Program

Rotman One-Year Executive MBA Program


Decision-making Skills

The Executive MBA program has been designed to improve decision making skills you will need in the future, whether you are a senior executive in a multinational firm or an entrepreneur. You’ll gain the ability to understand the machinery and the design of businesses, as well as the economic, political, and regulatory trends that can enhance, or undermine, your plans. You will learn how to use analytical tools that can give you deep insight into a business — to see what’s hidden in a financial statement, for example, put together a marketing plan based on the latest thinking in the field, or formulate a winning strategy at a time when the ground is shifting, and new threats seem to emerge from nowhere. At the end of the year, you will be able to take a step back and see the whole picture and how its different components relate to each other. You will have a powerful new lens to view your business problems and opportunities through.

Personal Leadership Skills

We’ll also work on your personal leadership skills, a key part of this executive MBA program. This will happen inside and outside the classroom.

 

MBA/CMA Accelerated Program

Graduates of the Rotman Executive MBA Program are eligible to enroll in CMA Ontario's seven-month Accelerated Certified Management Accountant (CMA) Program. Those who earn an MBA and a CMA designation through the combined program will save substantial time and money over those pursuing the degree and designation separately. 

For more information, please contact:
  
Mira Sirotic, CMA
Tel: 416.482.5556
msirotic@cma-ontario.org

A manager's function - production, reporting, analyzing - requires more math these days, not less. It's always remarkable to me that people are willing to accept the idea that you ought to dumb down the math, but no one says that about the literacy requirement. These days, not only do you have to understand what numbers mean, you have to communicate it to customers and other stakeholders.

- Doug Hyatt, Economics Professor


Doug Hyatt