HEC Paris

HEC Paris (French: École des hautes études commerciales de Paris, lit.'Paris School of Advanced Business Studies') is a business school and grandes écoles located in Jouy-en-Josas, a southwestern outer suburb of Paris, France. The school offers MiMs, MSc in International Finance, MBA, EMBA, executive education, and PhD programs.[9]

HEC Paris
École des hautes études commerciales de Paris
Campus main entrance
MottoApprendre à oser
Motto in English
Literal: Learn to dare
Non-literal: The more you know, the more you dare
TypeGrande école de commerce et de management, École consulaire;[1]
(Private research university Business school)
Established4 December 1881 (1881-12-04)
FounderGustave Emmanuel Roy
AccreditationTriple accreditation:[2] AACSB;[2]
AMBA;[2]
EQUIS[2]
Endowment€53.1 million (2017)[3]
Budget€155 million (2019)[4]
ChairmanJean-Paul Agon[5]
DeanÉloïc Peyrache
Academic staff
160 resident professors:[6]
96% PhD.;[7]
30% female;[7]
64% international[7]
Students4,400 (postgraduate);[8]
8,000 (executive)[8]
Location
Paris (Jouy-en-Josas), France;
Doha, Qatar
Admission rate6% (2018)
ColorsBlue and White    
AffiliationsConférence des grandes écoles;[2]
CEMS;[2]
Polytechnic Institute of Paris[8]
Websitewww.hec.edu

HEC Paris is the founding member of CEMS - Global Alliance in Management Education and is triple accredited (by AACSB, AMBA, and EQUIS).[10]

History

The château at HEC Paris

Founded in 1881 by Gustave Emmanuel Roy, president of the Paris Chamber of Commerce (CCIP), with 57 students in its first class, the École des hautes études commerciales de Paris (HEC) aimed to be in the fields of management and commerce what the École Centrale de Paris was in the field of engineering.

In 1921, the school introduced the case-based method of the Harvard Business School, but most of the lectures remained theoretical. In 1938, the HEC program was lengthened to 3 years.

Due to French corporations' demand for North-American-style management education, at the end of the 1950s, the case-based method was generalized and a one-year classe préparatoire was created to prepare for the entrance examination, which had become more difficult. As a result, only 9% of HEC students had attended university in 1959, whereas 47% had done so in 1929.

In 1964, French President Charles de Gaulle inaugurated a new 250-acre (1.0 km2) wooded campus in Jouy-en-Josas. In 1967, HEC launched its executive education programs. Women have been accepted at HEC since 1973. Only 27 women were accepted that year and HEC jeunes filles (HECJF), another school dedicated to women, was closed. Its alumnae are officially considered graduates of HEC, and include Édith Cresson, the first female Prime Minister of France.

In 1988, HEC founded the CEMS network with ESADE, Bocconi University and the University of Cologne.

In 2016, the school adopted a new legal status and became a public-private partnership (École consulaire or EESC), largely financed by the public Chamber of Commerce in Paris.[11]

In 2017, HEC launched a portfolio of new dual degree programs called M2M with the Yale School of Management, the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, and Fundação Getulio Vargas.[12]

Grande École System

HEC Paris is a Grande école, a French institution of higher education that is separate from, but parallel and connected to, the main framework of the French public university system. Similar to the Ivy League in the United States, the Russell Group in the UK, and C9 League in China, Grandes Écoles are elite academic institutions that admit students through an extremely competitive process.[13][14][15] Alumni go on to occupy elite positions within government, administration, and corporate firms in France.[16][17]

Although they are more expensive than public universities in France, Grandes Écoles typically have much smaller class sizes and student bodies, and many of their programs are taught in English. International internships, study abroad opportunities, and close ties with the government and the corporate world are hallmarks of the Grandes Écoles. Many of the top-ranked business schools in Europe are members of the Conférence des Grandes Écoles (CGE), as is HEC Paris, and out of the 250 business schools in France, only 39 are CGE members.[18][19]

Degrees from HEC Paris are accredited by the Conférence des Grandes Écoles[20] and awarded by the Ministry of National Education.[21] HEC Paris is also triple accredited by the European Foundation for Management Development (EQUIS),[2] the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB),[2] and the Association of MBAs (AMBA)[2]

International rankings

Business Rankings
Europe MBA
QS (2023)[22]1
Financial Times (2023)[23]4
Global MBA
QS (2023)[24]4
Financial Times (2023)[25]11
Ranking 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
Business School
FT – European Business Schools[26] 2nd[27] 1st[28] 1st[29] 1st[30] 1st[31]
QS (by Subject) – Business & Management Studies[32] 12th 11th 9th 9th
QS (by Subject) – Accounting and Finance[32] 36th 17th 19th 20th
Master in Management (GE-MiM) for FT—Master in Strategic Management for QS and The Economist (12 months program)
FT – Master in Management[33] 2nd[27] 2nd[28] 2nd[29] 2nd[30] 2nd[34]
QS – Masters in Management[35] 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st
The Economist – Masters in Management[36] 1st 1st
MSc in International Finance
FT – Masters in Finance Pre-Experience[37] 1st 1st 1st
QS – Masters in Finance[38] 3rd 2nd 3rd 4th 2nd
MBA
FT – Global MBA[39] 21st[27] 19th[28] 9th[29] 7th[30] [40] 11th
QS – Full Time MBA[41] 3rd 7th 7th 5th 4th
The Economist – MBA[42] 13th 3rd 3rd 2nd
Bloomberg Business Week – International MBAs[43] 4th 8th
Executive Education
FT – Executive MBA (Trium HEC/LSE/NYU)[44] 2nd[27] 3rd[28] 4th[29] 2nd[30]
QS – Executive MBA (Trium HEC/LSE/NYU) 4th 3rd 1st 1st
FT – Executive MBA (EMBA HEC)[44] 6th 1st 3rd 1st
QS – Executive MBA (EMBA HEC) 13th 5th 3rd 1st
FT – Executive Education – Customized[45][46] 5th 3rd 2nd 1st
FT – Executive Education – Open[47] 14th 11th 8th 1st
Specialized Masters
The Economist – MSc in Strategic Management 1st
QS – MSc in Strategic Management 1st
QS – MSc in Marketing 3rd 1st 1st 1st
QS – MSc in Business Analytics 3rd

Programs

Higher education business degrees in France are organized into three levels thus facilitating international mobility: the Licence (Bachelor's), Master's, and Doctorate degrees. A Bachelor's degree requires the completion of 180 ECTS credits (bac + 3); a Master's, requires an additional 120 ECTS credits (bac + 5). HEC Paris does not offer a bachelor's degree;[2] its highly coveted PGE (Program Grand École) ends with the awarding of Master's in Management (MiM) degree.[48][49][50] Outside of the PGE, students at HEC can be awarded other Masters degrees, such as the MBA (bac + 5), or a PhD (bac + 8).[2]

Grande école Master in Management (MIM)

French students who attended a classe préparatoire are taught fundamental managerial sciences during their first year at HEC. Courses include economics, accounting, finance, law, psychology, sociology and mathematics (models, operations research, and statistics). During this first year, students can spend a semester in a foreign university (e.g. Wharton, Bocconi University, Trinity College Dublin, University of British Columbia, etc.). They can also enrol in a specific one-year program to earn a bachelor's degree from a French university (see below).

Direct admissions, including international students, enter directly into the second year, where they begin a business-intensive program. Courses include corporate and market finance, accounting, marketing, law, mathematics, management, human resources, and supply chain. Second-year students are also allowed to spend one semester in a foreign university. At the end of their second year, students choose specific majors and must pass through a less competitive application process.

To graduate, students are required to have 8 months of internships. Since this is usually difficult during the summer, many students take a semester or year off for their internship, generally between the second and third years. The final year of study covers intensive courses in the chosen major.

HEC Paris has numerous double-degree agreements with French and foreign institutions, including Sorbonne Université, Sciences Po, the École Normale Supérieure, the École Polytechnique, the Technical University of Munich, Yale University and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology abroad.[51] Some of them only make degrees of the partner institution available to HEC students, while others also enable selected students of the partner institution to graduate from HEC.

MSc in International Finance (MIF)

The MSc in International Finance is ranked #1 worldwide for pre-experience programs (2020 FT Rankings).[52] This program caters to high-achieving graduates looking to succeed in a career in finance. Substantial contact time with world-renowned practitioners adds a new dimension to the traditional curriculum and provides students with an edge in an increasingly competitive environment.[53] The first semester is dedicated to Core and Advanced Core courses, whereas the second semester allows students to choose from a concentration of electives as well as a wide variety of free electives.

The program puts a strong emphasis on graduate placement. It provides a variety of workshops and events with banks and multinational companies, including a study trip in London, designed to increase networking and job opportunities.

The program has a 99% placement rate within 3 months after graduation, where 68% of students work outside of their home country, and have an average salary of €66,000.

Students have the choice between (1) the Business track: designed for students with a background in business, finance or accounting; or (2) the Accelerated track: designed for students with a background in a quantitative field such as mathematics, engineering, physics, and econometrics.

Business track and accelerated track students have access to the same pool of electives in the Spring term and have the same career opportunities at the end of the program. In particular, they both have access to either a specialization in Corporate Finance or a specialization in Capital Markets (Spring term).

According to their choice, students will have access to a specific range of core and elective courses. While the first semester is dedicated to core and advanced core courses, the second semester allows students to choose from a concentration of electives as well as a wide variety of free electives.

12-18 month MSc / MS Programs

  • MSc Consulting and Coaching for Change (with Oxford University)
  • MSc Innovation and Entrepreneurship (delivered, in part, via Coursera)
  • MSc International Finance
  • MS/LL.M International Law and Management
  • MSc Managerial and Financial Economics
  • MSc/MS Marketing
  • MSc/MS Media Art and Creation
  • MSc Strategic Management
  • MSc Sustainability and Social Innovation
  • MSc X-HEC Data Science for Business (with École Polytechnique)
  • MSc X-HEC Entrepreneurs (with École Polytechnique)

Master in Business Administration (MBA)

The MBA program, created in 1969, has two intakes: September and January. HEC's MBA consists of a 16-month-long curriculum, with 8 months of core courses and 8 months of a customized program, including several specialization options, exchange programs, and fieldwork projects.[54] A typical class is composed of some 250 students – 90% of whom are international students – with more than 52 nationalities represented in the 2017 graduating class.[55] The selection process seeks a balance between academic achievement, professional experience, international exposure, and personal motivation. Knowledge of French is not an entry requirement, but participants are highly encouraged to have a basic knowledge of French by the start of the MBA Program, while mandatory (during the first two core terms) and optional language courses are offered throughout the program. Exchange and dual degree programs are offered with about 40 international partner business schools, including HKUST, London Business School, Columbia Business School, Wharton, and Yale.[56][57]

Executive MBA

The HEC Executive MBA is a program for top executives with a minimum of 8 years of corporate experience, which prepares them for general management positions (the average background experience of students is about 14 years). The Executive MBA is a multi-site program offered in Paris (France), Beijing (China), St Petersburg (Russia) and Doha (Qatar). The courses are split between theory, case studies, strategic projects, leadership training, EU community campus and foreign exchanges in the US and Asia. Program partnering universities are NYU, UCLA, Babson College in the US, Tsinghua University in China and Nihon University in Japan.

TRIUM Global Executive MBA

HEC also offers the TRIUM Global Executive MBA programme jointly with Stern School of Business of NYU and the London School of Economics. It is divided into six modules that are held in five international business locations over 16 months.

PhD Program

The HEC Paris PhD in Management provides training for careers in research and academia.[58] It offers 7 specialisations and usually takes 4–5 years to complete. The specialisations offered are Accounting & Management Control, Economics & Decision Sciences, Finance, Information Systems & Operations Management, Management & Human Resources, Marketing, and Strategy & Business Policy. As of December 2020, there are 59 students in the program, representing 18 nationalities. More than 90% of the students join an academic career upon completion. All PhD students receive a full tuition waiver, a five-year cost-of-living scholarship and research support funding.

Admissions

HEC Paris is among the most selective French grandes écoles. The number of applications has steadily increased over the years.

2018 Admission Statistics[59][60]
Procedure Applicants Admitted Acceptance Rate (%)
Grande Ecole (Master in Management)
Classes préparatoires (French concours, students enter in L3) 5,151 382 7.4%
French dual degree (students from French partner institutions) 421 82 19.5%
Direct admissions (students enter in M1) 6,520 271 4.2%
Total 12,092 735 6%
MBA
Total 2,231 391 17.5%

Research and Entrepreneurship

HEC Paris has several centres of research:

  • HI! PARIS CENTER - A collaboration with the Institut Polytechnique de Paris (IP Paris), this interdisciplinary and inter-institutional centre combines education, research and innovation to investigate the major challenges surrounding digital transformation and its impact on companies and society at large. This Center combines the 300 researchers and infrastructures of IP Paris and HEC Paris.[61]
  • Society & Organizations Institute - an interdisciplinary Institute that brings together over 60 professors to research, teach and implement ideas in sustainability and inclusion.[62]
  • GREGHEC - The Groupement de Recherche et d’Etudes en Gestion à HEC Paris is a joint research laboratory focused on economics and management in France.[63]
  • Innovation & Entrepreneurship Center - 20 partnerships of excellence; 400 projects supported each year; an ecosystem of 400 professors, researchers and recognized experts.[64]

The school has been offering a degree in entrepreneurship for more than 40 years, by creating HEC Entrepreneurs in 1977,[65] which has today become the MSc X-HEC Entrepreneurs, in partnership with École Polytechnique.[66] Since the creation of HEC Entrepreneurs, HEC alumni have created more than 600 companies.[65] Between 2004 and 2013, the percentage of entrepreneurs per class jumped from 10% to 25%.[67] In 2007,[68] HEC Paris created Incubateur HEC Paris, its startup incubator dedicated to supporting alumni-created startups. Currently directed by Antoine Leprêtre, the incubator has been part of the Station F campus since 2017.[69]

Student life

France

HEC is located on a 110-hectare campus in Jouy-en-Josas, 16  km. (10 miles) southwest of central Paris, close to Versailles. Jouy-en-Josas is served by the RER Parisian suburban train and the local bus service. The campus is built around a 19th-century château, which is currently used for Executive Education classes.

Lodging is provided in one of ten dormitories (Bâtiments) providing basic but furnished rooms. Everyone eats together at the University Restaurant, which serves two meals a day in a soup kitchen set. Grande école and Specialized Master students have classes in the Bâtiment des études (Batzet), while MBA students study in a specially designated building. There are three on-campus bars: Le Zinc, which is located on the second floor of the former Cafeteria (or Kfet), Le Wunder Bar, which is located on the first floor next to the Kfet, and the Piano Bar, which is adjacent to the MBA residence hall. The campus also has several sports fields, gym facilities and two lakes.

Qatar

HEC Paris in Qatar

HEC Paris in Qatar is a remote campus of HEC Paris, located in Doha, the capital of Qatar.[70] HEC Paris in Qatar is the result of an agreement between HEC Paris and the Qatar Foundation,[71] a non-profit organization created in 1995 by the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani and his wife, the Sheikha Moza bint Nasser.[72]

HEC Paris in Qatar campus is located in the “Tornado Tower” in the heart of the “West Bay” financial centre of the city of Doha.[73] HEC Qatar offers four types of programs, including an Executive MBA and a Mastère spécialisé program.[74]

Clubs

There are around 130 clubs or "associations" on campus.

The HEC Student Council (Bureau des Élèves in French, or BDE) is in charge of the social entertainment on campus. It is also in charge of coordinating all club activities and representing the students in front of the campus administration. The BDE organizes weekly events such as POWs ("Parties of the Week"), lunches and dinners, speakers, and sports events. HEC parties, which usually are organised every Thursday, are some of the most recognized ones among all French schools and universities. The BDE is composed of a 40-student team that is elected each year in April and for which the competition among students creates the well-known Student Office Campaign.

The HEC MBA Council is in charge of all social activities related to the MBA student body. It manages the MBA students' Piano Bar in the Expansiel Building (Building A), coordinates and sometimes funds all MBA club activities (speaker events, sports events, dinners, etc.), works to expand the HEC MBA brand, develops campus and alumni relations, sets up the new MBA students' integration week, and generally relays student concerns and needs to the administration. Elections for the MBA Council are bi-annual to accommodate both January and September MBA intakes.

Alumni association

The school alumni association, Association des diplômés HEC Paris, was founded in 1883 and gathers alumni of the different institutions of the HEC Group: École HEC Paris, MBA HEC Paris, HEC Paris Executive MBA, Mastères HEC Paris and Doctorat HEC Paris. Each degree is associated with a letter and the year of graduation. In 2017, HEC Alumni were ranked by The Economist as the 2nd most powerful business school alumni network in the world.[75]

The institution is featured in many works. Association of Wrongdoers, a 1987 film by Claude Zidi, features former students.

See also

Notes and references

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  2. "Welcome: HEC Paris". HEC. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  3. "Notre rapport d'activité 2017 est disponible!" (PDF). Fondation HEC Paris. May 2018. p. 24. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 January 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
  4. "HEC Paris ambitionne de lever 200 millions d'euros via sa fondation". letudiant educpros. 21 June 2019. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  5. HEC. "Chairman".
  6. "Faculty Directory List". HEC. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  7. "HEC Paris". Financial Times. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  8. "HEC Paris and Ecole Polytechnique join forces to launch MSc Big Data for Business Program". HEC. 27 September 2016. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  9. "HEC Paris". 16 May 2023.
  10. "The Triple Accredited Business Schools (AACSB, AMBA, EQUIS)". MBA Today.
  11. "Who We Are". HEC. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  12. HEC. "M2M Programs". HEC Paris. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  13. "France's educational elite". Daily Telegraph. 17 November 2003. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  14. Pierre Bourdieu (1998). The State Nobility: Elite Schools in the Field of Power. Stanford UP. pp. 133–35. ISBN 9780804733465.
  15. Ball, MBA Crystal (19 April 2019). "Top Grandes Écoles in France: Ranking, costs, job placements and more".
  16. Monique de Saint-Martin, « Les recherches sociologiques sur les grandes écoles : de la reproduction à la recherche de justice », Éducation et sociétés 1/2008 (No. 21), p. 95-103. lire en ligne sur Cairn.info
  17. Valérie Albouy et Thomas Wanecq, Les inégalités sociales d’accès aux grandes écoles (2003), INSEE
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  43. Nasiripour, Shahien (19 December 2017). "These Are the Best International MBA Programs". Bloomberg.com. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
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  48. "La Licence". enseignementsup-recherche.gouv.fr (in French). 19 July 2016. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
  49. "Le Master". enseignementsup-recherche.gouv.fr (in French). 19 July 2016. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
  50. Ben-David, Joseph and Philip G. Altbach. eds. Centers of Learning: Britain, France, Germany, United States (2nd ed. 2017).
  51. HEC. "Dual Degree Programs with Partner Institutions". HEC Paris. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  52. "Business school rankings from the Financial Times - FT.com". rankings.ft.com. Retrieved 23 April 2021.
  53. "MSc International Finance". HEC Paris. Retrieved 23 April 2021.
  54. MBA, HEC-. "16-month Curriculum". HEC – MBA. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  55. "HEC MBA Brochure" (PDF). HEC Paris MBA Program. 2018.
  56. MBA, HEC-. "International Exchanges". HEC – MBA. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  57. MBA, HEC-. "Double Degrees". HEC – MBA. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  58. "Doctoral Program". HEC Paris. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
  59. Berrou, Nicolas (13 October 2018). "Comment intégrer HEC ?". Business Cool (in French). Retrieved 18 January 2019.
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  61. "Hi! Paris Center". HEC. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  62. "Society & Organizations Institute". HEC. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  63. "greghec". HEC. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  64. "Innovation & Entrepreneurship". HEC. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  65. "HEC Entrepreneurs souffle ses 40 bougies". HEC Paris (in French). 10 July 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  66. "MSc X-HEC Entrepreneurs". HEC Paris (in French). Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  67. "De plus en plus de créateurs d'entreprise à HEC". www.letudiant.fr (in French). 23 March 2015. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  68. "Incubateur HEC Paris". Les Echos Solutions Business (in French). Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  69. Manceau, Jean-Jacques (14 April 2020). "Les Écoles De Commerce Championnes De L'Entrepreneuriat". Forbes France (in French). Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  70. "HEC Paris: de Jouy-en-Josas à Doha | CCI News". 30 May 2011.
  71. "Qatar Foundation et HEC Paris concluent un accord de partenariat" (PDF).
  72. HEC Paris in Qatar.
  73. "HEC Paris exporte ses programmes au Qatar". 7 July 2010.
  74. "HEC Paris welcomes International Executive MBA Class of 2022". thepeninsulaqatar.com. 10 April 2021.
  75. "Who you know, not what you know". The Economist. Retrieved 18 January 2019.

48°45′29″N 2°10′13″E

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