Wirtschaftswoche, February 18, 2008
"In Mannheim 70 percent had a signed contract in their pocket before their graduation, and three months after completing their studies a superb 95 percent of the MBA students were employed. Quite a few had found their dream job."
Financial Times Deutschland, February 8, 2008
"Mannheim Business School is still on the trail to further success and wants to further increase the number of participants. The full-time program in autumn is starting with a new concept. The Mannheim MBA can either take place entirely in Mannheim or with a three-month stay at a partner school in North America, Asia or Europe."
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, December 1, 2007
"Aila Anderson deliberated the idea for a year before she decided on Mannheim Business School's full-time MBA program. She is currently completing one of her program's required study terms abroad at Copenhagen Business School. The connection to Mannheim University's business administration was of particular importance to the 30-year-old, who has a PhD in Law. "My career will not be limited to the legal department" is her reasoning behind the decisive step to pursue the Mannheim MBA."
Handelsblatt, October 19, 2007
"SAP discovers the MBA. The software giant sends its high potentials to Mannheim Business School."
Financial Times (Masters in Management Ranking), September 17, 2007
"Mannheim Business School in Germany made a rather impressive debut. It entered the ranking at number 15, largely due to the excellent salaries reported by its graduates."
Wirtschaftswoche, June 25, 2007
"Little Harvard in South Western Germany: From a global perspective, German MBA programs still find themselves primarily on the fringes of a bustling market. One of the exceptions, however, is Mannheim Business School (MBS), and this is thanks to the fact that it is commendably cosmopolitan."
The Times, June 14, 2007
"Joe Lewis has been working in Germany since 2001 and is combining Mannheim Business School's weekend MBA course with his job at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Heidelberg, where he is the head of its chemical biology core facility. He works towards his MBA every second weekend with longer courses running sporadically. "You can do your day job and your MBA at the same time," he says "And the whole course is much more diverse than I would have guessed. We have a number of different nationalities, and people from a nice mix of backgrounds, from big organisations down to small, family-run companies."
Financial Times, December 4, 2006
"Late starter offers MBAs with a difference - Mannheim aims to provide what others do not."
Wirtschaftswoche, May 15, 2003
"A new spirit in the palace: The University of Mannheim has Germany's best business school - thanks to minimal bureaucracy and close cooperation with companies."
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, October 26, 2002
"German universities, often criticized for their alleged inflexibility and lack of presence on the international stage including the best management schools, have suddenly come forward showing that their programs are of the highest quality and creating new programs, the like of which, when compared to even the most renown names in business schools, are no cause for shame.One example from the most recent past (and present) is the University of Mannheim. Its core competence has always been in business and social science; now, it offers a "European MBA" program in partnership with two highly regarded European partners."
Die Zeit, May 23, 2002
"What Harvard is for the Americans, Mannheim is for the Germans."
Focus, April 15, 2002
"Among future business professionals, the University of Mannheim is seen above all as a career springboard. Almost in no other location is the search of surrounding areas for future managers and employees by large corporations, such as Ernst & Young, the Deutsche Bank, or SAP, so intense."