Courses are carefully integrated and complement each other. In some cases, students with an extensive background in a particular discipline may receive an exemption from one of the core courses and take an elective course in its place.
This two-course sequence introduces analytic methods for modeling decision problems, understanding data, and using models and data to make wise decisions. Analytics 1 begins by studying probability and decision-making under uncertainty. We then discuss spreadsheet modeling and optimization. We conclude with an introduction to data visualization. We illustrate these analytic methods in a variety of managerial settings (including marketing, operations, and finance) and in a variety of industries. The course will emphasize hands-on experience with Excel, with Excel add-ins, and will introduce Tableau for data visualization.
The objective of Analytics 2 is to provide you with a strong background in predictive analytics. We will emphasize learning how to be an intelligent "consumer" of analytics. This, in turn, will help you make effective decisions as a manager using predictive analytics. We will use sophisticated statistical and predictive analytics methods to understand and anticipate the effects of our actions. These methods include confidence intervals, hypothesis testing, A/B testing, multiple regression, and supervised and unsupervised machine learning models such as neural networks and cluster analysis. We will apply these methods to problems from all organizational functions including management & strategy, operations, economics, marketing, finance & accounting, and to a variety of industries. In addition, you will become skilled in performing various analyses via hands-on experience using the R statistical programming language.
This course provides a detailed overview of the world’s debt, equity, and derivatives markets. We start with the fundamentals of how the markets function and then move on to more advanced topics such as the determinants of interest rates, the trade-off between risk and return, the behavior of stock prices, and the pricing and use of futures and options contracts. We illustrate how and why capital markets are important to investors and managers using real-world problems.
This course discusses basic principles of corporate finance and provides practical tools for financial decisions and valuation. The course consists of five sections. The first, Capital Budgeting Decisions, shows optimal project acceptance criteria consistent with the objective of maximizing the market value of the firm. The second section, Estimating the Cost of Capital, extends the analysis from the Capital Markets course to the practice of estimating a project’s expected return, using factor models. The third part of the course, Valuation Techniques, develops several valuation methods used in practice, including WACC, APV, multiples, and real options. Part four, Capital Structure and Dividend Policies, involves a discussion of how capital structure and dividend decisions affect firm value and survey industry practice. Finally, part five of the course, Investment Banking, develops key principles and practices for raising capital, mergers and acquisitions, and modern restructuring techniques.
This course offers the “essential” toolkit of the executive involved in the strategy process—the key ideas, concepts, and tools that are necessary to properly exercise strategic leadership. The course is divided into two parts. The first focuses on the strategy problem at the business unit level. It is at the business unit level that many key strategic choices and actions are formulated and undertaken. This part of the course starts by proposing a vocabulary and an analytical structure that help define competitive advantage precisely. It then tackles the question of how a strategic leader can locate opportunities to achieve sustained competitive advantage. This part of the course concludes with a discussion of why strategic leaders should be not only competent “practitioner economists”––the ability to read market forces is the traditional focus of competitive strategy analysis and tools––but also competent “practitioner psychologists,” and what developing such competence entails. The second part of the course focuses on the challenge of managing multiple business units. In particular, it focuses on how a strategic leader can determine the ideal horizontal and vertical scope for her firm and what that implies for mergers, acquisitions, and various typologies of alliances.
This course develops the basic concepts and procedures underlying corporate financial statements and introduces tools for analyzing profitability and risk. We explore the impact of the alternative policies and procedures available within generally accepted accounting principles on financial statements, especially in terms of management's financial reporting strategy.
The First-Year Project (FYP) course challenges students, working on teams of five, to apply classroom learning, and utilize skills from their prior work experience, to solve complex business challenges for real clients, or for their own entrepreneurial endeavor. This experiential learning class is unique in that it allows individual students the opportunity to tailor the curriculum to their own interests and career goals. Under the guidelines of the course, students can source their own project or select a project from the project portfolio, and join a team of their choice.
Projects come from all industries; are local, national and global; are for non- and for-profit organizations; are with companies at all levels of business development, from early-stage to Fortune 100. Past project teams have analyzed new businesses, created launch strategies for new product or service offerings from an existing company, developed marketing strategies and implementation plans, and assessed the market potential for expansion into entirely new markets.
Global Economics for Managers will expand students' knowledge of economics in two directions. First, we expand the scope of inquiry to cover the economics of the nation in a global economy. This portion of the course will cover international economics and macroeconomics. We will study the larger economic forces that shape production, trade flows, capital flows, interest rates, exchange rates, and other variables that create the global economic landscape. The second direction is international microeconomics, which will apply the tools of microeconomics and international economics to illustrate how globalization influences performance, strategy, and policy within firms. Our ultimate objective is to help students develop a framework for analyzing both opportunities and risks in a global economic environment.
This course is designed to provide Tuck students with immediately applicable skills for professional communication. You will complete the course with an understanding of and demonstrated improvements in overall communication, delivery and presentation skills. In addition, you will learn and practice effective techniques for delivering feedback. This mini-course runs during Summer term to allow you to immediately apply your ManComm skills—in your other classes, during recruiting, your FYP and summer internship.
This course applies the ideas and methodology of economics to analysis of the firm, key decisions within the firm, and the industry. Topics covered include costs, pricing, competition, economic efficiency, and industry equilibrium and change. Particular attention is paid to the behavior of the firm and industries when uncertainty and transaction costs exist. The course combines lectures/discussions of principles, with cases covering both current and classic firm and industry dilemmas. Issues of public policy, especially regarding pollution, are also covered.
Managing Organizations is the final installment of the core organizational behavior curriculum. Building on ideas developed in Tuck Launch and Managing People, and applying principles developed in Strategy, MO will focus on how organizations get things done.
Organizations are complex social systems that bring together tasks and structures, people and culture. The role of leadership is to manage this system, keeping it well-aligned, in service of achieving strategic goals and in a way that harnesses the benefits of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). We address these topics by engaging in case studies and experiential approaches, such as simulations and role plays, as well as by discussing contemporary organizational challenges.
This course will provide students with conceptual frameworks for improving their management of people and teams with a focus on developing a deeper understanding of interpersonal dynamics. Topics include: motivation, diversity, conformity, conflict, performance feedback, decision-making, negotiations, and fairness.
The marketing course prepares general managers and brand managers to understand the strategic role of marketing and how to apply it in their organizations. The course teaches how to grow a business by thoroughly understanding its current and prospective customers, the only source of a firm's revenue. Companies with high or increasing market capitalizations know how to create, communicate and deliver value to their customers. Students will learn how to create such value by applying a set of frameworks and analytical tools in three areas: identifying market opportunities, setting a marketing strategy, and formulating the marketing mix. Case studies and a competitive simulation exercise are used to develop experience in implementing these frameworks and analytical tools in order to grow a business. Specific course topics include market research, consumer decision making, market segmentation, targeting, positioning, product development, advertising, pricing, and distribution.
Operations Management is the systematic design, management and control of the resources and processes that transform inputs into finished goods or services. This course provides an introduction to the concepts and analytic methods that are useful in understanding the management of a firm's operations; both in service and manufacturing settings. The level of analysis varies considerably, from operations strategy through to daily execution, and from single locations through to global supply chains.