– festivities and traditions
– feelings
– inventions and products
– the time
– problems of everyday life

 

 

Learning Outcomes

After successfully completing this course, students will be able:

– to understand newspaper articles and reports on contemporary problems, economic and business issues as well as specialized texts in the own professional field;

– to understand radio and TV reports spoken in standard language;

– to understand complex presentations in the own professional field;

– to write corporate history, complex business reports, graph descriptions, summaries of business talks, information letters, offers, confirmations;

– to communicate easily during stays in Russia, to participate in talks on familiar topics;

– to make complex telephone calls (requests, providing information), to establish business contacts, to make a product or firm presentation, to conduct negotiations, to close contracts.

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

– Consolidation of correct pronunciation of the sounds and tones of modern Chinese.

– Independent and creative use of the Chinese language in various situations

– Consolidation of knowledge of the structure of Chinese characters.

– Handwriting skills of commonly used Chinese characters.

– Reading of texts written in Chinese characters pertaining to various situations.

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

This course will lead students to the A2 level of competence following the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages.

 

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Students will be able to use active verbs in the present tense and in the past tense. They will be able to converse on a variety of subjects from everyday life. They will be able to read simplified texts.

 

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of the semester students will have acquired thh following skills:

Written Skills:
– write short texts such as emails, text messages, informal letters, invitations and notes

Oral skills:
– plan and book a trip
– express an assumption
– express emotions
– express positive and negative reactions
– discuss advantages and disadvantages
– express a complaint
– order in a restaurant
– plan an evening (say what you feel like doing)

Grammar skills:
– use reflexive verbs
– use verbs with prepositions
– form embedded questions
– form relative clauses
– form modal verbs in the past tense
– form the past tense

Students will possess significant knowledge of vocabulary relating to:
– traveling and traffic
– hobbies and sports
– media, especially computer and internet
– free time, eating out
– living in the city / in the country
– culture
– relationship

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Learning outcomes A2+:

After successfully completing this course, students will be able:

– to understand personal letters which describe feelings, wishes, and events

– to understand diverse text types on familiar topics written in standard language (global and detailed reading)

– to search for specific information in authentic documents, brochures and on websites (selective reading);

– to understand radio and TV reports spoken in standard language;

– to understand presentations in the own professional field;

– to write personal letters expressing his/her own opinion;

– to write business reports, summaries of business talks, information letters, invitations, CV, job descriptions;

– to express oneself in familiar situations, to give one’s opinion, to explain situations;

– to make telephone calls (appointments, requests, providing information), to participate in discussions, to conduct a job interview and answer questions as an job applicant.

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

– Consolidation of productive and receptive knowledge of the romanization system Hanyu Pinyin.

– Consolidation of correct pronunciation of the sounds and tones of modern Chinese.

– Independent and creative use of the Chinese language in various situations.

– Consolidation of knowledge of the structure of Chinese characters.

– Handwriting skills of commonly used Chinese characters.

– Reading of texts written in Chinese characters pertaining to various situations.

 

 

Learning Outcomes

At the end of this Semester students will be able to:

Written skills:

– produce a suite of formal and informal letters and emails

– write structured and developed letter of motivation (cover letter) and CV

– produce Context Action Result (CAR) responses to on-line application form questions

– form developed, unified and coherent paragraphs as blocks in extended pieces of writing

– use advanced techniques to add variety and emphasis to writing

– produce meeting minutes

Oral skills/Speaking and Understanding:

– answer an array of job interview questions

– use an awareness of the importance of body language to increase their effectiveness at job interview

– discuss fluently a wide variety of salient business topics

– communicate in English as a Lingua Franca

– negotiate effectively

Language skills/vocabulary:

– use elegant, non-bureaucratic or non-discriminatory phraseology

– use an extensive range of both formal and informal business terms

– use different tones to convey subtleties of meaning within polite, formal business language

– accurately use all the major punctuation: colons, semi-colons, commas and hyphens

Learning Outcomes

By the end of the semester students will have acquired the following skills:

Written Skills:

– write short texts such as postcards, text messages and short emails

Oral Skills:

– talk about the past
– buy food
– buy clothes
– talk about the weather
– talk to a doctor
– give orders
– express feelings
– express an opinion

Grammar Skills:

– form the present perfect (Perfekt)
– form the comparative and the superlative
– declinate adjectives
– form the imperative
– form subordinate clauses

Students will possess significant knowledge of vocabulary relating to:

– holidays
– food
– clothes
– colors
– the weather
– sports
– body parts
– illnesses
– family

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Learning outcomes A2+:

After successful completion of this course, students will be able:

– to understand personal letters, information and reports about everyday activities, newspaper articles, advertisements with general contents, simple business reports (global and detailed reading);

– to search for specific information in authentic documents, brochures and on websites (selective reading);

– to understand stories and reports on familiar topics;

– to understand phone conversations on familiar topics;

– to understand instructions on the job;

– to write simple notes and messages, exact directions, personal letters about everyday life, travels, hotel-stays and plans;

– to write short business e-mails (requests, simple business reports);

– to talk about everyday life (living, apartment, hotel-stays, plans, individual preferences and experience);

– to make telephone calls (appointments, requests), to make complaints at a hotel, to make a hotel presentation.

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, students will be able to

– Read and understand Business English texts

– Understand and use Business English terminology in the fields outlined in the Course Description

– Actively participate in discussions in those fields

– Produce written business texts about graph descriptions, business reports and business proposals

– Give presentations in public on business topics

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of the semester, students will be able to master a number of basic everyday life situations.

Specifically they will have acquired the following skills:

Written skills:

– fill out a form
– write short messages

Oral skills:

– spell and count
– greet and get to know somebody
– describe someone’s characteristics
– ask for and give directions
– make an appointment
– talk about oneself
– order in a café or restaurant
– talk about daily routines

Grammar skills:
– conjugate the present tense of the most common verbs
– use nouns in the nominative, accusative and dative
– use personal and possessive pronouns
– form questions
– use the most common prepositions
– form and use the past of the auxiliary (to be, to have) verbs
– use modal verbs
Students will possess significant knowledge of vocabulary relating to:

– free time
– days and months
– sightseeing
– nationality
– personal characteristics
– jobs and work

 

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

This course will be taught either at beginners’ level, reaching A1 by the end of the 5th semester, or at an advanced level, starting at A2+ at the beginning of the first semester.

Learning outcomes A1:

After successful completion of this course, students will be able:

– to understand simple personal letters, business cards, simple advertisements;

– to search for information on websites;

– to understand simple messages related to someone’s name, profession, address, telephone number, location;

– to understand simple instructions;

– to write simple notes and messages, personal letters;

– to fill in forms;

– to order meals at a café or a restaurant;

– to find his/her way to/at the airport;

– to respond to questions at the passport control and at the customs;

– to ask and to respond to questions related to someone’s name, profession, address, telephone number;

– to check into a hotel;

– to make short phone calls;

– to tell about one’s colleagues and office

Learning outcomes A2+:

After successful completion of this course, students will be able:

– to understand personal letters, information and reports about everyday activities (detailed reading);

– to understand simple newspaper articles and advertisements with general contents (global reading);

– to search for specific information in authentic documents, brochures and on websites (selective reading);

– to understand stories and reports on familiar topics;

– to understand phone conversations on familiar topics;

– to understand simple instructions;

– to write simple notes and messages, personal letters about one’s everyday life, travels and plans;

– to write short business e-mails (making and cancelling appointments);

– to talk about one’s everyday life (weather, traveling, health, plans, individual preferences and experience);

– to make telephone calls, to give information about a company, his/her own job.

 

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this semester, students will have/know:

– Productive and receptive knowledge of the romanization system Hanyu Pinyin.

– Correct pronunciation of the sounds and tones of Modern Chinese.

– Independent and creative use of the Chinese language in various situations.

– Knowledge of the structure of Chinese characters.

– Handwriting skills of about 100 basic and common Chinese characters.

– Reading of texts written in Chinese characters pertaining to the situations outlined in the “course contents”.

– Using electronic devices (computer, cell phone) to write Chinese characters.

 

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end oft he semester, students will be able to:

Written skills:

– produce effective written summaries of published materials on various business topics

– express opinions and argue positions on themes related to business today

– compose proper emails appropriate to various situations

Oral Skills/Speaking and Understanding:

– discern and use different registers (formal vs. Informal) when communicating within the business community

– speak more fluently and confidently using new target vocabulary and idiomatic expressions

– analyze and discuss a range of issues pertaining to business skills and practices

Language skills/vocabulary:

– acquire a broad range of vocabulary across several business topics

– learn to use this vocabulary naturally and confidently

– have improved grammatical and syntactical proficiency in weaker areas

– understand better the semantic importance of punctuation and use it correctly

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

After completion of the course, students will be capable of rooting Controlling in Management (through analyzing and interpreting financial reports), by placing the Controller as a key member of the Management Team and the Strategic Decision Making Process.

Students will know methods to analyze Budgets, Costs, Investments and Performance that will round up the knowledge for proper decision making. Performance and Control in general will offer better practical understanding of the theory.

 

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this Capstone Course students will be able to

– Describe business scenarios (business analysis, planning, and forecasting)

– Understand (financial) modelling such as DCF, WAAC

– Apply financial models to company strategies, targets and operational processes

– Understand how and why business modelling and project management influences a company’s financial and operative success

– Demonstrate to select and apply a range of financial management and risk management techniques

– Understand the corporate finance, financing and operational risk management problems of companies

 

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of the course students will be able to

– Describe the Financial System (structure and function of financial markets, financial regulation)

– Understand and describe Financial Instruments

– Analyze and value of Capital Market Instruments

– Understand and evaluate the role of portfolio theory, the capital asset pricing model and the dividend valuation model in determining the cost of capital

– Estimate an organization’s cost of equity and its cost of debt

– Estimate the weighted average cost of capital for an organization, whether it is in the public or private sector, and know how to use it in investment appraisal

– Appraise the factors influencing an organization’s capital structure and dividend policy.

– Explain and use the three main methods of company valuation – asset (book) value, market multiples and discounted cash flow

– Appreciate the merits and disadvantages of each technique

– Decide on the most appropriate method or methods of valuation according to the circumstances – regulation, new issues, privatization, merger and acquisition or restructuring.

 

 

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of the course students will be able to

– Explain credit risk, liquidity risk, interest rate risk, foreign currency risk and operational risk, and how these risks can be measured and managed

– Understand how and why financial risks may be managed, including how derivatives may be employed in such risk management

– Demonstrate an ability to select and apply a range of risk management techniques in various contexts

– Understand the corporate finance problems of multinational firms

– Understand the workings and instrument of FX markets

– Understand how exchange risks affects the valuation of multinational firms

 

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of the course students

– Have a good understanding of the scope and legal environment of IFRS.

– Obtain thorough knowledge about the key concepts and elements of corporate reporting under IFRS

– Are able to differentiate the key differences in accounting standards according to IAS / IFRS compared to those of commercial law

– Learn about the preparation and structure of IFRS financial statements and notes

– Acquire practice-relevant knowledge in the following areas of IFRS: property, plant and equipment, intangible assets, impairments, financial assets, financial liabilities, accounting for derivatives and equity, and income taxes

– Understand and critically evaluate IFRS financial statements as well as apply IFRS recognition and measurement rules on typical situations independently

– Have a profound knowledge of the techniques and advantageous criteria of business taxation and tax planning

– Should be able to analyze cross-border situations with reference to tax law and economics as well as to systematically solve and appropriately assess new problems

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, students are able to:

– use management control as a company’s central decision-making and planning tool

– differentiate between strategic and operational management control responsibilities

– apply key management control instruments with a view to achieving objectives

– implement a structured planning process

– analyze key value drivers, and integrate individual performance indicators and systems of indicators in the management control system with a view to achieving objectives

– identify appropriate management control instruments for SMEs

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course students will

1. have learned to understand the background of a company’s financial shortage and its effects on customer, partner and employee management.

2. have analyzed, developed, proved and applied sales strategy models, processes in sales, the structure and culture of sales organizations and the mechanism of leadership models:

– Analysis, development, transfer and application of a sales strategy to the sales organization

– Understanding the process of turning a sales strategy into results

– Definition, analysis and development sales organizations and hierarchies in sales

– Definition and development of positive customer and partner relevant sales processes and their interfaces

– Understanding and application of sales financial leadership models and competences

– Understanding and definition of sales key performance indicators

– Development and analysis of sales management data

– Preparation of sales presentation for management purposes

– Performance of a sales management presentation and defense of ideas and arguments

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course students will have a general overview about the area of channel management/logistics as well as sales management. After having successfully completed this course they will be able to identify logistical problems and have an idea of appropriate solutions in the distribution channels. They will also understand the critical relevance of sales in a business context as well as be able to identify the activities in sales management. They will comprise of knowledge of Customer Relationship Management (CRM) and Building Partnerships. Beside the Sales Forecasting they will also understand its Relationship to Operational Planning, execute Sales Budget Planning and will be able to define specific Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for a business unit in sales management.

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course students will be able to

– Understand the difference among terms such as product management, product development, marketing manager, promotion, product marketing management

– Explain and define product management

– Understand the role and difference between a product manager and a product developer

– Understand the difference among the terms such as brand associations, brand attitude, brand awareness, brand equity, brand image, brand personality, brand preference.

– Recognize the growing importance about social media when it comes to branding in general

– Understand the importance of branding and how marketers use branding for differentiation

– Recognize the importance of marketing research for the effective development of new products

– Define and explain the product strategy, and how it contributes to a firm’s performance

– Identify and explain further the stages of NPD (New Product Development)

– Understand the contribution that packaging has on the new product development process

– Demonstrate what impact packaging has on product development and brand management

– Understand the contribution that market research has on the new product development process

– Recognize the benefits and weaknesses of consumer new product testing

– Understand the importance of discontinuous products

– Provide an understanding of the role that a knowledge base organization has in the new product development process

– Understand the importance of innovation

– Define and explain the concept of commercialization in the NPD process

– Explain the structure and functions in managing the NPD process

– Explain and define the differentiation of skills among marketing people, sales people, developers and product managers

 

Learning Outcomes

At the end of the class, the student will be able to:

– Understand the relevance of consumer behavior for marketing strategy

– Appreciate the complexities of consumer behavior

– Apply key principles of consumer behavior to marketing issues faced by SMEs

– Apply social influence tactics to influence consumer behavior

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course the students will understand

– relevant concepts and tools of financial economics and describe key economic variables like inflation, deflation, money creation, money supply and the role of financial institutions

– the differences between major macroeconomic theories like Monetarism, Keynesianism and the Austrian School of Economics.

– economic cycles and their origin

– the importance of interest rates

– how the money multiplier works and what the key functions of money are

– the system of exchange rates, PPP and market equilibrium

– conventional and non-conventional monetary policy tools and QE

– the monetary and fiscal policy tools policy makers have at their disposal

– price stability and the nominal anchor

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course, students should:

– Know the basic concept, historical development, different schools and contemporary trends of marketing.

– Understand economic and psychological approaches to consumer behavior.

– Distinguish between Consumer (B2C) and Business-to-business (B2B) MARKETING

– Be able to apply strategies and techniques in pricing, positioning, branding and communication.

– Know about the current and future trends of marketing, including CSR, social, shared economy, political marketing.

 

Students should also have the skills needed to:

 

– Understand the role of the economical theories in different approaches in marketing. Functionalist, behaviourist, psychological, institutionalist, etc.

– Distinguish and understand the different motivations of consumer and B2B buyers.

– Know the basic concepts of influencing, reinforcing and motivating of consumers.

– Create criteria for selecting and evaluating target markets, and use that for positioning.

– Understand the theory of communication, recognize the different roles and tasks in corporate communication.

– Know the different fields of branding. Understand the financial importance of branding, distinguish between brand value and brand equity.

– Use the different methods of pricing, identify the links between economic, accounting and marketing orientation to pricing.

– Know about and apply latest tools in e-commerce, shared economy and social media.

– Understand the economic consequences of production and consumption externalities and their marketing aspects.

– Understand the ethical aspects of marketing and their relationship to CSR, stakeholder communication, social marketing, sustainability and consumer welfare.

 

By the end of the course, students should be able to:

– Make high level presentations.

– Use marketing techniques for special business cases.

– Prepare themselves for near-future marketing challenges.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course, the student will be able to:

– Know where to find relevant economic data, how to download and process them.

– Know basic data manipulation and statistical techniques and apply them to actual data.

– Apply your knowledge from the introductory courses of economics to real data from several different areas like industry concentration indicators, household spending, GDP, employment, or price and cost measures.

– Analyze the data and derive meaningful and correct conclusions from them.

– Develop own graphical illustrations that support your empirical findings and the underlying “story” that you want to tell.

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course students will be

Subject-specific:

Recognizing:

– Outline basic concepts of macroeconomics and describe the key economic variables:

  • Gross domestic product (GDP) and growth
  • Consumer price index and inflation
  • Employment and the unemployment rate

– Name major economic drivers that determine long-run macroeconomic growth.

– Recognize that there are short-run fluctuations (business cycles) that fluctuate around these long-run trends.

Knowing:

– Know how GDP, inflation, and unemployment are measured.

– Know how to describe the performance of an economy or the relative performances of several economies using the three main economic indicators GDP, employment, and price indices

– Know about the different components of production, about saving and investment and about financial markets

– Know about the theory of short-run fluctuations like the Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand model, the Philips curve, and monetary and fiscal policies.

Understanding and applying:

– Understand the transitory short-run dynamics around the macroeconomic long-term trends.

– Understand the monetary and fiscals policy tools policy makers have at their disposal to shift the Aggregate Demand curve

– Understand the short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment and their connection to aggregate demand

Methodological:

Recognizing:

– See the relationship between variables expressed in levels and expressed in percent changes

Knowing:

– Know how to get from variables expressed in nominal terms to the same variable just expressed in real terms. And know that most of the data published is shown in real terms.

– Know how to read semi-technical reports (Statistical news releases by Eurostat) in order to find relevant information

– Have an idea where to find data (Eurostat)

Understanding and applying:

– Understand the fundamental difference between variables expressed in real terms and in nominal terms

– Understand how to “read” a graph and how to interpret the information being depicted. (What is the story the producer of the graph wants to tell?)

 

Learning Outcomes

After completing this course, students should have developed a range of skills enabling them to understand economic concepts and use those concepts to analyze specific questions.

By the end of this course, students should be able to:

– Explain the concepts of scarcity, opportunity cost and the basic rules of economics.

– Understand consumer and firm behavior.

– Understand the operation of a market and its failures.

– Analyze different types of market structures (monopoly, oligopoly and a competitive market)

– Understand how to apply economic principles to a range of policy questions.

 

Students should also have the skills needed to:

 

– USE supply and demand diagrams to analyze the impact of overal changes in supply and demand on price and quantity.

– KNOW the meaning of perfect competition, profit maximization, market determination of cost and quantity.

– RECOGNIZE different types of costs and their curves (total, average, variable, fix, marginal, short run, long run). CALCULATE different production costs.

– EXPLAIN the concept that economic decisions are made at margins. DEFINE marginal cost and marginal revenue.

– ANALYZE the impact of changes in price and income on a consumer’s decision (income vs. substitution effect).

– KNOW AND CALCULATE the different types of elasticities.

– ANALYZE producer and consumer surplus and shortage graphically.

– ANALYZE the behavior of firms in a perfectly competitive market in the short-run and the long-run (economy of scale).

– ANALYZE the behavior of firms in a monopoly or oligopoly (entry barriers, natural monopolies, deadweight loss).

– KNOW government policies (taxes, controls, regulations) and ANALYZE their effects on the supply and demand framework.

By the end of the course, students should be able to:

– READ and INTERPRET graphs.

– Mathematically CALCULATE major functions (e.g. price elasticity).

– EXPLAIN the most important phrases and terms of economics (e.g. ceteris paribus).

 

Learning Outcomes

The course will increase students’ ability to utilize, apply and transfer the concepts of project management, as studied in the previous semester, to a real-life project.

The replication, reproduction, explanation and application of this knowledge will be trained and experienced.

It will be necessary to apply project management tools and concepts as studied during the PM I course to successfully develop a project.

Communication skills, both oral and written, will be utilized and applied.

Innovation and creativity will be developed in the framework of the project.

 

Learning Outcomes

At the end of this course students will:

– Be able to explain and replicate the principles of successful project management.

– Be able to apply general issues of project management

– Be able to explain and replicate principles and practices of project management

– Have developed the ability to function effectively on a project team

– Be able to explain how projects are used in everyday business life

– Have developed the ability to function effectively as a project manager

– Have further developed their ability to communicate effectively both orally (presentations) and in writing especially in regards of producing a professional, clear and well structured seminar paper.

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course students will

– understand the concept of managerial accounting.

– apply the relevant instruments.

– develop an understanding of strategic controlling

– flex and analyze a budget against actual results.

– be able to manage a firm in the context of value-oriented controlling.

– be able to set up reports.

 

Learning Outcomes

The objective is to inform the students on tools, needs and occasions of corporate communication. The students will better understand corporate communication as a discipline and how to apply it in the real world, being able to identify its challenges of application.

The students will get proficiency in investigating for objectives of better information. They will get proficiency in academic seminar paper writing, too. Furthermore, their presentation skills will be further developed and the students will gain more experience in presenting and arguing their opinion in front of a (professional) audience.

The students will be able to analyze problems of corporate communication with a problem solving approach.

They will be able to think with a global management perspective, to integrate and apply corporate communication skills to leadership activities or to participation in projects.

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:

– Create their own online-presence and perform basic SEO

– Monitor, analyze and utilize traffic data using Google Analytics

– Perform and implement A/B testing (e.g using Google Optimizer/LPs/AdStage)

– Understand how the “online ecosystem” works, and what is a digital footprint

– Strategize & target highly-specific audiences using social media

– Grow a product and generate leads using social media and viral campaigns

– Optimize content and tell better stories to improve conversions

– Manage, segment and automate email-marketing communications

– Use heatmaps and screenshots to increase revenue

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, the student will be able to:

– Explain the importance of data management and benefits of database processing in contrast to file processing

– Model data using Entity-Relationship (ER) Model

– Understand normalization and design of databases based on ER model

– Understanding of the physical and logical organization of data

– Write commands in SQL

– Apply techniques for extraction of data from source systems

– Implement business dashboards.

Further learning outcomes are:

– Knowledge how data warehouses are used to help managers successfully gather, analyze, understand and act on information stored in data warehouses;

– Gather strategic decision making requirements from businesses, develop key performance indicators (KPIs) and corporate performance management metrics using the Balanced Scorecard, and design and implement business dashboards;

– Analyze multidimensional data interactively from multiple perspectives by using OLAP tools;

– Understand the fundamental principles of Business Intelligence (BI);

– Apply the Business Intelligence tools in an enterprise;

– Estimate success factors of a BI project implementation;

– Understand how information systems facilitate information flows, decisions, and transactions in business.

Course Pre-requisites:

Knowledge of the basic concepts and hands-on experience with the Windows operating systems and MS Office.

ECDL/ICDL-Contents:

– Apply advanced text, paragraph, column and table formatting.

– Work with referencing features like footnotes, endnotes and captions.

– Enhance productivity by using fields, forms and templates.

– Apply advanced mail merge techniques.

– Use linking and embedding features to integrate data.

– Manipulations with headers and footers in a document.

– Apply advanced formatting options such as conditional formatting and customized number formatting and handle worksheets.

– Use functions and formulas.

– Create charts and apply advanced chart formatting features.

– Work with tables and lists to analyze, filter and sort data.

– Use linking, embedding and importing features to integrate data.

– Understand key concepts of database development and usage.

– Create a relational database and relationships between tables.

– Create forms to improve functionality.

– Create report controls to perform calculations.

– Create and modify templates and format slide backgrounds.

– Enhance a presentation using built-in drawing and image tools.

– Apply advanced chart formatting features and create and edit diagrams.

– Insert movies and sound and apply built-in animation features.

– Use linking, embedding, importing and exporting features to integrate data.

– Work with custom slide shows, apply slide show settings, and control a slide show.

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, the students will be able to apply table calculations using complex functions (e.g., different financial, logical, and lookup functions) and to solve correctly problems and critically assess the results, use data linking and consolidation, use goal seeking to determine the values required to reach a desired result, analyze data, manipulate with one data series and multiple data series. Also, the student will obtain knowledge to perform professionally an advanced formatting of research and scientific papers.

Further, the students will be able to perform tasks that involve creating and preparing presentation on a professional level, and gain a greater understanding of how to use the individual applications together to solve business problems. The students will obtain the knowledge about the concept of databases, their creation, manipulation and maintaining, which is necessary for majority of nowadays business use-cases. They should easily answer to the most of “when and why” questions of performing these tasks and follow up-to-date information on current applications.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course the students will be able to identify fundamental Business Law related structures and be able to explain legal frameworks and facts for a solid orientation in selected divisions of Business Law.

The students will also understand and reproduce significant fundamental Business Law related principles and the respective interfaces and interactions within (the selected divisions of) Business Law.

The students will also be able to utilize primary (such as legal databases) and secondary sources of law (legal literature) in methodically correct ways.

Furthermore, at the end of this course the students will have an increased command of basic legal terminology and will be able to express interests by applying accurate legal terminology.

Moreover, the students will have legal risk awareness and risk assessment in (selected divisions of) Law related matters and will start to apply and use legal principles and its limits to business and (self-) marketing strategies.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of the course students will

– Know key theoretical concepts of multilateral cooperation of states within international organizations (IO);

– Understand the rationales of various forms and types of international organizations and institutions;

– Assess their roles within international relations;

– Develop specific knowledge about key IOs in the political and economic field and elaborate on their governance, structures and objectives.

Learning Outcomes
Upon completion of this course, students will:

– appreciate the relevance of consumer insights and shopper marketing

– have developed an understanding of the key drivers of consumer behavior at the point of sale

– be able to apply this knowledge to the (re)design of retail spaces and service environments

– understand how emotions influence shopping decisions and be able to trigger emotions in shoppers

– understand the effect of sensory clues such as music, scents and colors on shopping behavior

– be able to apply the knowledge gained in this course to a real-world project

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course the students will be able to identify fundamental Public Law related structures and be able to explain legal frameworks and facts for a solid orientation in Public Law.

The students will also understand and reproduce the fundamental Public Law related principles and the respective interfaces and interactions within Public Law.

In particular, the students will have a basic know-how of a manager’s strategies and plans when in court or when involved in Administrative proceedings and how to manage internal and external legal support.

The students will also be able to utilize primary (such as legal databases) and secondary sources of law (legal literature) in methodically correct ways.

Furthermore, at the end of this course the students will have an increased command of basic legal terminology and will be able to express interests by applying accurate legal terminology.

Moreover, the students will have legal risk awareness and risk assessment in Public Law related matters and will start to apply and use legal principles and its limits to business and (self-) marketing strategies.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course the students will be able to identify fundamental legal structures and be able to explain legal frameworks and facts for a solid orientation in Private Law.

The students will also understand and reproduce the fundamental Private Law related principles of law (in particular the meaning, value and significance of private autonomy) and the respective interfaces and interactions with different fields of Private Law as well as of Public Law.

The students will also have a first awareness of the different legal concepts provided by different legal systems with reference to Private Law and will be able to develop an understanding of the absoluteness and immortality of Private Law (principles) such as freedom, legal peace and self-determination.

The students will be able to utilize primary (such as legal databases) and secondary sources of law (legal literature) already in methodically admissible ways.

Furthermore, at the end of this course the students will have a command of basic legal terminology and will start to be able to express interests by applying accurate legal terminology.

Moreover, the students will have legal risk awareness and risk assessment in Private Law related matters and will start to apply and use legal principles and its limits to business and (self-) marketing strategies.

Learning Outcomes

Students successfully completing Marketing II will have the knowledge to name and explain each dimension of the marketing mix. Furthermore they will be able to identify and understand the relationship and interdependency of the Product, Price, Place and Promotion. Based on this conceptional and topic competence they will be able to develop appropriate scenarios for integrated marketing communications for products and brands. Students will be able to apply the knowledge acquired in Marketing I and II in the framework of a marketing plan.

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course students will

– understand the characteristics of different financing sources.

– be able to guide the process of raising equity.

– be able to plan the distribution policy of a company.

– be familiar with the characteristics of different debt instruments.

– be able to calculate the cost of different financing alternatives.

– develop a financing strategy for a company

 

Learning Outcomes

After completion of the course “Management of Production and Sourcing” students will have an overview into the field of managing business processes and sourcing from an integrated supply- and demand- driven perspective. The students will have more insights into production/operations management problems and how to apply some quantitative instruments for managing operational problems in a productive business organization including sourcing and sourcing strategies.

In particular the students will be able to:

– Explain/Replicate/Reproduce the procurement and production business processes, the concepts of an input-output-system of a production company, supply-demand processes, Little’s Law, idle time and throughput time , sourcing and sourcing strategies.

– Utilize/Apply/Develop quantitative instruments of Productivity and Efficiency measurement, IDLE TIME & THROUGHPUT TIME, Material requirement planning (MRP), Economic order quantity (EOQ), ABC-Analysis.

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course students will be able to

– Explain/Replicate/Reproduce the issues and concepts of depreciation, valuation of Inventory, Financial Statements, Accounting Information System (Accounting Cycle) & Conceptual Framework in Financial Accounting

– Utilize/Apply/Develop the Financial Accounting double-entry booking system (with VAT) through applied exercises), Financial Ratios, Depreciation, Valuation of Inventory

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course Marketing I, students should be able to:

– understand the role of the marketing function within a firm

– gain solid understanding of key marketing concepts

– apply knowledge by performing a situation analysis to assess market opportunities

– develop marketing strategies and reproduce techniques of segmentation, targeting, and positioning

– relate and apply the theoretical concepts learned in class to real-life business situations

 

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to

– perform financial calculations.

– apply methods used to evaluate investments.

– determine the cash flows of an investment project.

– analyze the cost of capital.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course, students

will have basic knowledge of the Accounting field, especially Budgeting, Financial Accounting (Bookkeeping, Auditing). Students will be able to understand and execute virtually simple accounting and bookkeeping transactions and have basic knowledge in handling financial statements (e.g. balance sheet and income statement). Finally the students will also be made familiar with business vocabulary and get an idea of what is considered with the different keywords. (=prerequisite for further success in their business studies)

Furthermore students will be able to

– Explain/Replicate/Reproduce the issues and concepts of Accounting, Financial accounting, Accounting Terminology, double-entry booking system

– Utilize/Apply/Develop the Financial Accounting double-entry booking system through applied exercises)

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to

– Replicate and explain the cross-linked key activities of businesses and the relationships between them.

– Describe the key players, their functions and responsibilities of the structural- organizational- and environmental level.

– Apply knowledge of influence and effects of different economic models, globalization, the state and its power(s) on analyzing modern businesses and their environments.

– Reproduce the organizational aspects of a company/business not only as its formal structure, type of ownership and other hard facts, but also as the organizational and corporate cultures that have immense effects on the performance of the businesses.

– Describe and differentiate between management and leadership in terms of scope and activities.

– Analyze approaches to strategy and its link to organizational as well as environmental aspects

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, the students will gain a comprehensive overview of the advanced mathematical concept essential for business, research and decision making. The student’s goal should be to build up an understanding of rationale underlying the various mathematical techniques used in business, marketing and economy. Students need to comprehend the various concepts and to apply them in solving problems. Further, students will obtain knowledge about:

– Usage a response surface to increase industrial productivity;

– Implementation and performing economic dynamical analysis and optimization;

– Application of a particular mathematical tool in a given situation, (i.e., in the real use-cases);

– Application to the economic planning and development, Comparative Static Analysis, Production Costs and Scheduling, Resource Allocation;

– Analyzing to forecast and benchmark demand important for strategic planning of a destination business organization, international business chains planning a new investment;

– Application to Investment (Portfolio Selection), Production Planning;

– Understanding a variety of complex marketing models and discern use-cases in which they are applicable;

– Understanding fundamental principles of mathematics and statistics used in marketing models;

– Translating practical question in marketing into formal models;

– Interpreting the results based on formal models in a practical context;

– Performing a successful identification of all parameters and variables in variety of marketing-oriented economic models presented.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course students will:

– use hypothesis tests to make decisions and know how to interpret the results.

– explain the basics of observational studies and experiments and be able to identify potential problems with data that are presented in scientific and non-scientific publications.

– analyze the relationship between categorical and numerical data and know how to interpret the results.

– describe selected pitfalls of economic forecasting and multivariate statistics.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course students will

– Know, reproduce and understand the thesis development process and LBS Scientific Standards.

– Be able to independently apply their knowledge for further academic writing assignments (e.g. BT II)

– Apply the requirements to their practical work on BT I.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of a Bachelor Thesis, students will be able to:

– Know, reproduce and understand the thesis development process and LBS Scientific Standards.

– Research, identify and read academic literature on their BT-topic, and use it for their own argumentation.

– Apply an academic writing style, notably develop and argue claims based on reason and evidence.

– Independently apply their knowledge for further academic writing assignments.

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, students will:

– appreciate the importance of research for the marketing function

– be able to understand the major decisions necessary to plan and execute a research project

– understand both qualitative and quantitative research techniques

– be able to apply the concepts learned in this course to an empirical research project.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of the MER class, students will:

– Be familiar with the academic working cycle that underlies each academic paper (including the Bachelor thesis)

– Have practice in searching and finding academic literature through various channels

– Know the typical structure and nature of academic texts

– Have knowledge and practice in reading academic texts, and particularly be able to apply different reading techniques

– Be able to summarize an academic text in own words and to answer questions in a targeted and focused way

– Have trained expressing themselves in writing

– Be able to compose a literature review in compliance with academic standards, particularly by engaging with other authors’ texts

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course:

– Students can explain the role of statistical models in economics and marketing

– Students utilize visualization techniques and appropriate descriptive statistics for data presentation.

– Students explain the basics of surveys.

– Students apply inferential statistics and know how to interpret the results.

– Students analyze the relationship between categorical or numerical data and know how to interpret the results

– Students know how to apply statistical software for solving practical problems.

Course Pre-requisites

This course is based on the contents of the Austrian Matura, which comprises:

Fundamental Operations with Numbers (Real Numbers, Exponents, Powers, Fractions, etc.), Fundamental Operations with Algebraic Expressions (Terms, Degrees, Grouping, Computations, etc.), Properties of Numbers, Special Products, Factoring (Factorization Procedures, Greatest Common Factor, Least Common Multiple), Fractions (Operations with Fractions, Rational Algebraic Fractions, Complex Fractions), Exponents (Integral Exponents, Roots, Rational Exponents, General Laws of Exponents, etc.), Radicals (Radical Expressions, Laws for Radicals, Operations with Radicals, Rationalizing Binomial Denominators, etc.), Operations with Complex Numbers (Graphical Representation of, Algebraic Operations with Complex Numbers, etc.), Equations (Transformation, Equivalent Equations, Polynomial Equations, etc.), Ratio/Proportion/Variation, Functions and Graphs (Variables, Relations, Functions, Function Notations, Rectangular Coordinate System, Function of Two Variables, Symmetry, Shifts, Scaling, etc.), Linear Equations in One Variable (Linear/Literal Equations), Equations of Lines (Slope of a Line, Parallel and Perpendicular Lines, Slope-Intercept form, Slope-Point Form, Two-point Form, Intercept Form), Simultaneous Linear Equations (Systems of Two/Three Linear Equations), Quadratic Equations in One Variable (Methods of Solving Quadratic Equations, etc.), Systems of Equations Involving Quadratics (Graphical/Algebraic Solution), Inequalities (Principles, Absolute Value Inequalities, Higher Degree Inequalities, Linear Inequalities in Two Variables, Systems of Linear Inequalities, etc.), Polynomial Functions (Polynomial Equations, Zeros of Polynomial Equations, Solving Polynomial Equations, Approximating Real Zeros), Rational Functions (Vertical/Horizontal Asymptotes, Graphing Rational Functions, etc.), Sequences and Series (Arithmetic/Geometric/Harmonic Sequences, Infinite Geometric Series, Means, etc.), Logarithms (Definitions, Laws, Common Logarithms, Natural Logarithms, Use of Tables/Calculators, etc.), Application of Logarithms and Exponents (Simple/Compound Interests, etc.), Permutations and Combinations, The Binominal Theorem, Probability (Simple/Compound/Binominal/Conditional Probability, Mathematical Expectation), Mathematical Induction (Principles of and Proof by Mathematical Induction), Partial Fractions (Rational/Proper/Partial Fractions, Identically Equal Polynomials, Fundamental Theorem, Finding Decompositions), The Derivative (Slope of a Function, Limits, Derivative Function, Adjectives for Functions), Rules for Finding Derivatives (Power/Product/Quotient/Chain Rule, Linearity of Derivatives), Curve Sketching (Maxima and Minima, First/Second Derivative Test, Concavity and Inflection Points, Asymptotes, etc.), Integration (Substitution, Integration by Parts, Rational Functions, etc.).

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, the students will gain a comprehensive overview of the basic mathematical concept essential for business, research and decision making. The student’s goal should be to build up an understanding of rationale underlying the various mathematical techniques used in business and economy. Students need to comprehend the various concepts and to apply them in solving problems.

Further, students will obtain knowledge about:

– Application to Cost Segregation, Time Series;

– Interpretation of Long-Range Forecasting;

– Application of a particular financial-mathematical tool in a given situation, (i.e., in the real use-cases);

– Application to the economic planning and development, Comparative Static Analysis, Production Costs, Production Scheduling, Resource Allocation;

– Application to Investment (Portfolio Selection), Production Planning;

– Recognize and solve scenarios as Minimizing Inventory Costs, Elasticity of Demand, Continuous Money Flow, Consumers’ and Producers’ Surplus;

– Understand fundamental principles of mathematics and statistics used in finance and marketing models;

– Translate practical question in finance and marketing into formal models;

– Interpret the results based on formal models in a practical context.

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, students will be able to

– understand and apply basic principles of communication and communication theory

– understand and explain the impact and the importance of communication skills and presentation techniques

– explain, utilize and apply LBS presentation standards.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this class, students will be able to:
– Understand the nature of research and academic work in Economics and Business;
– Understand and explain what is academic research, science and scientific quality;
– Explain, utilize and apply basic academic rules, in particular how to quote correctly;
– Reproduce and apply the LBS Scientific standards;
– Conduct academic literature search and literature review;
– Discuss the importance of academic quality for their studies and beyond.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course, students will be able to:

– Describe the History of ACs

– Specify the AC method

– Enumerate possible applications (in HRM) of the AC method

– Name the strengths of ACs, illustrate the criticism & limitation of the method

– Indicate intercultural aspects of ACs

– Apply the AC method by planning an AC

– Design simulation exercises

– Select the relevant exercises and arrange them to meet the requirements of the AC

– Analyze jobs

– Assess the Validity of simulation exercises

– Assess Participants and evaluate their performance

– Interpret Assessments

– Recommend and suggest further steps (selection, need for training…)

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course students will be able to

– Know, reproduce and understand key concepts of behavioral economics

– Apply the concepts to both general and business settings

– Reflect on these concepts with respect management implications

Learning Outcomes

The principal learning objective of this course is that students will develop a foundational understanding of corporate governance in a national as well as international context and to have an understanding of the purpose of corporate governance and how an effective governance structure can enhance value creation for all stakeholders.

After successful completion students will be able to:

– Understand the fundamental theories and practices of the corporate governance framework of organizations.

– Develop awareness of the undesirable consequences of weak corporate governance practices and its mitigations.

– Identify influences of major constituents to corporate governance within given circumstances.

– Evaluate the relation of performance and governance.

– Determine responsibilities of organizations to different stakeholder groups and judge on corporate (social) responsibility.

-Adapt the acquired knowledge to a qualified understanding of reports on corporate governance issues in popular media.

Learning Outcomes

After completion of this course students will have:
• Basic insights and an overview of state of the art motivational theories (basic and current streams) and
• understand their practical implication and drivers
• from a theoretical as well as
• corporate and
• employees’ perspective.

Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course students will:

– Have developed their critical thinking skills

– Be able to read and interpret philosophical texts.

– Be able to summarize and explain difficult ideas and concepts.

– Be able to understand reality from different perspectives and thus to understand that different people will define issues in different ways.

– Be able to describe the concept, relevance, aims and key dimensions and aspects of Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI).

– Understand moral principles and apply these to everyday life.

– Have a basic understanding of:

-> different participatory research methodologies

-> the relationship between science, research, innovation, and society

-> the potential impact of science/research/innovation on individuals, groups, or society as a whole

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course students will be able to

– reproduce and explain concepts, models and terminology from mediation and conflict theory

– identify different conflict situations

– apply the principles of various theories of communication in work-related environments

– apply the principles of mediation in work-related conflicts

– perceive conflict as an opportunity to bring about change and clarity

 

By the end of this course students will also have improved

– their problem-solving skills

– their team-leading skills

– their negotiation skills

– their knowledge of theoretical concepts influencing team management

– their understanding of the importance of embracing conflict

– their abilities to deal with conflicts productively

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course the students will be able to:

1. reproduce and explain the following concepts, models and terminology:

the topics of HRM
the duties of a HRM Manager
the line and staff aspects of HRM

Talent Management
Job analysis, job description, job specification
The steps in the recruitment and selection process
Different techniques in workforce planning and forecasting
Application Forms

Reliability and validity of tests
Different types of test for employee selection
Work samples and simulations

Basic types of interviews and questions
Interview – errors

Employee orientation
The five step training process (ADDIE)
Different training techniques
Different Management Development Programs
Performance Management – Performance Appraisal

The basic factors determining pay rates
Job evaluation methods
Pay plans
Incentives

2. utilize, apply and transfer the following concepts and models:

different methods to collect job analysis information
Finding internal candidates / external candidates in the recruiting process
How to design a structural situational interview
How to conduct an effective job interview
How to design a training program and motivate trainees
How to set effective performance appraisal standards
How to create a market competitive pay plan

3. analyse and develop strategies and innovative concepts:

the trends in HRM
a recruiting handbook
Pros and Cons of internal / external sources of candidates
“recruiting a more diverse workforce”
Identification of training requirements
The problems to avoid in appraising performance and the guidelines for effective appraisals
Contemporary topics/important trends in compensation management

277832