EDHEC Business School

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The EDHEC (École des hautes études commerciales du nord) or EDHEC Business School is a university ( Grandes écoles) and serves primarily in France as a training center for future business executives. It was in 14th place in the 2016 ranking of European business schools.

University

EDHEC was founded in 1906 as part of the Catholic University of Lille and has offices in Lille , Nice , Paris , London and Singapore . The Grande École has the Triple Crown d. That is, it is accredited by the three accreditation organizations EQUIS, AACSB and AMBA.

In 2010 the MIP Management Institute of Paris was taken over .

Rankings and salary

Depending on the ranking, EDHEC is among the top 5 grandes écoles of economics in France with HEC Paris , ESSEC , ESCP and EMLYON Business School .

The EDHEC Business School is ranked as follows:

  • Financial Times European Business Schools 14th place
  • Financial Times Master in Finance Pre-experience 1st place worldwide
  • Financial Times Master in Management ranked 15th worldwide
  • Le Point Business School Ranking 4th in France

In the Masters in Finance Pre-experience Ranking 2017 of the Financial Times , the EDHEC Business School awarded the M.Sc. 1st place in financial markets worldwide. This puts it ahead of other elite schools such as MIT , Oxford , Bocconi and St. Gallen in an international comparison, and for the first time in four years it pushed HEC Paris from first place.

The average salary after three years is € 49,320 for all graduates and € 103,423 for graduates of finance courses.

Partner universities in Germany, Austria and the Netherlands

The following universities offer exchange or double degree programs with EDHEC:

Well-known graduates

  • Laurence Antoine (1989), CEO, Caterpillar
  • Mike Burke (1980), CEO, Fendi
  • Jean-Pierre de Montalivet (1966), Chairman and CEO, Henkel
  • Bruno de Pampelonne (1981), DG France, Merrill Lynch
  • Thierry Drecq (1980), Chairman, ECF
  • Bernard Fournier (1962), Chairman NED, Xerox Limited
  • Gérard Guillemot (1980), CEO, Gameloft (founder of Ubisoft )
  • Regis Larose (1981), CEO, Yves Rocher
  • Geoffroy Sardin, CEO, Ubi Soft
  • Christian Polge (1989) - President of Coca-Cola France
  • Laurent Freixe (1985), CEO Nestlé Espagne, Chairman Nestlé Portugal
  • Bruno de Saint-Florent (1988) - Vice President, The Boston Consulting Group
  • Hélène Ratte, Human Resources Director Europe, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu
  • Franck Moison (1975), CEO, Colgate Palmolive Europe
  • Hugo Kunetz (1990), CEO, L'Oréal Spain
  • Michel Grillon (1973), CEO, Sothys International
  • Philippe Fortunato (1989), CEO, Christian Dior Asia / Pacific
  • Philippe Durand (1979), Vice Chairman, Texas Instruments
  • Vincent Cheney (1980), Chairman, Procter & Gamble France / Belgium
  • Étienne Aubourg (1981), Group Executive Vice President, AXA
  • Jean-Jacques Goldman (GE 1974), composer and interpreter

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Business school rankings from the Financial Times - FT.com. Retrieved March 20, 2017 (English).
  2. Our campuses. Retrieved March 20, 2017 .
  3. Triple accredited business schools (AACSB, AMBA, EQUIS). Retrieved March 20, 2017 (American English).
  4. ^ Business school rankings from the Financial Times - FT.com. Accessed July 31, 2017 .
  5. rankings.ft.com
  6. Grandes Écoles Ranking: Grandes écoles de commerce - Classement 2018 - Le Point.
  7. Grandes Écoles Salaries of Finance Graduates ( lepoint.fr ).
  8. Grandes Écoles graduate salaries ( lepoint.fr ).
  9. Website: edhec.edu