• Thursday, April 25, 2024
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Business School Netherlands rates tier one MBA institution

Business School Netherlands rates tier one MBA institution

Business School Netherlands (BSN) has been ranked as a ‘Tier One’ MBA offering institution among the Global Executive MBA Business Schools rankings in the latest CEO Magazine, 2022 Global MBA Rankings.

The BSN International Action Learning MBA emerged sixth among the Tier One European MBA Rankings.

In addition, BSN International Action Learning MBA was ranked second (2nd) in the Global Online MBA Rankings.

The CEO Magazine Global Ranking is a global recognition desired by the world’s top business schools. CEO Magazine has published its MBA rankings annually for the past ten years. It is peculiar because it is acceptable by world top organizations as a yardstick in differentiating among the ever-widening options of MBA programmes around the globe.

Business School Netherlands is present in the Netherlands with study centres in different locations across the globe, including Lagos, Abuja and Port-Harcourt. While the CEO Magazine is an annual Global MBA Rankings, profiling MBA, Executive MBA and Online MBA programmes.

Read also: Ecobank updates retail foreign exchange transactions for schools

“Business School Netherlands ranks among the best fourteen global Executive MBA Business Schools. It ranked no.14 out of 180 Global Executive MBA programmes that were thoroughly examined from all over the world. Thus, BSN outpaced over 166 excellent programmes in different continents of the world, in terms of the quality of Faculty, learning environment, class sizes, tuition fees, faculty, delivery methods, international diversity, gender make-up and more,” Alexandra Skinner, group editor-in-chief, CEO Magazine stated.

According to Skinner, the rankings focused primarily on identifying the business schools, which combine the exceptional quality of content, facilitation, and other indices with great return on investment. According to the report, specific criteria considered in assessing business schools are based upon key performance indicators considered to be of interest and value to potential students.

The indicators are quality of faculty (weighted 34.95%); international diversity (9.71%); class size (9.71%); accreditation (8.74%); faculty to student ratio (7.76%); price (5.83%); international exposure (4.85%); work experience (4.85%); professional development (4.85%); gender parity (4.85%) and delivery methods (3.8%).

“In an increasingly crowded market, selecting the right business school can be difficult, which is far from ideal given the time and investment involved. Using a ranking system entirely geared and weighted to fact-based criteria, CEO Magazine aims to cut through the noise and provide potential students with a performance benchmark for those schools under review,” Skinner stated.