The Financial Times Masters in Management hub will help you choose the best degree. Evaluate schools using our interactive rankings, brush up on important subjects with our Masters gyms and read the latest Masters in Management magazine online.

Rankings

Ready to go

illustration of a globe ©Nick Lowndes

Pre-experience masters degrees are set to multiply as graduate recruiters look for ‘plug-and-play’ employees, writes Della Bradshaw

More reports and rankings

Employees illustration, PS352
The latest degrees for those aspiring to work in the finance industry
Schools are finding glimmers of hope amid the gloom
Law schools and business schools are working more closely together
illustration of a plane cockpit ©Nick Lowndes

Masters in Management rankings 2012

Laurent Ortmans interprets the data gathered from students and schools for the masters in management rankings

Methodology

How the masters in management rankings were researched and compiled. By Adam Palin

Ask the Expert From ASK THE EXPERT

Ask the Experts: Masters in Management 2012

Why are Masters in Management degrees popular with recruiters? The FT’s panel of experts explain

Features

Henri de Castries ©Magali Corouge

Interview: Henri de Castries

How does Axa’s chief executive and HEC Paris graduate rate business education – and its graduates – today? By Scheherazade Daneshkhu

Vittorio Colao, chief executive of Vodafone group ©Charlie Bibby From EUROPEAN BUSINESS SCHOOLS

A clear vision

‘Hard-wired’ with the business basics as a student in Italy, Vittorio Colao rose to the top at Vodafone. So what does he look for in the next generation?

Ferguson illustration Feature of the Week

French schools rethink their apprenticeships

Competition for public funding means there are fewer places

Columnists
Della Bradshaw ©Ed Robinson

From the editor: Cherchez la femme

With so many women doing masters in management, why do few make it to the top? By Della Bradshaw

Simon Caulkin ©Ed Robinson

On management: A big problem

Simon Caulkin on how companies have outgrown countries – and why it matters

William Boulding is the dean at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business in North Carolina ©Charlie Bibby Deans Columns

Home truths

Why one dean’s unorthodox parents had intriguing lessons for us all. By William Boulding

Deans Columns

A team of leaders

Europe’s astonishing comeback in golf’s Ryder Cup shows that it need not be lonely at the top, writes Sue Cox

From EUROPEAN BUSINESS SCHOOLS

Engineering success

Business school is helping Arun Luykx persuade companies to see beyond his specialism

Hopes and fears: Cultural shift

Going global was a key attraction for Steven Arjonilla

Specialist masters

Specialist masters: Culture club

Creative industries demand management skills as well as artistic sensibilities

Specialist masters: Going green

Sustainability is moving up business schools’ agenda

Specialist masters: Joined-up thinking

Social media are a growing element on marketing courses – but they are only part of the picture

Feature of the Week

Universities master the art of creativity

Innovative degree programmes are preparing students for a changing world

On campus
From BUSINESS SCHOOL PROFILES

Profile: University of Edinburgh

The Scottish business school is playing to its strengths in finance and the environment

From BUSINESS SCHOOL PROFILES

School profile: HHL

The German school is targeting the top 10

From BUSINESS SCHOOL PROFILES

Profile: Theory and practice

The University of Maryland school is looking to produce graduates who go on to influence the world

From BUSINESS SCHOOL PROFILES

Profile: Doubling up

Audencia Nantes uses partnerships to develop dual programmes