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DURHAM, NC—Duke Corporate Education, Inc., the customized
non-degree education company of Duke University’s Fuqua School
of Business, has been ranked the No. 1 customized corporate educator
in the world by the Financial Times.
Duke’s Fuqua School ranked No. 2 in the world in overall
executive education when the No. 1 ranking for customized education
was combined with its No. 8 ranking for open-enrollment programs
that are open to students from multiple companies and associations.
Customized education, on the other hand, is tailored for an individual
company.
In the Financial Times’ overall executive education rankings
published today by the global business newspaper, Columbia took
the top spot. It was followed in the Top 10 by Duke, Harvard, Iese
(Spain), Stanford, IMD (Switzerland), London Business School, Wharton
(University of Pennsylvania), Insead (France), and Thunderbird.
In a survey of the schools themselves and international business
executives, Duke Corporate Education led the 50-provider list of
what the newspaper called “established pace-setters for quality.” Duke
ranked No. 1 in faculty, “value for the money,” “new
skills and learning,” teaching materials, preparation, course
design, facilities, and food and accommodation.
“ What a fabulous honor to achieve this recognition after
being in business only three years,” Duke Corporate Education
CEO Blair Sheppard said. “This ranking is all about our customers,
who have committed to using education as a strategic lever to change
their leadership dynamics. Our customers have enabled us to be
creative and really drive toward outstanding results,” he
said. “We look forward to pushing executive education to
a new level.”
As Dean of Duke’s Fuqua School of Business, Douglas T. Breeden
is chairman of the board of directors of Duke Corporate Education. “This
is wonderful news for both Duke Corporate Education and Duke’s
Fuqua School. It demonstrates the wisdom of the decision three
years ago to take Fuqua’s renowned custom executive education
team, led by visionary Professor Blair Sheppard, to form Duke Corporate
Education,” he said.
Duke Corporate Education’s rise to the top position has
been accelerating in the last few years. It was ranked by the newspaper
No. 2 in 2001 and No. 3 in 2003. The company was formed by Duke
in July 2000 to house and grow the customized executive education
operation. The new flexibility to build and grow has allowed Duke
Corporate Education to scale upwards. It is a for-profit corporation
with Duke’s Fuqua being the largest shareholder. It has grown
to a staff of 71 academic and business professionals. Duke Corporate
Education generates revenue of more than $23 million from its headquarters
in Durham and a service office in London.
Clients include: PricewaterhouseCoopers, IBM, Schering, Saudi
Aramco, Royal Dutch Shell, ABB, NCR’s Teradata division,
Progress Energy, Amvescap, the American Cancer Society, Merck,
The New York Times Company, Siemens, Nestle, and Lilly.
“ We are very proud of the success of Duke Corporate Education
as well as Duke’s open-enrollment programs,” Breeden
said. “Duke Corporate Education uses many Fuqua professors
in is teaching programs as well as some outstanding educators from
other schools.”
Surveyed students are happy about the educational programs they
are taking from this faculty. “As in previous years,” the
newspaper wrote in its lead story about the ranking, “perhaps
the overriding conclusion from the Financial Times executive education
rankings is that all the respondents to the survey are happy, and
often extremely happy, with the service they get from the business
schools. If this is true in these days of economic uncertainty,
then the international business school community can look to the
future with confidence.”
“The executive education market has grown and matured tremendously
in the last decade,” said Duke’s associate dean for
executive education, John F. Cady. “Duke’s achievement
of leadership in every segment of the executive education market
is indicative of the commitment of talent and resources that the
school has made to its mission of educating corporate leaders worldwide.”
Duke’s ranking for non-degree open-enrollment programs is
based primarily on the school’s Advanced Management Program,
Cady said. The program, designed for senior executives with global
corporate experience, combines the diverse experience of an international
cadre of executives with faculty ranked No. 1 in intellectual capital.
The result is a collaborative learning experience that provides
the knowledge, skills, and tools to begin to immediately improve
business performance.
Fuqua also provides a portfolio of specialized programs and courses
for all levels of management.
The full survey and accompanying news stories can be viewed at www.ft.com
May
20, 2003
Contact
Jim Gray
jigray@mail.duke.edu
(919) 660-2935
David Miller
david.miller@dukece.com
(919) 680-5686
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