Resources for professors and students. A selection of FT content for use in business and management teaching.
FT articles to use in the classroom
Topical FT articles and suggested classroom questions
Executive education increasingly targets a practical understanding of the technology
The business schools that topped the tables for custom and open programmes
In a diverse market, alumni are increasingly selective in their search for additional learning
Institutions seek to lure elite scholars who fear being caught up by tougher US visa rules
Industry incumbents must decide when and how to use new production methods while the old ones remain profitable
Topical issues for classroom discussion. This series hosts short case studies on contemporary business dilemmas for professors and students, written by academics who provide insights and questions on themes from supply chains and artificial intelligence, to marketing and accounting
Artificial intelligence raises opportunities and risks for audit quality and financial reporting
Sustainability, leadership, economics, innovation, AI
Supply chains, economics, banking, marketing
Global commerce, M&A, geopolitics, economics
The dilemmas facing cement makers in their efforts to decarbonise are considered in the latest of our series of business-school-style teaching case studies on sustainability. Read selected FT articles and see how you would address similar challenges
The challenge is to understand stakeholder relationships and the broader social consequences of rollbacks
Economics, risk, leadership, commerce
Does PE firm KKR’s model add up to real reform or a one-off windfall? Read the article and consider the questions raised
Supply chain management, leadership, finance, AI, strategy
Marketing, innovation, accounting, AI, strategy
Senate report on one hospital finds that PE debt can lead to a cycle of under-investment
Leadership, strategy, ethics, political economy
Marketing, innovation, accounting, strategy
Students no longer limited to geography or a rigid structure demand cheaper, more flexible alternatives
Lee Newman, dean at Madrid-based IE, taking a ‘hard look’ at the portfolio of courses as he warns the market is ‘confused’