Social impact has become the cornerstone of many MBA programs. While finance, marketing, operations, and organizational structure will always be the core of an MBA curriculum, many programs have leaned into weaving social impact into their core, while others have developed concentrations, pathways, or majors around social impact. Whether you want to pivot to social impact as a career or inject social impact into your future roles, here are some MBA programs that should be on your radar.
Berkeley Haas School of Business
Berkeley Haas is known to support social impact through its curriculum, experiential learning, and significant research. Haas’s Social Impact career path includes classes such as “Large Social Change,” “Applied Impact Evaluation,” “Social Investing,” and “Networks for Impact: Social Innovation’s Next Frontier.” In each of the social impact electives, students are challenged to innovate and think through problems with a social impact lens. As Haas is known for its experiential learning, the Center for Social Sector Leadership offers , where students work with volunteer McKinsey & Company consultants to address strategy or organizational questions for nonprofit clients, as well as opportunities through and the Net Impact Club. And The Institute for Business & Social Impact involves 70% of full-time MBA students in classes such as “Climate Change and Business Strategy” and “Business and Sustainable Supply Chains,” while also housing the and the . Professors such as William Rosenzweig and Kellie A. McElhaney continue to deepen Haas’s focus on social impact. And just this year, Haas began offering a joint MBA/MCS (Masters of Climate Solutions) with the Rausser College of Natural Resources.
Oxford Saïd
Oxford Saïd stands out in Europe for its social impact focus through the Skoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship. Through programs such as Impact Lab, students gain experiential opportunities to build a future in social impact at larger organizations, as an entrepreneur, or globally. Skoll’s theory of change focuses on global impact. Skoll Scholars can earn full funding to focus on a career in global social change. Map the System is a global competition that pushes students to think holistically about long-term solutions and supports Said’s research in systems-focused change making. Classes such as “Global Opportunities and Threats” and “Capitalism in Debate” help Saïd students think differently about existing norms and challenge them to envision a different future.
Yale School of Management (SOM)
In light of Yale SOM’s mission to educate leaders for business and society, the school has embedded social impact in its culture since its inception. The Program on Social Enterprise, Innovation, and Impact looks to make connections across people and programs to innovate on building a more equitable, sustainable, and inclusive world. The Meng Impact Investment Fund is a student-run investment fund that offers students the opportunity to drive investments in sectors based on student interest. Sectors of focus in recent years have included climate, education, workforce development, financial inclusion, and health care. Courses such as “Global Social Entrepreneurship” and “Introduction to Social Entrepreneurship” help students explore issues ranging from nonprofit management and public policy to environmental stewardship and business ethics. Social Impact Lab is a weekly speaker series that brings in leaders across mission-driven organizations to offer students insights into the challenges they are facing. Students also could get involved in the Yale Economic Development Symposium or the Yale Philanthropy Conference. SOM leans into the environmental side of social impact through the Yale Center for Business and the Environment, the joint MBA/Master of Environmental Management degree, and the Yale Business and the Environment Club.
NYU Stern School of Business
NYU Stern’s Center for Sustainable Business, Business & Society Program, and Center for Business and Human Rights offer innumerable resources and opportunities for students who want to explore social impact. Through its Social Enterprise Area of Interest, students can dive into specializations such as Sustainable Business and Innovation or Leadership and Change Management—to customize their coursework to their specific impact-focused career goals. Classes such as “International Social Impact Strategies” and “Examining the Nonprofit Capital Market” give students a toolkit to solve problems with social impact in mind. Outside of the classroom, students can take on real projects affecting New York City through Stern Signature Projects or invest in innovative and socially sustainable businesses in the NYU Impact Investment Fund. Students can also get involved in social impact–focused clubs such as the Social Impact and Sustainability Association or the Stern Energy & Infrastructure Club. Professor Tensie Whelan has contributed her years of expertise and continues to be a cornerstone of Stern’s sustainability resources.
The Wharton School
Wharton continues to build its social impact presence around its strong finance reputation. Through the Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) Initiative, Wharton adds new majors focused on social impact. Depending upon their career goals, students can choose from the majors Business, Energy, Environment and Sustainability; Environmental, Social and Governance Factors for Business; and Social and Governance Factors for Business. The MBA/MES (Master of Environmental Studies) dual degree is also available. Students can get involved in the Wharton Climate Center, the Impact Investing Research Lab, the Political Risk & Identity Lab, or the Zicklin Center for Governance & Business Ethics to collaborate with other students and professors on research in these important socially focused areas. Outside of research and the classroom, students can gain hands-on learning on the financial side of social impact through Turner MIINT MBA Impact Investing Network and Training, Wharton Impact Venture Associates, and the Turner Impact Portfolio Challenge. Or they can put their heads together on a Wharton Environmental, Social and Governance Integration Project, where students conduct consulting projects with companies and organizations and focus on existing real-world projects related to ESG issues.
University of Chicago Booth School of Business
Chicago Booth’s Rustandy Center for Social Sector Innovation gives students a wide variety of resources and opportunities in social impact. Through the Edwardson Social Entrepreneurship Program, students can flex their social impact muscles in the Social New Venture Challenge, which can provide funding to start a venture with a social mission, or as a Tarrson Social Venture Fellow, where they could receive funding and advising on a startup working to solve a social or environmental problem. Students can apply to take courses such as “New Social Ventures” and “Social Entrepreneurship and Innovation”—or the “Global Social Entrepreneurship Lab,” where they will work with a Partner Social Venture on a project for one semester. Students interested in the impact investing side of social impact can get hands-on experience through the Steven Tarrson Impact Investment Fund. Booth Social Impact Consulting and the Net Impact Board Fellows Program allow students to practice what they’ve learned with local Chicago nonprofits. And even as alumni, former students can stay involved through Booth Alumni Nonprofit Consultants.
Stanford Graduate School of Business (GSB)
Stanford GSB’s Center for Social Innovation is geared toward building leaders for change. The Certificate in Public Management and Social Innovation helps students build a curriculum to bring about social impact change in their specific way. Through the Social Entrepreneurship Program, students can gain support and resources to start their own social venture. And through the Stanford GSB Impact Fund, students can try their hand at impact investing. Students also can apply to the Social Management Immersion Fund to be sponsored to work with nonprofits, governmental agencies, and social-purpose businesses. As a leading research institution in social impact, Stanford GSB allows students to collaborate with the Stanford Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society.
Tuck School of Business
Tuck’s Center for Business, Government & Society works to build solutions to global challenges through pathways to process, working to inspire students to be changemakers. Tuck GIVES (Grants to Interns and Volunteers for the Environment and Society) supports students who want to spend their summers working for a nonprofit or public sector organization. Students can gain hands-on experience with impact investing through the Tuck Social Venture Fund, which is student driven. Courses such as “Business and Society” and “Managing for Social Impact” help Tuck students build a toolkit to drive social change. Student clubs including Tuck Community Consulting, Tuck Sustains, and Net Impact help Tuck students engage outside the classroom.
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