IMD - International Institute for Management Development
Introduction
IMD is an independent not-for-profit foundation with no financial support from government. The school serves the international corporate community, helping develop and retain the best qualified management talent for global leadership. IMD, the most international of all executive education institutions worldwide, is dedicated to being the “global meeting place.” It is one of the world’s a leading graduate business schools, bringing cutting-edge, practical focus on dilemmas and pertinent research into the classroom in the shortest possible time – to support what IMD calls “Real World. Real Learning.”
Origins
IMD was established in January 1990, as the successor of two previously independent business schools: IMI, founded in Geneva by Alcan in 1946, and IMEDE, founded in Lausanne by Nestlé in 1957. Incorporated under the name "International Institute for Management Development," IMD, as the institution is now known, provides executive education for large- and medium-size international businesses, and for individuals.
Program participants
IMD is truly international. Every year, some 8,000 executives, representing over 98 nationalities, attend more than 20 open-enrollment Executive Development Programs, Degree Programs (MBA and EMBA programs) as well as company-specific Partnership Programs. Participants come from every sector of service and manufacturing industries. Cultural backgrounds range from young managers to board members from world-class corporations. English is the working language, though no single business approach dominates.
Faculty
IMD’s 55 Faculty members, comprising 20 nationalities, are recognized authorities in their fields. They divide their time between teaching, research and consulting to major companies and thus remain firmly on top of the latest developments in managerial practice. IMD has no academic hierarchy (all Faculty are professors) and there is no tenure system.
Research and development
Learning at IMD has its roots in original IMD research. Currently more than 70 research projects are underway, each led by one or several Faculty members. IMD carries out its research and program development – 27% of IMD’s overall costs go to R&D - in close collaboration with industry. To create value, Faculty members not only make sure that research initiatives are relevant to practicing managers, but they also produce a steady flow of new material for IMD programs.
Program Admission Requirements
Demonstrate your commitment and readiness to succeed in business school by taking the GMAT exam – the most widely used exam for admissions that measures your critical thinking and reasoning skills.
Download the GMAT mini quiz to get a flavour of the questions you’ll find in the exam.
Locations
- Lausanne
Ch. de Bellerive 23 P.O. Box 915