The Business Management Graduate Certificate offers an understanding of how to improve business operations. This program is designed to equip students with practical business intelligence, IT leadership, and business research.
You can also tailor your coursework to your specific career goals. You’ll learn how to make your work days more effective—so that while you keep one eye on your daily responsibilities, you can keep the other on big-picture strategy and goals.
Think about where you are currently in your career, and where you want to be. Then, choose four of the nine courses below that align with your career goals to earn your certificate.
In this course, we enhance the students' basic statistical and mathematical modeling skills covering the following topics:
Probabilistic decision-making
Regression analysis
Forecasting
Simulation models
Optimization modeling with the EXCEL Solver.
In this course, you’ll gain a user-oriented understanding of how accounting information should be managed to ensure its availability on a timely and relevant basis for decision-making. The first part of the course reviews financial accounting and reporting while the second part of the course focuses on cost-benefit analysis for evaluating the potential value-added results from planning, organizing, and controlling a firm’s accounting information. The use of cases, forum discussions, and computer support is used extensively.
Study of information systems management issues including skill and talent management; IT costs, budgets, value, and chargeback systems; priority setting and financial justification of IT investments; project management; runaway projects and underperforming vendors; security risks and crises; emerging technology policies; communication expectations amongst senior executives; vendor management; infrastructure standardization; support for innovation; and risk management.
In this course, you’ll learn about:
Economic decision-making in the business firm
The strategic interaction of competing firms within various industries
The purchasing and behavior of individual consumers and consumers as a group
The influence of public policy on market outcomes
You’ll also develop:
A fluency with the language of economics and a strong 'economic intuition'
An understanding of selected economics-based decision-making tools and the impact and interaction of the structure of an industry on competition.
The skills to analyze intra-industry rivalry
An improved understanding of public policy issues
There will be an emphasis on the logical foundations of economic analysis and managerial decision-making to promote the understanding and application of various quantitative measures.
In this course, you will:
Develop a working knowledge of the tools and analytical conventions used in the practice of corporate finance
Establish an understanding of the basic elements of financial theory to be used in application of analytical reasoning to business problems
Explore the interrelationship among corporate policies and decisions
Your coursework will include problem sets, study group preparation of executive summary memos and critiques, and the use of PC spreadsheets to develop a planning model for a case focusing on funds requirement.
The objective is to provide the student of management with a basic knowledge of the American legal system, the legal process and relevant substantive law necessary to make informed and effective business decisions. The law develops and evolves in response to changing social, economic, political, and technological forces, and business decisions often carry long-lasting as well as delayed effects. This course emphasizes the study of the law of torts, contracts, and product liability. It is hoped that considered study of these legal principles will give prospective managers insight into the dynamics of the legal process to enable them to predict as soundly as possible the future legal environment in which their present decisions will have lasting impact.
This course offers an introduction to tools for strategic management. It provides an introductory review of the complexities involved in determining long-term strategies. Rather than assessing the firm's environment in terms of broadly defined opportunities and threats, we will examine the dynamics of the competitive environment, how both the pace and direction of industry change are influenced by the resources, capabilities, and competitive interaction of rivals. The course uses discussion forums, team projects, and an interactive simulation.
Here’s your introduction to the process of creating a market-driven organization. Specific course topics will include marketing strategy, market research and analysis, and the development of products and services, pricing, distribution and promotion. The course employs lectures, classroom discussion through threaded discussion forums, case analysis, and field research projects.
In this course, you’ll survey the management of operations in manufacturing and service firms. Students will work through diverse activities, such as:
Determining the optimal size and type of production process needed
Purchasing the appropriate raw materials
Planning and scheduling the flow of materials and determining the nature and content of inventories
Assuring product quality
Deciding on production hardware and how it gets used
You’ll also learn that managing operations will require both strategic and tactical skills. The topics considered include:
Process Analysis
Workforce Issues
Materials Management
Quality and Productivity
Technology
Strategic Planning
The course makes considerable use of business cases and most classes will be spent discussing the cases assigned. For each case, students will be asked to review actual company situations and apply technical and managerial skills to recommend courses of action. Most cases will be taken from manufacturing, but some will be service-oriented. Several of the cases will focus on international companies or challenges.
* C521 must be taken before C540 ** K520 is recommended before C580
Eye care professionals must complete three courses from the Kelley School and one course from the IU School of Optometry to earn the Business Management Certificate (BMC).
Please contact keep@iu.edu for additional information.
No Scholarship is available for Kelley-IU School of Optometry BMC Program.
Optometry Course:
V606, Aspects of Practice Transition
Kelley Courses (select three):
C520, Quantitative Analysis
C521, Managing Accounting Information for Decision-Making (pre-requisite Accounting Primer)
After you complete the Kelley application, you’ll receive an email with instructions on how to apply through the Graduate CAS Application. During this stage, you will upload the following materials to complete your application:
Resume Provide a copy of your resume, summarizing your professional experiences and accomplishments.
Personal statement Tell us what you want to achieve in this program in 500 words or less.
Letter of recommendation Ask someone familiar with your professional career to write a letter of recommendation for you. Provide the contact information of your recommender within the application. An email prompt will be sent to their email address, allowing them to fill out a form and upload the letter. If you need alternative arrangements, please contact keep@iu.edu.
Undergraduate transcripts Provide copies of your transcripts from the undergraduate institutions you’ve attended. Your transcripts can be uploaded into the Part 2 Application.
Questions? Contact us.
Our admissions team is here to help you navigate the admissions process. Contact Kelley Executive Education Programs directly to start the conversation at keep@iu.edu.
Requirements
Graduate certificates from the Kelley School of Business are designed to be flexible and cost-effective.