SFU launches Americas MBA program with top business schools

Apr 05, 2011

FIA (Brazil), ITAM (Mexico) and Vanderbilt University (USA) team up with SFU’s Beedie School of Business to partner on new executive program focused on the Americas

VANCOUVER– Four of the most widely respected graduate business schools in North and South America are partnering to offer an innovative new Master of Business Administration program for international executives starting in August 2011.

Called the Americas MBA for Executives, the two-year degree program provides 60 students with the opportunity to study management issues in each of the four largest economies in the Americas.

Participating schools include:

• FIA Business School, Fundação Instituto De Administração, São Paulo, Brazil
• ITAM, Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México, Mexico City, Mexico
• Simon Fraser University, Beedie School of Business, Vancouver, BC, Canada
• Vanderbilt University, Owen Graduate School of Management, Nashville, Tenn., USA

The program grew out of a recognition that global businesses are increasingly aligning their operations around all of the Americas, not just particular regions such as Central, North, and South. It also responds to a growing need among companies and students for business instruction focused more deeply around issues specific to the Americas markets.

According to Daniel Shapiro, Dean of SFU’s Beedie School of Business, the Americas MBA for Executives is a reflection of Canada’s economic present and future in a regional and international context. “This is an exciting initiative that addresses head-on those areas that will define business in the 21st century,” he said.

“This is a program that recognizes the growing prominence of the Americas as a cohesive economic entity,” said Colleen Collins, Associate Dean of Graduate Programs at SFU’s Beedie School of Business. “We have brought the top scholars in cross-cultural management, global competitiveness and new ventures together to give students a unique perspective on international management.”

The highly selective program begins with each school assembling no more than 15 students to participate in the Americas MBA curriculum. During their first year, students will remain at their home school as part of its executive or part-time MBA program. Then during the second year, students from all four schools will be grouped together in cross-cultural study teams, which will embark on a yearlong, global capstone strategy project. The teams will also rotate together to each campus to engage in class work, local business practices, cultural events, as well as have face-to-face time for their project work. Each school will offer programming that draws on its core strengths:

• First in Canada, the Americas MBA candidates will take on cross-cultural communications and business strategy. The study groups will also begin their yearlong capstone project here.
• Next they go to Brazil, where the Americas MBA students will learn about sustainability, how global markets operate, and bottom-of-the-pyramid product development.
• From there it’s on to Mexico City, where the Americas MBA participants tackle the topics of international trade and investments, and learn how to navigate the large family-owned businesses that are prevalent in the region.
• The Americas MBA students will spend their final on-campus visit in the U.S. focused on launching venture capital-based projects and how to nurture innovation.

“Free trade has opened many exciting new opportunities throughout the Americas in recent years. Since Vanderbilt’s first Executive MBA trip to Mexico City in 1997, we have watched our client (sponsoring) companies move from distinct divisions in North America and Latin America to a comprehensive Americas approach,” said Tami Fassinger, Associate Dean of Executive Programs at Vanderbilt’s Owen Graduate School.

While the schools all provide a similar level of academic rigor and share a common educational philosophy, each institution will determine admission and tuition requirements for its Americas MBA program applicants. Classes and coursework will be in English, though applicants with foreign language skills and international business experience will be given preference.

Upon completion of the program, students will receive a joint “Americas MBA” certificate awarded by the group of four schools, in addition to the degree conferred by their home school.

“This program is all about taking a deep dive into the Americas, which is an increasingly important market for rising executives,” Fassinger said. “The Americas certificate from four top universities, on top of an MBA from a leading university in the region, is the icing on the cake to help our Americas MBA graduates be successful in ex-pat roles anywhere in the Americas.”

For more information about curriculum and other program details, visit:

https://beedie.sfu.ca/emba/americasmba

ABOUT THE SCHOOLS:

FIA Business School created the first Executive MBA in Brazil in 1993, and has the only fully Brazilian Executive MBA ranked among the best in the world by the Financial Times. Accredited by the London-based Association of MBAs (AMBA), FIA was chosen in December 2010 as “the Most Innovative Business School in South America,” by European CEO magazine. For more information, see www.fia.com.br.

ITAM, Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México, was the first Latin American business school accredited by AASCB, and is one of fewer than 50 schools also to have accreditation from EQUIS and AMBA. With a world-class research institute in finance and economics, it is among the best business schools in Latin America as ranked by America Economia. and has been a leading player in Mexico’s executive education space for more than three decades. To learn more, see www.itam.mx.

Simon Fraser University’s Beedie School of Business is home to Canada’s first Executive MBA program, founded in 1968. Accredited by AACSB and EQUIS, the school is a global leader in international business teaching and research. Visit www.beedie.sfu.ca.

The Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Management is ranked as a top institution by Bloomberg Businessweek, The Wall Street Journal, U.S. News & World Report, Financial Times and Forbes. Accredited by AACSB and SACS, Vanderbilt’s 60-credit, two-year EMBA Program started in 1978. For more news about Owen, visit www.owen.vanderbilt.edu.

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Brazil:
James Wright
FIA Business School
+55 11 3091-5848
jamest@fia.com.br

Canada:
Derek Moscato
SFU Beedie School of Business
+1 778-782-5038
derek.moscato@sfu.ca

Mexico:
Tabata Fernández
ITAM
+52 55 56284014
carla.fernandez@itam.mx

USA:
Amy Wolf
Vanderbilt University
+1 615-343-2634
amy.wolf@vanderbilt.edu