The John Molson School of Business, formerly the Faculty of Commerce and Administration at Concordia University, boasts 5,500 undergraduate students, 300 graduate students and 35,000 alumni. The business school offers 18 different programs from 5 different departments, with the 2 most important being the Bachelor of Commerce (BComm) and the Masters in Business Administration (MBA) programs. The business school is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB).
Both undergraduate and graduate students are active participants in both national and international university case competitions. The business school also hosts 2 of their own competitions: the Undergraduate National Case Competition and the MBA International Case Competition.
A select number of undergraduate students manage a $1,000,000 endowment equity portfolio every year as part of the Kenneth Woods Portfolio Management Program (KWPMP). The portfolio was formed in 2000 for the primary purpose of training undergraduate students in investment management.
The business school is located at the Sir George Williams campus of Concordia University and plans are underway for a new building to be built at the intersection of Guy Street and de Maisonneuve Blvd in downtown Montréal. In late March of 2006, the provincial Finance Minister for Québec announced a major financial commitment towards the building of the business school's new facilities.
One of the top business schools in Canada, leader in management education and research.
John Molson School of Business, formerly the Faculty of Commerce at Concordia University in Montreal ... Mailing address: John Molson School of Business Executive MBA Program 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd.
They were competing Saturday in the final round of the 26th Annual John Molson MBA International Case Competition, where they presented their strategic solutions to a business case involving Research ...
The Concordia University business school is called the John Molson School of Business. Quotes. My beer has been universally well-liked beyond my most sanguine expectations. - John Molson, 1786