Optativas Dbabba
Optativas Dbabba
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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Artificial Intelligence (AI) started in the aftermath of World War II as one of the newest fields in
science and engineering. Shortly afterwards, AI transformed into a hot topic as its applications
spread across numerous industries and businesses, including automation, natural language
processing, recommended systems, fraud detection and disease diagnosis in medicine.
In recent years, the development of new Deep Learning techniques, together with the availability of
large amounts of data and increased computing power has lead to novel applications and AI
systems which can perform a variety of tasks at human-performance level.
The general objective of this course is to understand the basis of the newest AI applications based
on Machine Learning and Deep Learning using a "from theory to practice" approach. We will apply
theory and knowledge to real practical examples across different industries and study state-of-the-
art algorithms and technologies.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
In this course, you will learn state-of-the-art methodologies in AI used for different applications. The
subject covers three important blocks of the AI modern landscape. Namely Advanced Computer
Vision & Object Detection; Natural Language Processing and Advanced Sequence Models; and
Generative Models.
We expect that at the end of the course, students will obtain a solid understanding of the theory and
practical implementations of modern AI methodologies, with special focus on Deep Learning
technicques for the above mentioned applications. The course has a strong practical component in
which we will use Python libraries such as PyTorch and Tensorflow. Therefore, it is expected that
students have a medium to advanced level of programming in Python.
In order to fill the possible gap in programming knowledge, the course has a section devoted to
reviewing important programming concepts that will be used along the course.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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SUMMARY
Disclaimer: The following description of the material covered is tentative. An attempt will be made
to cover all listed topics. However; the pace in the classes will depend on the group performance.
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Autoencoders & Variational Autoencoders
Book Chapters: Generative Deep Learning. Teaching Machines to Paint, Write, Compose and Play.
Chapter 3
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SESSION 23 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Review/Questions/Inquiries.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
During the course students will be required to read material prior to the sessions, and to participate
in discussions during class. Students will be given assignments and quizzes to be completed
individually. These will be solved and discussed during class sessions where students are expected
to participate actively. The group project will consist of solving a given business or research
problem using some of the AI methods learned. The group will present the solution to the problem.
The overall grading will be based on the following criteria:
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All assignments need to be submitted online via Turnitin on Campus Online. All other methods of
submission will not be considered.
FINAL GROUP PROJECT
The group project has the highest weight in the overall grade because it is an important part of this
course. Each group (composed of 4 -5 students) will be asked to choose an advanced topic related
to the course content. The professor will suggest several topics to pick up at the beginning of the
course. The solution to the problem should constitute a complete and working solution (e.g.,
uploaded as a repository in GitHub). This will mimic how professionals work and familiarize
students with software version control. This solution has to be accompanied with a description of
the project and a presentation. There will be a special session where students will present their
solutions.
All assignments need to be submitted online via Turnitin on Campus Online. All other methods of
submission will not be considered.
MIDTERM AND FINAL EXAMS
There will be a midterm and a final exam, each of them covering part of the program. The final
exam may include questions from the part covered in the midterm exam as well. For the exams,
you will need your own laptop. Each of the exams is split in two parts, a theoretical and a practical
one. For the theoretical part you are allowed to bring an (2-sides) A4 sheet with all the formulae you
may consider. For the practical one you have to make use of your computer and be prepare to
complete programming questions.
Disclaimer:
NO QUESTIONS ARE ALLOWED DURING THE EXAMS. THE CHEAT-SHEET ALONG WITH
ANY SCRAP PAPER WILL BE COLLECTED AND STAPLED TO YOUR EXAMS.
In order to pass the course, you need a minimum grade of 5 in the final exam. If your grade in the
final exam does not reach the threshold value of 5, you will fail the course, even in the case in
which your weighted average (computed using the table above) exceeds 5.0.
Notice that the date of the midterm exams could change and needs to be considered with flexibility.
The precise date will be communicated to students two weeks ahead of time. The date of the final
and the retake exam CANNOT BE CHANGED under any circumstances.
There exists the possibility that both, midterm and final exams, will be in the form of take home
exercise. In such a case, the professor will adapt the exams to that format.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Eli Stevens, Luca Antiga, Thomas Viehmann. (2020). Deep Learning with
PyTorch. Manning. ISBN 978161729526 (Digital)
- David Foster. (2022). Generative Deep Learning. Teaching Machines to Paint,
Write, Compose and Play. O'Reilly. ISBN 978149204194 (Digital)
- L. Tunstall, L. von Werra, T. Wolf. (2022). Natural Language Processing with
Transformers. Building Language Applications with Hugging Face.. O'Reilly. ISBN
978109810324 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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ADVANCED TOPIC: FINANCIAL ANALYTICS
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
FA-DBA.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 2º
Category: COMPULSORY
Language: English
Academic Background:
- Executive MBA, Business Administration and Management, IE Business School, Spain
- Master in Computer Science and Statistics, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
- Computer Science Degree, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
Academic Experience:
- Risk & Fraud Analytics - Master in Business Analytics & Big Data at IE Business School
- Statistical Programming Python - Master in Business Analytics & Big Data at IE Business
School
- Building a Fintech - Master in Business Analytics & Big Data at Universidad de Alcalá de
Henares
- Math and Stats for Big Data - Master in Business Analytics & Big Data at U-TAD
Corporate Experience:
- Founder and CEO of Suncaged Analytics Consulting Europe (Madrid: 2019-curr)
- Director of Analysis & Reporting, Altamira Real Estate (Madrid: 2018-2019)
- Director of Credit Rating, Big Data and Business Analytics, Bravo Capital (Madrid: 2015-2018)
- Head of R&D for Risk Analytics Area, Santander Bank Headquarters Spain (Madrid: 2012-
2015)
- R&D Risk Analytics Area Manager, Santander Bank United Kingdom (Milton Keynes: 2008-
2012)
- Credit Risk Modelling Manager, Santander Bank Brazil (Sao Paulo: 2007-2008)
- Credit Risk Supervisor, ibi bank (C&A group) (Sao Paulo: 2006-2007)
- Credit Card Risk analyst, Citibank Brazil (Sao Paulo: 2003-2005)
Office Hours
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Office hours will be on request. Please contact at:
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Finance is a vast subject that involves the management, creation, and study of
money and investments, including acquiring capital and spending or investing
that money. Financial markets serve as the means to facilitate the flow of
money through investments and other financial instruments between different
parties. Financial instruments are monetary contracts that can be created,
traded, modified, and settled. These instruments include cash, ownership
interests in an entity, contractual rights to receive or deliver currency, debt such
as bonds and loans, equity such as shares, and derivatives such as options,
futures, and forwards. This diversity of financial instruments enables the flow of
money through economies worldwide.
Recent technological advances have propelled finance into a new era, driven
by two major forces. The first is programmatic access to real-time financial
data, which generates vast amounts of data that humans alone cannot process.
As a result, computational power and algorithms increasingly drive financial
markets instead of human traders. The second force is the growing importance
of artificial intelligence in finance. An increasing number of financial institutions
are investing in machine learning (ML) and deep learning (DL) algorithms to
improve their operations, trading, and investment performances.
This course covers essential topics in Financial Data Science that are at the
core of these technological evolutions, including financial data and
preprocessing, technical analysis, financial time series modeling, factor models
and volatility modeling, Montecarlo simulations, asset allocation and portfolio
optimization, and financial machine learning.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The course aims to cover the basic techniques involved in Financial Data
Science with a practical emphasis on their application, starting with traditional
methods such as time series analysis and factor models and progressing to
more modern techniques such as machine learning. The objective is to provide
students with an adequate understanding of theory and data analytics
knowledge previously acquired to determine which technique best solves a
specific problem.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
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Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 26.67 % 20.0 hours
Discussions 6.67 % 5.0 hours
Exercises in class, 6.67 % 5.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 46.67 % 35.0 hours
Individual studying 13.33 % 10.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 75.0 hours
PROGRAM
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SESSION 6 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Financial time series modelling
Traditionally financial applications have been addressed using methods from Econometrics. This
session introduces the basics of time series modeling. Then, we look at two of the most widely used
approaches of time series modeling, exponential smoothing methods and ARIMA class models. We
present Python libraries to perform different statistical analyses and time series forecasting.
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SESSION 10 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Asset allocation and portfolio optimization
Investments in real life are done using a set of assets pulled in a portfolio to diversify risk. In this
session we introduce Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT) and show how to obtain the Efficient Frontier
and identify specific portfolios, such as minimum variance or the maximor Sharpe ratio. We also
show how to evaluate the performance of such portfolios.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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Your final grade in the course will be based on both individual and group work of different
characteristics that will be weighted in the following way:
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Yves Hilpisch. (2019). Python for Finance. Mastering Data-Driven Finance. 2nd
edition. O'Reilly Media, Inc, USA. ISBN 1492024333 (Digital)
- Eryk Lewinson. (2020). Python for Finance Cookbook: Over 50 recipes for
applying modern Python libraries to financial data. 1st. Packt. ISBN 1789618517
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(Digital)
- Yves J. Hilpisch. (2010). Artificial Intelligence in Finance: A Python-Based Guide.
First. O'Reilly Media, Inc, USA. ISBN 1492055433 (Digital)
Recommended
- Marcos M López de Prado. (2020). Machine Learning for Asset Managers. First.
Cambridge University Press. ISBN 1108792898 (Digital)
- Matthew F. Dixon, Igor Halperin, Paul Bilokon. (2020). Machine Learning in
Finance: From Theory to Practice. 1st. Springer. ISBN 3030410676 (Digital)
- Frederic Mishkin. (2018). Financial Markets and Institutions. Pearson. ISBN
1292215003 (Digital)
- Irene Aldridge. (2021). Big Data Science in Finance. First. John Wiley & Sons Inc.
ISBN 9781119602989 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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AI APPLICATIONS IN HEALTHCARE
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
AIAH-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
If your question cannot be properly answered via email and/or you would prefer
to meet in person, please make an appointment to meet with me on the
university campus during my scheduled office hours. Office hours will be
determined during the semester and posted on Campus Online.
PREREQUISITES
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algorithms for healthcare applications.
- Familiarity with healthcare data is a plus: Students should have a basic understanding of
healthcare data, including medical terminology, common healthcare data formats, and
electronic health records (EHRs). This will help them work with healthcare data and understand
the specific challenges associated with healthcare data.
Overall, a strong foundation in programming, statistics, machine learning, and healthcare data is
essential for success in a course on AI applications in healthcare.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This course is designed to provide students with an understanding of the potential applications of
artificial intelligence (AI) in the field of healthcare. Topics covered will include AI techniques such as
machine learning, deep learning, natural language processing, and robotics, and how these
techniques can be applied to various healthcare scenarios such as disease diagnosis, treatment
planning, drug discovery, and patient monitoring. The course will also explore ethical considerations
related to the use of AI in healthcare.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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Course Introduction
In this session we will review the course logistics and organization together with basic concepts and
requirements along the subject.
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SESSION 10 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Deep Learning
Introduction to deep learning methods and overview of the basic algorithms with neural networks:
MLP and Autoencoders. Applications in Healthcare.
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SESSION 19 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
AI for medical robotics
Review of the potential of AI and Robotics in healthcare.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Throughout this course, you will be asked to read material related to the sessions, participate in
discussions, complete individual assignments, participate in in-class quizzes, implement a final
project (creating a Python program which provides a solution to a business challenge) and present
the outcome of this project in class. Specifically, grading will be based on the following criteria:
1. Class participation – discussion: you are expected to attend every class and participate in the
discussions and class activities (problems, etc.). The basic criteria in grading your
participation are: a) your presence in each session, b) your (quality) contributions to the group
discussion. Lively discussions in the classroom are always encouraged, however, make sure
that you provide constructive comments which contribute to the learning experience of the
whole class.
2. Final project implementation: a major part of this course’s learning experience consists of a
final project (individual or in groups) which will be focusing on designing and implementing an
algorithmic solution to a business problem. The definition of the problem as well as the main
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requirements will be provided to you during the sessions, so that you have only to focus on
designing and implementing the best solution. Remember, creativity is always rewarded!
3. Individual work: you are expected to solve and present a number of problems and exercises
that will be presented along the practical sessions.
4. Final exam: at the end of the course, you will have to pass an individual exam. The minimum
pass grade is 3.5.
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 20 %
Individual Work 30 %
Group Work 35 %
Class Participation 15 %
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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APPLIED MACHINE LEARNING USING GRAPHS
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
AMLUG-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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Probabilistic graphical models (PGMs) are a rich framework for encoding probability distributions
over complex domains: joint (multivariate) distributions over large numbers of random variables that
interact with each other. These representations sit at the intersection of statistics and computer
science, relying on concepts from probability theory, graph algorithms, machine learning, and more.
They are the basis for the state-of-the-art methods in a wide variety of applications, such as
medical diagnosis, image understanding, speech recognition, natural language processing, and
many, many more. They are also a foundational tool in formulating many machine learning
problems.
The module focus on a specific PGM called Bayesian network, which is the most commonly used to
explore the dependence structure in datasets. The course discusses both its theoretical properties
as well as its use in practice. The focus will then move to inferential problems, i.e. how a Bayesian
network can be used to answer questions, and learning algorithms, i.e. how the structure of the
Bayesian network can be inferred from data.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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Review of probability and statistics, conditional independence and its axioms.
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EVALUATION CRITERIA
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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AT THE EDGE OF NEUROSCIENCE: MARKETING
DECISIONS
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
AEN-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
No specific academic background required. Passion to learn.This course is particularly useful for
those interested in pursuing marketing and marketing research related careers.
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SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Neuroscience helps us to understand the decision making process that we undergo as consumers.
For our brain, context matters and everything is relative. Consumers not always disclosure the
drivers behind their decisions, that’s why being able to measure such hidden drivers becomes so
important.
This course provides a first approach to how Neuroscience is currently applied to Marketing. In
particular understanding how attention, memory or emotion affect the decisions of consumers and
how brands and value perceptions are built in consumers’ minds.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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SESSION 3 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
SESSION 3: How our rational decision-making is hindered by cognitive biases II: What factors
affect our decisions?
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SESSION 13: Ethics of Consumer Neuroscience
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
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Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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AUTOMATION AND SECURITY ENGINEERING
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
ASE-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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This course explores the principles, techniques, and tools used in securing
automated systems and software. Students will learn how to design,
implement, and maintain secure systems by leveraging the latest technologies
and methodologies in security engineering. The course emphasizes the
importance of incorporating security measures throughout the entire software
development lifecycle, with a particular focus on continuous integration and
continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipelines and the cloud.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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SESSION 2 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
CI/CD concepts I
- Fundamentals of CI/CD. Basic tools.
- In-class workshop: Introducing Git
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- Assignment SE
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- Infrastructure as Code (IaC)
- Security configurations and policies
- In-class workshop: AWS policies
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Group project III
- Final presentation
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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It is mandatory to attend 100% of the classes. Students who do not comply with at least 70%
attendance will lose their 1st and 2nd chance, and go directly to the 3rd one (they will need to enroll
again in this course the next academic year).
Grading for retakes will be subject to the following rules:
- Those students who failed the subject in the first regular period will have to do a retake in July
(except those not complying with attendance rules who are banned from this possibility).
- Dates and location of the July retakes will be posted in advance and will not be changed.
Please take this into consideration when planning your summer.
- The maximum grade that a student may obtain in the 2nd exam session is 8 out of 10. Those
students in the 3rd call will be required to attend 50% of the classes. If due to schedule overlap,
a different option will be discussed with the professor in order to pass the subject.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Gene Kim, Jez Humble, Patrick Debois, and John Willis. The DevOps Handbook:
How to Create World-Class Agility, Reliability, and Security in Technology Orgs.
ISBN 978194278800 (Digital)
https://ie.on.worldcat.org/oclc/1341896353
- Jez Humble and David Farley. Continuous Delivery: Reliable Software Releases
through Build, Test, and Deployment Automation. ISBN 978032160191 (Digital)
https://ie.on.worldcat.org/oclc/1100830377
- Julien Vehent. Securing DevOps: Security in the Cloud. ISBN 978161729413
(Digital)
https://ie.on.worldcat.org/oclc/1105800614
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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BAYESIAN STATISTICS
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
BS-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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We often use probabilities informally to express our information and beliefs about unknown
quantities. However, the use of probabilities to express information can be made formal: In a
precise mathematical sense, it can be shown that probabilities can numerically represent a set of
rational beliefs, that there is a relationship between probability and information, and that Bayes’ rule
provides a rational method for updating beliefs in light of new information. The process of inductive
learning via Bayes’ rule is referred to as Bayesian Inference.
More generally, Bayesian methods are data analysis tools that are derived from the principles of
Bayesian inference. In addition to their formal interpretation as a means of induction, Bayesian
methods provide:
- parameter estimates with good statistical properties;
- parsimonious descriptions of observed data;
- predictions for missing data and forecasts of future data;
- a computational framework for model estimation, selection and validation.
Thus, the use of Bayesian methods goes beyond the formal task of induction for which the methods
are derived. Throughout this module we will explore the broad uses of Bayesian methods for a
variety of inferential and statistical tasks.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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The steps of Bayesian data analysis.
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SESSION 15 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Lab: The Gibbs algorithm in action.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Your final grade in the course is based on a variety of activites. The weight of each one will be as
follows:
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Kruschke, J.K. Doing Bayesian Data Analysis. ISBN 9780124059160 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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CLINICAL DATA AND LAW
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
CDL-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This course explores the intersection of clinical data and law. Through a series of interactive
discussions and case studies, students will learn how to navigate the complex ethical, legal, and
social issues surrounding the collection, analysis, and use of clinical data.
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Course Goals:
- To develop a critical understanding of the ethical, legal, and social issues surrounding the
collection, analysis, and use of clinical data.
- To provide students with the skills and knowledge necessary to navigate the complex legal and
regulatory landscape surrounding clinical data.
- To encourage students to engage in critical thinking and analysis of the ethical and social
implications of the use of clinical data in healthcare.
Full bibliography and reading lists will be included at the beginning of the course.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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[Guest lecture]
This session will bring an external speaker to showcase the in-hospital challenges for data
collection in terms of regulatory, ethics, and feasibility. It will wrap-up with success examples of best
practices for data collection and its usefulness for research and model training.
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[Guest speaker]
This session will bring in a guest speaker to reflect on the uses of data in the settings discussed in
the previous lectures: Personalised Health, AI, and Genomics.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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All students who fail the course will be given a second chance as a re-sit.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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DATA GOVERNANCE
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
DG-DBA.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 2º
Category: COMPULSORY
Language: English
Office Hours
Office hours will be on request. Please contact at:
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Experienced Chief Data Officer, establishing a robust and integral Data
Strategy & Governance model, with a demonstrated history of working in the
banking&retail industries. She has been involved in Banking transformations for
more than 20 years, projects related to Core Banking and Digital
transformation. She has been leading this kind of projects in different financial
institutions worldwide.
Office Hours
Office hours will be on request. Please contact at:
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The objective of the course is to provide students with necessary skills that wolud allow them to
efficiently manage the life cycle of an organization's data.
At the end of the course, students will be able to:
- Apply Data Management as a whole, using one of the most recognized frameworks in the
sector
- Know through real cases, the best practices carried out in organizations that allow obtaining
value from their data assets
- Understand the best practices in different disciplines related to data management
- Avoid the most common mistakes and correctly apply the knowledge in this matter
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TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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30th October 2023
- Business drivers
- Data maturity level with dataMat
- Data Strategy with dataToolkit
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- Goals and principles
- Activities and tools
- Best practices in database design
Reference material:
EVALUATION CRITERIA
5
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Your final grade in the course will be based on both individual and group work of different
characteristics that will be weighted in the following way:
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
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30th October 2023
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
30th October 2023
DATA IN THE HEALTHCARE INDUSTRY
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
DHI-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
David G Pisano holds a MSc in Applied Statistic, a MSc in Bioinformatics PhD and a BSc in
Fundamental (Cellular and Molecular) Biology from Oviedo University. Research interests include
integrative and multimodal approaches to improve processes in the healthcare industry, with
special focus on the usage of omics data in diagnostics, patient segmentation and improvement of
health outcomes. He has published 114 papers in peer-reviewed scientific journals, with more than
11,000 acumulated citations and h-index 46. Lecturer in genomics, bioinformatics, biomedical data
handling and advance analytics in the healthcare industry. Previous jobs include ISP owner and
CTO, process and technology consultant, project manager and service delivery manager, CTO, lab
director, and head of healthcare analytics. He is currently the Clinical Bionformatics Director at
Genomocore.
David is an accomplished senior level manager with solid background in technology consulting,
professional service delivery, cancer genomics research, and data science/advanced analytics
within insurance/healthcare sector. He has in-depth knowledge of processes and requisites related
with healthcare, pharmaceutical, manufacturing, veterinary, in-vitro diagnostics, biotechnology,
R&D, cancer research, and high performance computing. Well-versed in devising strategies for the
achievement of short and long-term organisational objectives. Articulate communicator and speaker
with proven track record or fostering strong relations with multi-disciplinary functions, stakeholders,
and C-suite executives. Skilled problem-solver, supporting the achievement of individual and
shared goals.
CORPORATE EXPERIENCE
- Current position: Clinical Bioinformatics Director, Made of Genes (Barcelona: 2020-present)
- Health Analytics Head, Sanitas (Madrid: 2016-2019)
- Head of Bioinformatics, Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO) (Madrid: 2006-
2016)
- CTO, National Bioinformatics Institute (Madrid: 2004-2009)
- Head Bioinformatician, GENOMICA (Zeltia) (Madrid: 2001-2003)
- Service Delivery Manager for Iberia and Latin America, Thermo Fisher Scientific (Madrid: 2000-
2001)
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- Project Manager, Thermo Fisher Scientific (Madrid: 1999)
- Project Consultant, Thermo Fisher Scientific (Madrid: 1998)
- Founder & CTO, CSSC (Oviedo: 1995-1997)
ACADEMIC BACKGROUND
- Accelerate: Building Business from Science & Technology, IE Business School
- MSc Statistics, UNED
- MSc Bioinformatics, GNA
- MSc Biochemistry, Univ. Oviedo
- BSc Molecular Biology, Univ. Oviedo
- Corporate Experience
ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE
- Master in Business Analytics & Big Data (IE University)
- Master in Research Methodology in Molecular Biosciences (Univ. Autonoma Madrid)
- Master in Bioinformatics (Univ. Complutense de Madrid, National Health School)
- Master in Health Biotechnology, Technology and Biotechnology Management (CESIF, Madrid)
- Summer School in Bioinformatics (Univ. Complutense, Madrid)
- Biotechnology Degree (Univ. Francisco de Vitoria, Madrid)
- Biology Degree (IE University, Segovia)
- Bichemistry Degree (Univ. Oviedo)
[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This is an introductory course for data in the healthcare industry, from the
perspective of data analysts. Through this course, you will gain highly valuable
skills in the healthcare sector by understanding how the healthcare system
records information about each patient and medical encounter. You will also
learn the specific features of health data that enable you to perform more
insightful analyses. You will also be able to communicate more effectively with
clinical and analytic colleagues. You will be empowered to improve care
processes and make a difference to many people’s health and lives.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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- To understand –omics and other big data technologies, and to realise that they drive the
profound changes to be experienced by biomedical data sciences
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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20th July 2023
Unstructured Data: medical images, medical notes, signals…
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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Evaluation criteria:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit the exam
in June / July (except those not complying with the attendance rule, who will not have that
opportunity and must directly re-enroll in the course on the next Academic Year).
- The extraordinary call exams in June / July (re-sits) require your physical presence at the
campus you are enrolled in (Segovia or Madrid). There is no possibility to change the date,
location or format of any exam, under any circumstances. Dates and location of the June / July
re-sit exams will be posted in advance. Please take this into consideration when planning your
summer.
- The June / July re-sit exam will consist of a comprehensive exam. Your final grade for the
course will depend on the performance in this exam only; continuous evaluation over the
semester will not be taken into consideration. Students will have to achieve the minimum
passing grade of 5 and can obtain a maximum grade of 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the
in the re-sit exam.
- Retakers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will be needed to check the syllabus of the assigned
professor, as well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria
for them as retakers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year).
The maximum grade that may be obtained in the retake exam (3rd call) is 10.0.
After ordinary and extraordinary call exams are graded by the professor, you will have a possibility
to attend a review session for that exam and course grade. Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your exam. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session. Any grade appeals require that the
student attended the review session prior to appealing.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June-July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam during the June / July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a
re-taker and pay the corresponding extra cost. As you know, students have a total of four
allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
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Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
6
20th July 2023
DEEP REINFORCEMENT LEARNING
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
DRL-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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Arbitrator of the Madrid Arbitration Court, specialist in the Technology,
Information and Communications sector and Developer of an advanced
software platform for modelling business risks and economic projections,
valuation of companies & portfolios and for building advanced risk & value
information systems for Directors.
Public Activity and Teaching
He has been part of the Advisory Committees of eMobility and SIMO. He was a
member of the Jury of the National eMobility Prize and participated in the
Competitiveness Forums of Madrid and Castilla y León.
Instructor and speaker in numerous courses and seminars, national and
international, of a general nature and related to his areas of specialization.
Lecturer in various Business Management Master courses in subjects related
to advanced economic and statistical analysis as well as organizer of the
Master eBusiness of the Universidad Pontificia de Comillas, Speaker in the
Executive Education Program of ESADE and in the Executive MBA of AEDE
Business School in the subjects of "Information Systems", "Technological
Environment" and "Systems Architecture".
He has published articles on business and technical content topics in
newspapers such as Expansión, Cinco Días, Gaceta de los Negocios,
Actualidad Económica, Dinero, etc., and directed or participated, as author or
coordinator, in the publication of various books on issues of quality,
organization and information technology (Las empresas del click / The
Clickable Corporation [1999, Actualidad Económica], La Calidad en
España/Quality in Spain [1995, Cinco Días]) and collaborated in the
development of others (The organization in the information age: Learning,
Innovation and Change [ 1995, IESE])
He was listed in the year 2000 by Actualidad Económica in the ranking of the
100 most relevant people on the Internet and eBusiness in Spain.
E-Mail: [email protected]
PREREQUISITES
To optimize your chances of success in this program, we recommend having a good Python
programming knowledge with at least 120hrs of programming experience, familiarity with data
structures and experience with libraries. This is especially important for the assignments, and for
getting the most out of the F2F practice/tutorials along the course. Additionally, the use of some
standard Machine Learning libraries such as scikit-learn, Tensorflow and Pytorch will be required.
The new environment programming and tools (such as OpenAI gym) will be introduced and
covered along the course.
In a few sections, some of the theoretical concepts will be presented with quite a bit of rigor and a
good college-level knowledge of linear algebra, calculus and basic inferential statistics would be
desirable for a thorough understanding. For example, it is expected that you know about standard
probability distributions (Uniform, Gaussians, Poisson…), and also understand the operation and
interpretation of derivatives and the basic mathematics underlying probability models. Some
concepts about dynamic programming and markov decision processes will be revisited.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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Reinforcement Learning (RL) is a melting pot where excellent computational techniques of dynamic
programming, heuristic search in problem spaces and the new techniques of functional
representation of neural networks have converged with great success to build a highly scalable
area of discipline that is allowing to efficiently attack a wide range of problems previously
considered as practically unapproachable.
Throughout the course we will analyze each of these components in a structured way and we will
see the types of approach combinations currently in use, from basic Q-Value models, to Deep QL
and methods based on policy gradients, actor-critic, curiosity driven and other innovations in the
dynamic definition of reward functions.
We will try to understand in which problem scenarios they are most advisable, their strengths and
limitations and to anticipate some of the future trends that will progressively lead to advances and
breakthroughs in this field.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The main objective of this course is to introduce students to the exciting field of RL and to set up a
framework of knowledge that will allow them to make informed analysis of the opportunities and
challenges for its successful application in Business.
To achieve this, we will focus on helping students grasp a sound understanding of RL techniques
and their variations (model-free, model-based, online/offline RL, behavioural cloning, etc) and a
good intuition of how to apply them to tasks of their own design.
It encompasses knowledge about:
- the fundamentals and theoretical principles of this discipline,
- the most relevant algorithms used in practice,
- the engineering process for the development and management of this type of projects and
- the understanding of the difficulties, obstacles and challenges to be faced in this path.
Therefore, it will combine both a theoretical and conceptual approach with a hands-on technical
understanding of the different stages of these type of RL projects keeping always a clear
perspective of the business issues and opportunities and the future evolution and innovations from
the current state of the art.
To streamline the technical/computational requirements, we will concentrate on the
implementations using Python, and a level of complexity ranging from basic to intermediate.
For some advanced examples we could also touch on some other development environments
(such as LUA for robotics or Matlab for process-control) but just for showcase purposes. No
programming activities will be required in these cases.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This program will try to put you in a good starting point for becoming a well-rounded RL
practitioner, experiencing how to build RL models and apply them to problems in various fields.
We have tried to organize the different knowledge blocks integrating the conceptual and
theoretical background first, then moving into practice/tutorials examples and then framing
assignments of assorted levels of complexity.
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We expect students to work 3 to 8 hours/week on average. This is a rough estimation of total hours
the average student may take to complete all required coursework, including lecture and
project time (actual hours may vary depending on the individual student and each specific stage of
the course).
The course will be both lecture and example-based, and will include group in-class discussions
to promote learning and understanding of the course material in a variety of formats.
The course will have 6 main elements:
- Lectures: We will explain the theoretical ideas, concepts and methods involved and will try
to check on-time the correct understanding of the key elements. Questions and feedback will
be the basic tool for this interactive dialog, in order to guarantee that the message gets across.
- Examples/Tutorials/Cases: We will use profusely cases and examples related to the
theory (and preparatory for the Assignments). Questions and what-if interactive analysis will
be encouraged.
- Discussions: as one critical skill for your future is how you present your work, we
will encourage from time to time, for the relevant concepts in each section, some group
discussions. A few of them will be announced in advance and will require some preparation
from each student.
- Assignments: practical exercises for experimenting with RL concepts, algorithms
and techniques.
- Exams: There will just one formal test/exam, and a “test-exam” assignment will be included
to get students used to answer questions about RL in different types of formats.
- Group work: For the final part of the course the student will have to work in a small group
for preparing a final project presentation.
Assignments:
The best way to learn about a machine learning method is to program it yourself and
experiment with it. So, the assignments will generally involve implementing machine learning
algorithms, and experimentation to test your algorithms on some data. You will be asked to
summarize your work, and analyze the results.
The implementations will be done in Python, creating Jupyter notebooks or pure Python
programs (in some cases, numba or cython could be required for performance optimization), and
the structure and review criteria will be reported for each specific job.
Though they are considered as individual work, the "individual assignments" will be realized
(and delivered jointly) in small groups that will be defined by an special algorithm that will
dynamically form the groups for each assignment ensuring that no two students will be assigned
more than once together and trying to optimize and combine the skills of each one based on their
previous results to maximize cross-learning, Therefore, collaboration on the assignments is only
allowed (and enforced) within each group. Each student/group is responsible for his or her own
work.
Discussion of assignments and programs should be limited to clarification of the handout itself,
and should not involve any sharing of pseudocode or code or simulation results.
The only exception will be for the Final Group Assignment, for which another specific algorithm
will try to create optimized groups based on the preferences informed by each student.
The schedule of assignments is included in the syllabus and in general will correspond to
the sessions planned as "with assignment" except for exceptions required for the best development
of the content.
Assignments are due at the beginning of class/tutorial on the due date. Because they may
be discussed in class that day, it is important that you have completed them by that day.
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Optionally, some of the assignments could have the form of a “bake-off” (a competition
between machine learning algorithms). We will give everyone some data for training a RL system,
and you will try to develop the best method. We will then determine which system performs best on
some unseen test data.
Exams:
There will just one formal test/exam. However, as an especial practice/assignment the students
will have a series of test-exams to get them prepared for answering questions about RL (multiple
choice, true-false or open questions). These test-exams will be either automatically scored by
the machine or in some cases will require a self-evaluation or self-assessment. So, they are a type
of simulation of an open-book exam on all material covered up to that point in the lectures,
tutorials, required readings, and assignments, but eventually there could be topics not covered in
any of these that will require some online investigation or other type of research to find out (or
understand) the possible answers. The final scoring of this “assignment” will be based on the
number of testexams done (freely decided by each student), their average results, and the degree
of progressive improvement/learning shown.
The questions for the final test/exam will be selected from the ones used for the practice.
Participation:
We expect students to attend all lectures, and all practice/tutorials. Attention, interaction and
participation during these lectures is especially important because we will cover material in class
that is not included in the reference readings. Also, the tutorials will not only be for review,
practicing and answering questions, but new material and concepts will also be covered or
explained.
The oreintative expected distribution of times for these different types of learning activities is such
as the following:
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 16.0 % 20.0 hours
Discussions 8.0 % 10.0 hours
Exercises in class, 52.0 % 65.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 12.0 % 15.0 hours
Individual studying 12.0 % 15.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 125.0 hours
PROGRAM
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RL BASIC CONCEPTS
Definition of intelligent agents and their types. Evaluative vs Instructive feedback. Associative vs
Non-associative models.
Book Chapters: Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction; Chapter 1, Section 1.7 Early history of
Reinforcement Learning Chapter 1, Section 1.3 Elements of Reinforcement Learning (See
Bibliography)
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A FIRST PRACTICE - INTEGRATION OF CONCEPTS
The Snake Game. Application of the principles studied to an initial problem. Comparison with the
other possible solutions (harcoded, genetic algorithm, hamiltonian paths, etc). Live comparison and
charting of all of them and discussion of pros and cons. Rationale behind the use of RL
approaches.
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POLICY GRADIENTS [Assignment: ASSIGNMENT]
Theory behind PGM's and the "Policy Gradient Theorem".
Book Chapters: Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction; Chapter 13: Policy Gradient Methods (See
Bibliography)
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SESSION 20 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
MULTI-AGENT RL
Incursion in the multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL) sub-field. Possible dynamics for the
behavior of multiple learning agents that coexist in a shared environment. Extension (or
generalization) of the basic principles to these type of complex models.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
We will behave as professionals. This means that I expect you to come to class prepared to discuss
as if this was a meeting in your company. This is a small group, so we will take advantage of it
doing a lot of direct interaction. Come prepared to class and be inquisitive.
The followng table summarizes the Ongoing grading (maximum) for each of the sessions and
assignments:
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Participati I.Assignme G.Assign Test/Exa
SESSION LECTURE TOTAL
on nt ment m
INTRODUCTION TO THE
DRL_01 4 4
COURSE (SYLLABUS)
RL INTRODUCTION RL BASIC
DRL_02 4 4
CONCEPTS
DRL_03 MULTI-ARMED BANDITS 4 4
MONTE CARLO METHODS
DRL_05 [Assignment: WARM-UP 4 40 44
ASSIGNMENT]
DRL_06 TEMPORAL DIFFERENCES 4 4
A FIRST PRACTICE -
DRL_07 4 4
INTEGRATION OF CONCEPTS
A FIRST PRACTICE -
DRL_07 4 4
INTEGRATION OF CONCEPTS
DRL_08 LEARNING AND PLANNING 4 4
EVOLUTIONARY
DRL_09 4 4
COMPUTATION
DRL_10 RL FRAMEWORKS 4 4
DRL_11 INTERMEDIATE PRACTICE 4 4
DRL_12 APPROXIMATION METHODS 4 4
POLICY GRADIENTS
DRL_13 4 40 44
[Assignment: ASSIGNMENT]
DRL_14 ACTOR-CRITIC 4 4
DRL_15 PRACTICE REVIEW 4 4
PROBLEM APPROACH
DRL_16 4 4
FRAMEWORK
DEEP RL PRACTICE
DRL_17 4 40 44
[Assignment: ASSIGNMENT]
DRL_18 SUMMARY RECAP 4 4
MODEL-BASED, OFF-LINE,
INVERSE RL RESEARCH
PAPERS, INNOVATION
DRL_19 TRENDS (A) [Assignment: 4 55 59
EXAMINATION PRACTICE. BE
PREPARED TO ANSWER
QUESTIONS ABOUT RL]
DRL_20 MULTI-AGENT RL 4 4
RL APPLICATIONS
DRL_21 [Assignment: GROUP 4 100 104
ASSIGNMENT]
DRL_22 TOP CASES & COMPANIES 4 4
DRL_23 TEST-EXAM 4 75 79
GROUP PROJECTS
DRL_24 4 50 54
PRESENTATIONS (A)
GROUP PROJECTS
DRL_25 PRESENTATIONS (B), WRAP- 4 4
UP
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Summary of Criteria:
CRITERIA POINTS PERCENTAGE
Participation 100 20%
I.Assignment 175 35%
G.Assignment 150 30%
Test/Exam 75 15%
TOTAL 500 100%
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
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13th June 2023
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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13th June 2023
DEVOPS ENGINEERING
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
DE-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Ivan Diaz, Senior Analytics Manager at Kearney Analytics since May 2022, has 14 years of
international experience in product & project management tohether with strategy consulting at
prominent firms such as Kearney, BCG, Bain & Co, and Deloitte S&O. At Kearney he is the lead for
the Data & Analytics transformation hub, and during his tenure at BCG GAMMA, Ivan served as the
Head of the Iberia node, supervising 18 analysts across various disciplines, including Data
Engineering, Data Science, Geo-Analytics, and Software Development. He holds an MSc in
Business Analytics and Big Data from IE Business School (Dean's list) and an MBA (Cum Laude)
from Stellenbosch Business School, along with certifications in PRINCE 2, Scrum Master, and
Product Owner.
Since November 2018, Ivan has been sharing his expertise as an instructor for Data Visualization,
Communication & Storytelling with Data courses at IE University's Master's in Business Analytics
and Big Data, Bachelor's in Business Analytics and Big Data, and the ieXL BootCamp. His teaching
has been recognized with academic awards for all three cohorts.
Few selected software development projects:
- Retail
- Development and deployment of a cross country, harmonized software solution, for Trade
Terms & Promo performance improvement (Azure, Databricks, Delta Lake, Power BI)
- Oil & Gas (Retail)
- Software development and deployment of a Personalization Engine for fuel and
convenience store retailers. Managing a cross-regional team of 6 Developers, including
DevOps, Back & Front Ends, and Data Science and Engineering Modules (AWS, Spark,
Docker, Django, React)
- Infrastructure
- Development and deployment of a data-intensive platform for Project Planning
optimization and prediction of large infrastructure project deviation for a large multinational
construction firm (AWS, Spark, Django, React)
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- Pharma
- Developed of a SaaS Control Tower solution, for the coordination and planning of
Pharmaceutical studies across Europe (AWS, Postgres, Python, Tableau)
1. Teams or Slack channels set up for this purpose
2. [email protected]
PREREQUISITES
Students should have good understanding of software development, and some IT general
operations concepts. Including:
- Some good understanding of Python, and familiarity with the command line/ shell scripting
language (e.g. bash) to perform basic operations such as file manipulation, directory navigation,
and executing commands
- Familiarity with operating systems e.g. Windows, macOS, and Linux
- Basic knowledge of database, and basic understanding of concepts such as tables, queries,
and SQL
- Some exposure to version control e.g. Git, Github or GitLab
- Students will be provided with access to Azure Resource groups, students are expected to
familiarize themselves with this environment
Familiarity and scan reading to some reference of software (potentially) covered in class:
- Git: https://git-scm.com/
- Jenkins: https://www.jenkins.io/
- GitLab CI: https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/
- Terraform: https://www.terraform.io/
- Azure DevOps: https://aws.amazon.com/cloudformation/
- Docker: https://www.docker.com/
- Kubernetes: https://kubernetes.io/
- Prometheus: https://prometheus.io/
- Grafana: https://grafana.com/
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
The rapidly evolving field of software development has led to the rise of DevOps, a set of practices
that combine development and operations to streamline the software development process.
This course aims to equip students with the knowledge and skills required to understand and
implement DevOps principles and practices, enhancing their employability in a very competitive
software industry.
DevOps is a critical discipline, essential for modern software development and operations. In
today's fast-paced and highly competitive digital landscape, organizations need to be able to
deliver software and services quickly, reliably, and at scale. DevOps provides a set of
principles, practices, and tools that enable organizations to achieve these goals by breaking down
silos between development and operations teams, automating processes, and building a culture
of collaboration and continuous improvement (Agile).
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This course will introduce you to the fundamentals of DevOps and how it can help organizations to
accelerate their software delivery and increase their operational efficiency. You will learn about key
DevOps concepts, and how these concepts can be applied to build modern software applications.
Including:
- Coud
- Continuous integration, continuous delivery (CI/CD)
- Infrastructure as code (IaaC)
- Containerization,
- Monitoring
DevOps is not only important now, but it will also become increasingly
important in the future. As organizations continue to embrace digital
transformation, they will need to be able to deliver software and services
more quickly, reliably, and securely than ever before. DevOps provides a
framework for achieving these goals by enabling organizations to automate
their software delivery process, increase their operational efficiency, and
improve their overall quality of service.
Caveat emptor: Faithfully adhering to the agile spirit, this syllabus will be
modified and adapted to the specific requirements, needs, and pace of
the class. Lead this journey, provide feedback, and let's get the most out of
this experience together!
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
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04th July 2023
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 20.0 % 25.0 hours
Discussions 8.0 % 10.0 hours
Exercises in class, 0.0 % 0.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 48.0 % 60.0 hours
Individual studying 24.0 % 30.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 125.0 hours
PROGRAM
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SESSIONS 5 - 6 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Continuous Integration (CI)
- Introduction to continuous integration
- CI tools and best practices
- Build automation and testing
- Continuous integration tools
- Version Control systems (Git)
- Jenkins, GitHub Actions and its features
Activity: Set up a Git repository for the software application and configure a CI pipeline using
Jenkins or GitHub Actions
Extra (optional) reference:
- "Continuous Integration vs Continuous Deployment vs Continuous Delivery" by Atlassian
- "What is Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment?" by CircleCI
- "What is Continuous Deployment?" by IBM
- "What is Continuous Integration" by Azure
5
04th July 2023
SESSIONS 11 - 12 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Configuration Management and IaaC
- Introduction to Configuration Management
- IaC concepts and principles
- Configuration Management tools (Ansible, Puppet, Chef)
- IaC tools (Terraform, CloudFormation)
Activity: Set up configuration management and IaC for the software application using a chosen
toolset
Extra (optional) reference:
- "What is Configuration Management?" by Atlassian
- "Configuration Management: A Comprehensive Guide" by UpGuard
- "Configuration Management" by Azure
- "Infrastructure as Code" by Azure
6
04th July 2023
- Introduction to DevSecOps
- Integrating security in the DevOps lifecycle
- Security tools (Snyk, SonarQube, OWASP)
- Compliance and security best practices
Activity: Integrate security tools and practices into the software application's CI/CD pipeline
Extra (optional) reference:
- "Security in DevOps (DevSecOps)" by Azure
- "From DevOops! to DevSecOps" by SANS Institute
- "Integrating Security in DevOps: Best Practices, Tools, and Challenges" by TechStack
7
04th July 2023
Activity: Explore and implement a serverless component or machine learning service in the
software application
Extra (optional) reference:
- "The Future of DevOps: Trends to Watch in 2023 and Beyond" by Neil Sha
- "Future Scope of DevOps – 9 Reasons To Learn DevOps in 2023" by upGrad
- "Future of DevOps: Trends to Watch" by DevOps.com
EVALUATION CRITERIA
8
04th July 2023
Production. ISBN 1491917571 (Digital)
- Brendan Burns. Kubernetes: Up and Running: Dive into the Future of
Infrastructure. ISBN 1491935677 (Digital)
- Jesse Keating. Mastering Ansible: Master the Ins and Outs of Advanced
Operations with Ansible. ISBN 1784395487 (Digital)
- Yevgeniy Brikman. Terraform: Up & Running: Writing Infrastructure as Code.
ISBN 1491977086 (Digital)
- Mitesh Soni. Implementing DevOps with Microsoft Azure: Automate your
deployments and incorporate the DevOps cultu. ISBN 1789610545 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
9
04th July 2023
FINTECH: REVOLUTIONIZING FINANCIAL
SERVICES VIA DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
FRFS-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
- Basic Stats
- Python programming (R or other programming language)
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Digitization has changed the way citizens and entrepreneurs interact with
banks, their savings and financing.
The main actors of this disruption are the Financial technology companies,
known as Fintech companies. Fintechs are companies with an important
technological component, seeking new solutions within the financial sector
through the use of new design and user experience via technology, apps and
big data.
The Fintech field is a relatively new industry that applies technology to
streamline financial processes. It gains terrain against traditional banks by
simplifying bank services, by better controlling risks, by making improving
trading decisions, or by simply by offering new generation the power control
their finances.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
2
07th July 2023
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 30.0 % 45.0 hours
Discussions 6.67 % 10.0 hours
Exercises in class, 26.67 % 40.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 26.67 % 40.0 hours
Individual studying 10.0 % 15.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 150.0 hours
PROGRAM
3
07th July 2023
SESSION 7 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Module 2.2: Fintech - Case Study Research and Writting
Mandatory to read the blog post:
Other / Complementary Documentation: How to Write a Convincing Case Study in 7 Steps
******************************************************
Midterm Group Presentation (Case Study Presentation)
4
07th July 2023
SESSION 17 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Module 4.2: Demystifying blockchain and cryptocurrency - Advanced Crypto
Mandatory to read the paper:
5
07th July 2023
SESSION 26 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Module 5: Forging the future of FinTech
Mandatory to read the article: "How banks can compete against an army of Fintech Startups"
Technical note: How Banks Can Compete Against an Army of Fintech Startups (HBS H03MS6-PDF-
ENG)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
6
07th July 2023
The group project is an integral part of this course. Each group (the ones defined by IE or randomly
composed of N students defined by the professor) will be asked to work on a project, prepare and
deliver a presentation.
D. Final Exam
There will be one final exam (open book). You can refer to any class material and also access the
internet during the exam. HOWEVER, NO COMMUNICATION BETWEEN STUDENTS ARE
ALLOWED DURING THE EXAMS (IN PERSON OR ONLINE). MOBILE PHONES ARE NOT
ALLOWED.
As per University Policy:
Each student has 4 chances to pass any given course distributed in two consecutive academic
years (regular period and July period).
It is mandatory to attend 100% of the classes. Students who do not comply with at least 70%
attendance will lose their 1st and 2nd chance, and go directly to the 3rd one (they will need to enroll
again in this course the next academic year).
Grading for retakes will be subject to the following rules:
1. Those students who failed the subject in the first regular period will have to do a retake in July
(except those not complying with attendance rules who are banned from this possibility).
2. Dates and location of the July retakes will be posted in advance and will not be changed. Please
take this into consideration when planning your summer.
3. The maximum grade that a student may obtain in the 2nd exam session is 8 out of 10. Those
students in the 3rd call will be required to attend 50% of the classes. If due to schedule overlap, a
different option will be discussed with the professor in order to pass the subject.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Brett King. (2012). Bank 3.0: Why Banking Is No Longer Somewhere You Go But
Something You Do. 1st edition. Wiley. ISBN 1118589637 (Digital)
- Miguel Grinberg. (2018). Flask Web Development: Developing Web Applications
with Python. 2nd Edition. O'REILLY. ISBN 1491991739 (Digital)
- Yves Hilpisch. Python for Finance: Mastering Data-Driven Finance, 2nd edition.
O'Reilly Media. ISBN 1492024333 (Printed)
- Raymond Anderson. The Credit Scoring Toolkit: Theory and Practice for Retail
Credit Risk Management and Decision Autom. Oxford Press. ISBN 0199226407
(Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
07th July 2023
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
07th July 2023
FROM DATA TO DECISION MAKING IN MARKETING
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
FDTDM-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Data Science
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Marcus Sherwin holds a Bachelor in History and Classical Studies from University College Dublin,
and an MBA in Business from Universidad Carlos III.
He has 9 years experience working in the Tech sector with leading multi national companies on
their digital media strategies.
- Criteo Account strategist helping multinationals on their performance marketing strategy in
Retail & Travel.
- Yiedlr Key Account Manager advising revenue management and marketing teams on SaaS
integrations in the Aviation sector.
- TikTok Brand Partnership Manager working with Fintech clients on how they can invest with
TikTok to reach audiences at scale.
- LinkedIn Senior Entreprise Client Solutions Manager working with B2B clients on how they can
leverage LinkedIn to engage with their target audience.
[email protected]
1
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- In the consumer insights department of Mondelez (Kraft) developing research plans to explore
the different marketing initiatives of the company and using different market research
techniques to understand the consumer behaviour and support decision making for the strategy
of the brand;
- In United Planet in Boston as Marketing Project Manager;
- In Research International as Market Research Executive being seconded to the Chicago Office;
- In Russell Bedford International in London as Marketing Assistant.
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
2
06th July 2023
Most of the sessions will have a focus on real applications of the theory we are covering.
Bringing your laptop is mandatory to all sessions, although its use (or not) will be decided by the
professor.
Students are expected to create and execute a marketing plan targeting to specific audience to
promote their product/service. Students will need to apply what they are learning not only to their
group projects but also to the broader real-world context.
There will be a brief reading list included also some articles and recommended short Pod casts
which links will be provided to access on class notes.
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
06th July 2023
Resources will be provided on how to research your idea, in season 3, there will be a brief 5 minute
presentation on why you chose the product/service, what is your thought process around the
decision.
4
06th July 2023
SESSION 11 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
SESSION 11 (MARCUS)
Creating an ideal buyer
Who is this person
What do we know about them ?
How are we going to find them ?
Here we will look : Hubspot and how you can use it as the foundation for Marketing efforts.
5
06th July 2023
SESSION 18 (CHARO)
Understanding Price to improve Decision Making
6
06th July 2023
SESSION 25 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Session 25 (MARCUS)
1p 2p 3p data GDBR & Data privacy, measurement platforms, Dataroma, Google data hub.
Google Analytics
Analyzing attribution
EVALUATION CRITERIA
7
06th July 2023
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance rule during the semester will fail both calls for
this Academic Year (ordinary and extraordinary) and have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) in
the next Academic Year.
Evaluation criteria:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit the exam
in June / July (except those not complying with the attendance rule, who will not have that
opportunity and must directly re-enroll in the course on the next Academic Year).
- The extraordinary call exams in June / July (re-sits) require your physical presence at the
campus you are enrolled in (Segovia or Madrid). There is no possibility to change the date,
location or format of any exam, under any circumstances. Dates and location of the June / July
re-sit exams will be posted in advance. Please take this into consideration when planning your
summer.
- The June / July re-sit exam will consist of a comprehensive exam. Your final grade for the
course will depend on the performance in this exam only; continuous evaluation over the
semester will not be taken into consideration. Students will have to achieve the minimum
passing grade of 5 and can obtain a maximum grade of 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in
the in the re-sit exam.
- Retakers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will be needed to check the syllabus of the assigned
professor, as well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria
for them as retakers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year).
The maximum grade that may be obtained in the retake exam (3rd call) is 10.0.
After ordinary and extraordinary call exams are graded by the professor, you will have a possibility
to attend a review session for that exam and course grade. Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your exam. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session. Any grade appeals require that the
student attended the review session prior to appealing.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June-July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam during the June / July extraordinary
call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-taker and pay
the corresponding extra cost. As you know, students have a total of four allowed calls to pass a
given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Daniel Nunan, David F. Birks, Naresh K. Malhotra. Marketing Research. Applied
Insight.. Pearson Education Limited. ISBN 9781292308722 (Printed)
- Barbara Minto. The Pyramid Principle: Logic in Writing and Thinking. Pearson
Education Limited. ISBN 9781292372266 (Printed)
- Byron Sharp. How Brands grow, what marketers don’t know. OUP Australia &
New Zealand. ISBN 9780195573565 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
8
06th July 2023
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
9
06th July 2023
INTRODUCTION TO HEALTHCARE
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023 IH-
DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Ana Maria holds a Ph.D. in Mathematical Engineering from Carlos III University of Madrid. She
taught different topics of Mathematics at Carlos III University, University of Navarra and IE
University. Her actual research interests are on mathematical analysis and numerical simulations of
biological and medical systems, and new trends in the fintech industry.
Academic Qualifications
- Ph.D. in Mathematical Engineering, Carlos III University, 2016
- Master in Biosensors for Environmental Monitoring, Perpignan University and Bucharest
University, 2003
- B.Sc. in Chemistry, Bucharest University, 2001
Academic Experience
- Adjunct Professor, IE Business School, 2016-present
- Invited Professor, Carlos III University, Ph.D. Programme in Mathematical Engineering, 2016-
2017
- Assistant Professor, University of Navarra, 2010-2012
- Teaching Assistant, Carlos III University, 2004-2009
- Research Assistant, BIOMEM, Centre de Phytopharmacie, 2002-2003
Fields of Interest
- Computational methods in Biology and Finance
- Applied and computational mathematics
- Numerical modelling algorithms
[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
1
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The course is designed to introduce the healthcare system and to help
identifying the opportunities of using data science for improving and
personalizing it. No previous experience is needed.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The course is designed for students interested in Life Sciences and Biomedical disciplines, and its
main objective is to see how they can use new technologies and data science to improve the quality
of healthcare services.
Specifically, this course is designed to achieve several objectives:
- Describe the differences between public, private and non-profit health organizations
- Recognize the stakeholders in the healthcare system, their roles and responsibilities
- Identify the main challenges of the healthcare system
- Understand the structure and functions of pharmaceutical entities, the drug discovery process
and future trends in the pharmaceutical sector
- Overview the values and applications of bioengineering in solving actual health issues
- Understand the impact of biomedical research in modern healthcare and identify the challenges
faced by scientists in the field
- Examine in detail the Economics theories applied in healthcare, and analyze the economic
implications of actual healthcare reforms
- Explain the difference between private insurance plans and public insurance programs
- Identify the professionals delivering support and proficiency in different facets of the
pharmaceutical and healthcare businesses
- Understand the essential concepts, uses and innovations in biotechnology and health
technologies
- Analyze how the actual status of the healthcare industry can be improved through the use of
data science and analytics
- Investigate the actual industry environment covering personalized and precision medicine
- Examine and improve groundbreaking business models for health tech startups in creating
value-based healthcare systems
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
2
06th July 2023
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
06th July 2023
SESSION 4 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Overview of the Healthcare Industry:
- Basic terminology
- Introduction to healthcare systems: structure and stakeholders
- Public vs private health systems
- Discussion about characteristics of healthcare systems in different countries
- Case studies
4
06th July 2023
- Operations management in healthcare: tradeoffs between costs, patients experience, and
clinical quality
- Operations management in healthcare: pricing of procedures and their margins
5
06th July 2023
Group Presentations Part I
EVALUATION CRITERIA
The final grade of the course will be based on both individual and group work and it will be weighted
in the following way:
- Class Participation 10%
- Case Studies 20%
- Intermediate Quiz 20%
- Final Group Presentation 25%
- Final Exam 25%
Case Studies represent a fundamental learning mechanism and are also crucial for the well-
functioning of the class. The pre-class preparation and in-class participation will make the course
pleasant and intellectually stimulating.
Final Presentation is a group presentation where the students present their proposal for the
creation of a Tech company delivering service to the healthcare industry.
The Intermediate Quiz and Final Exam will comprise both theoretical and applications of the
topics covered during the course.
6
06th July 2023
- Christensen, Clayton M., Jerome H. Grossman M.D., and Jason Hwang M.D..
The Innovator's Prescription: A Disruptive Solution for Health Care. McGraw-Hill.
ISBN 0071592083 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
06th July 2023
MACHINE LEARNING FOR HEALTHCARE
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
MLFH-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 20
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 4.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
The office hours will be carried on online and under demand (email) of the
student.
PREREQUISITES
Machine Learning.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Today rigorous statistical models are applied to problems in medicine and pharmacy. During the
last two decades, advances in Machine Learning have enabled the resolution of complex problems
in the health industry.
In this course we cover real life models used in Health industry, from GLM models for clinical trials,
to ML models for patient clustering or survival analysis.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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- Master the most coomonly used GLM and ML models in health.
- Understand the clinical and diagnostic processes and use GLM+ML tools for their
improvement/resolution.
- Solve real-life practical examples.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
2
12th June 2023
SESSION 9 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Use Case: clinical trials
EVALUATION CRITERIA
3
12th June 2023
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 30 % Practical
Intermediate Tests 30 % Multiple Choice
test
Group Work 30 % Group project
Class Participation 10 % Class Participation
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
4
12th June 2023
MANAGING PROJECTS AND TEAMS IN DATA
SCIENCE
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
MPTDS-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Operations and Business Analytics
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Artificial Intelligence and Big Data are cutting edge technologies that are changing the world we
live. According to the McKinsey Global Survey of the last few years, AI adoption has steadily
increased and a majority of executives report that this technology is generating returns (revenue
increase or cost decrease).
1
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The latest McKinsey report also indicates that there are at least six sets of practices differentiate
high-performing companies from others: strategy, talent and leadership, ways of working,
technology, data and adoption.
This subject covers what managers need to know to develop a business culture to empower
Artificial Intelligence and Data projects. In particular, it will cover what are the important aspects
when developing projects and managing data science teams by analysing the different parts of the
AI process and detailing what are the key aspects to success or to fail in each.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
In this course the student learns to manage, develop and evaluate the performance of teams in
Artificial Intelligence and Big Data.
At the end of the course, students will obtain a solid grasp of the theoretical and
practical application of managing high technical teams. In particular the subject will cover areas
such as:
- Project planning in data science.
- Team goals.
- Managing technical people.
- Managing stakeholders.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
2
13th June 2023
Data scientists are the most known role in the Data Ecosystem but there are many more. It is
important to understand the differences, the interests and the motivitations of each person of the
team.
3
13th June 2023
Meetings with the “client” (professor) to refine the requirements of the Project.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
4
13th June 2023
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
5
13th June 2023
REAL TIME DATA AND AI
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
RTDAI-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
1
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[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
In this course, you will learn about various big data technologies and how they are used to solve
real-world problems at scale. We will start by recaping streaming in Spark and distributed data
processing for Machine Learning and AI with NLP and Large Language Models. Then, we will learn
to development several Machine Learning and AI algorithms in a distributed enviroment and also
deploy those models into Real Time applications. We then explore several use cases of real
time technology in real company like LinkedIn, Netflic and ING Bank.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. Understand how big data technologies are being used in the entertainment industry, with a
focus on Netflix's "Stranger Things" production.
2. Learn about the role of Kafka in real-time data processing and analytics
3. Explore the use of real-time fraud detection system in preventing fraudulent activities.
4. Understand how Anti Money Laundering Revolution helps financial institutions stay compliant
with regulatory requirements.
5. Develop a working knowledge of ChatGPT and large language models, and learn how they
can be used to solve complex problems.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
2
07th June 2023
PROGRAM
3
07th June 2023
ChatGPT - scaling Large Language Models for Real Time use
4
07th June 2023
SESSION 24 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
FINAL EXAM - QUIZ - content of session 14 to 22.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Throughout this course, you will be asked to read material related to the sessions, participate in live
and online discussions, complete individual assignments and labs, and participate in a group
project.
Specifically, grading will be based on the following criteria.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
5
07th June 2023
- Tyler Akidau, Slava Chernyak, Reuven Lax. Streaming Systems. 2018. O'Reilly
Media, Inc.. ISBN 9781491983874 (Digital)
Streaming data is a big deal in big data these days. As more and more
businesses seek to tame the massive unbounded data sets that pervade our world,
streaming systems have finally reached a level of maturity sufficient for mainstream
adoption. With this practical guide, data engineers, data scientists, and developers
will learn how to work with streaming data in a conceptual and platform-agnostic
way.
- Jay Kreps. (2014). I Heart Logs. O'Reilly Media, Inc.. ISBN 9781491909386
(Digital)
Why a book about logs? That’s easy: the humble log is an abstraction that lies at
the heart of many systems, from NoSQL databases to cryptocurrencies. Even
though most engineers don’t think much about them, this short book shows you
why logs are worthy of your attention.
- Piethein Strengholt. (2020). Data Management at Scale. O'Reilly Media, Inc..
ISBN 9781492054788 (Digital)
As data management and integration continue to evolve rapidly, storing all your
data in one place, such as a data warehouse, is no longer scalable. In the very near
future, data will need to be distributed and available for several technological
solutions. With this practical book, you’ll learn how to migrate your enterprise from a
complex and tightly coupled data landscape to a more flexible architecture ready for
the modern world of data consumption.
- Martin Kleppmann. (2017). Designing Data-Intensive Applications. O'Reilly
Media, Inc.. ISBN 9781449373320 (Digital)
Data is at the center of many challenges in system design today. Difficult issues
need to be figured out, such as scalability, consistency, reliability, efficiency, and
maintainability. In addition, we have an overwhelming variety of tools, including
relational databases, NoSQL datastores, stream or batch processors, and message
brokers. What are the right choices for your application? How do you make sense
of all these buzzwords?
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
6
07th June 2023
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
07th June 2023
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
07th June 2023
STREAM PROCESSING
Bachelor in Data and Business Analytics BDBA SEP-2023
SP-DBA.1C.4.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course: FOURTH
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
1
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PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. Understand the place of Streams in the Data Engineering Landscapce, its applications and
key Use Cases
2. Design tradeoffs and key abstraction models for Streaming Data Processing systems
3. Understand message serialisation and most common formats used in industry: CSV, JSON,
Parquet, AVRO
4. Understand probabilistic data structures for data streams and massive datasets
2
06th July 2023
5. Learn messaging paradigms for Stream Data Processing, including RPC, Queues, Message
Brokers
6. Design Data Engineering Pipelines based on data streams, using Windowing Techniques,
Watermarks & Streaming SQL
7. Learn to use tools and frameworks for stream processing, such as Kafka and Spark
Streaming
8. Understand NoSQL technologies and their relevance in stream processing
9. Learn to apply stream processing for machine learning
10. Learn to visualize data streams
11. Provide the basics of modern Design and Architecture of Distributed Systems
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
06th July 2023
SESSION 2 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
STREAMING FUNDAMENTALS
Event Time Domain vs Processing Time Domain. Triggers. Watermarks. Accumulation.
Windowing techniques: Tumbling, Hopping, Sliding, Session. Advanced Windowing.
STREAM PROCESSING
4
06th July 2023
Spark Structured Streaming Lab
Sample Spark Notebooks to demonstrate Spark Structured Streaming Programming model.
MESSAGING
5
06th July 2023
Implement a basic streaming solution using Azure Storage Queues.
6
06th July 2023
Other visualization stacks: Azure and PowerBI, ELK stack, Grafana
Discussion: Best practices for data visualization
7
06th July 2023
Student group will conduct a live presentation and upload accompanying materials to Campus
(code, Notebooks, Slides...).
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Knowledge Quizzes
There will be several in-class quizzes to support ongoing learning and understanding of core
concepts.
Final Exam
At the end of the course you will have to pass an individual exam which may contain questions
about any of the topics covered during this course.
Labs and Individual Practice
During the course I will propose labs and practical exercises to be solved individually
Group Assignment
A Group Project will be developed by teams of 4 to 6 students, who will have to work on a real life
Use Case involving Stream Processing. The team will play the role of a Chief Technology Officer
who puts together the best solution taking into account technical, business and environmental
constraints.
A list of topics will be proposed by the professor, but students are free to propose their own
subjects.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Martin Kleppmann. (2017). Designing Data-Intensive Applications. O'Reilly
Media, Inc.. ISBN 9781449373320 (Digital)
Data is at the center of many challenges in system design today. Difficult issues
need to be figured out, such as scalability, consistency, reliability, efficiency, and
maintainability. In addition, we have an overwhelming variety of tools, including
relational databases, NoSQL datastores, stream or batch processors, and message
brokers. What are the right choices for your application? How do you make sense
8
06th July 2023
of all these buzzwords?
- Tyler Akidau, Slava Chernyak, Reuven Lax. Streaming Systems. 2018. O'Reilly
Media, Inc.. ISBN 9781491983874 (Digital)
Streaming data is a big deal in big data these days. As more and more
businesses seek to tame the massive unbounded data sets that pervade our world,
streaming systems have finally reached a level of maturity sufficient for mainstream
adoption. With this practical guide, data engineers, data scientists, and developers
will learn how to work with streaming data in a conceptual and platform-agnostic
way.
- Emin Tahirovic, Dzejla Medjedovic, Ines Dedovic. (2022). Algorithms and Data
Structures for Massive Datasets. Manning Publications. ISBN 9781617298035
(Digital)
- Joe Reis, Matt Housley. (2022). Fundamentals of Data Engineering. O'Reilly
Media, Inc.. ISBN 9781098108304 (Digital)
- Jay Kreps. (2014). I Heart Logs. O'Reilly Media, Inc.. ISBN 9781491909386
(Digital)
Why a book about logs? That’s easy: the humble log is an abstraction that lies at
the heart of many systems, from NoSQL databases to cryptocurrencies. Even
though most engineers don’t think much about them, this short book shows you
why logs are worthy of your attention.
- Piethein Strengholt. (2020). Data Management at Scale. O'Reilly Media, Inc..
ISBN 9781492054788 (Digital)
As data management and integration continue to evolve rapidly, storing all your
data in one place, such as a data warehouse, is no longer scalable. In the very near
future, data will need to be distributed and available for several technological
solutions. With this practical book, you’ll learn how to migrate your enterprise from a
complex and tightly coupled data landscape to a more flexible architecture ready for
the modern world of data consumption.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
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06th July 2023
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
10
06th July 2023
ADVANCED CODING
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 ACG-
NBA.1C.d.OPT.M.A
Area Information Systems and Technology
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Academic Background
Graduate and Master in Telecommunication Engineer, Universidad
de Valladolid
Graduate and Master in Literary Theory and Comparative
Literature, Universidad de Valladolid.
Master in E.S.O, Bachillerato, Professional training and languages teaching.
Master in Philological studies: professional/business applications.
Academic experience
Bachelor in Business Administration at IE University. Since 2010.
Bachelor in Information Systems and Computer Science. Since 2017.
Currently, Instructor at IBM Global Services on Internetworking and
Information and Telecommunication Technologies. Since 2004.
Courses taught at IBM:
Big Data & Analytics
Mobile & corporate strategy
New technologies in communications
WLAN networks implementation
WLAN security
WiMAX technology
TCP/IP fundamentals
Networks Implementation & administration
IP Telephony (VoIP).
IoT (IBM Cloud)
Professional experience
1
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28th June 2023
Currently. Freelance. Telecommunication and Information
Technologies projects.
Currently. Instructor at IBM Global Services
Engineer in Acoustics. Acoustic municipal centre Hall of Valladolid
Solyven S.L. Solar energy projects.
PREREQUISITES
The only prerequisite for this course is to have passed the course for
Introduction to programming before taking this course.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
In this course you will learn how to use Python's advanced modules to extract
business knowledge from data including:
- Creating and manipulating arrays using the Numpy module
- Bulding dataframe data structures using Pandas
- Crafting visualizations using matplotlib
- GUI interface
- Developing programs using the OOP approach
- Learning about network interactions: APIs, HTTP, Flask
- Looking at searching, sorting and recursion algorithms.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
The course is mainly a practical hands-on course. During the sessions we will mix theoretical
lecturing with practical assignments. The course is designed for you to always have a laptop with
you in class so you can code directly the exercises during the sessions.
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
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28th June 2023
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 13.33 % 20.0 hours
Discussions 16.67 % 25.0 hours
Exercises in class, 30.0 % 45.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 20.0 % 30.0 hours
Individual studying 20.0 % 30.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 150.0 hours
PROGRAM
3
28th June 2023
SESSION 13 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Practice the content from sessions 5 to 12.
4
28th June 2023
In these sessions we will introduce Flask, a Python module that lets you develop web applications
easily thanks to a small and easy-to-extend core.
We will also learn the process of collecting and parsing raw data from the Web. We will also learn
the fundamentals of exchanging information through networks
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Your final grade in the course will be based on exams and the final team work that will be weighted
in the following way:
B. WORKGROUPS
During the course you will work with your group in order to develop a final assignment.
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28th June 2023
C. GROUP FINAL PRESENTATION
In the last session of the course you will need to present and share with your classmates.
6
28th June 2023
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
28th June 2023
ADVANCED CORPORATE FINANCE
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 ACF-
NBA.1C.f.OPT.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Jorge Merladet worked at first in the financial markets as an equity and fixed
income research analyst and then as the head of equity research department of
an investment bank in Spain. As a manager of the firm, Jorge contributed to re-
shape a formerly wealth management firm into a wide scope dealer in cash,
derivative and M&A markets, gaining licences to operate, gaining new clients,
increasing revenues and advising corporates in their IPOs, takeovers and
private equity deals.
From 2001, he became CEO of a privately held company. Jorge led two private
equity rounds and then the successful IPO of his company in 2005. After that,
he has been appointed director at the boards of different companies and
advisor to the board for strategic and finance matters and he has played a
major role in the expansion and in the restructuring of different businesses as
well as in their sale to national and international investors.
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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04th September 2023
In our course, our students have already studied an introductory course to
Corporate Finance and an introductory course to Capital Markets. The already
own the basic instruments: NPV & IRR, Fixed Income basics, Portfolio Theory,
Equity Markets and basic Derivative Markets. Now is time to put them to work
in managing your company.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
From the perspective of the CFO or the CEO we will address their use for:
- Financial analysis and planning.
- Debt Financing and Risk Management.
- Issuing Equities and Valuation.
- Incentives and limits to debt financing and restructuring.
All along the course, we will be connecting finance from the corporate
perspective and the markets, understanding how can the decision maker better
defend the interest of his/her firm.
Towards the end of the course, we expect students to be prepared to solve a
case study and prepare take aways from the course for discussion.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
2
04th September 2023
SESSION 2 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Financial Analysis
BMA Ch28
Book Chapters: Principles of corporate finance, Ch28 (See Bibliography)
RESTRUCTURING
3
04th September 2023
BMA Ch23 & Ch24
CASE STUDIES
DISCUSSION
4
04th September 2023
SESSION 17 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Tax, Financing and Valuation
BMA Ch18 and Ch19
Book Chapters: Principles of corporate finance, Ch18 and Ch19 (See Bibliography)
5
04th September 2023
Student presentations and discussion.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Evaluation will be aligned with the course methodology to encourage collaborative, active and
applied work. Every student will be asked to defend his/her views, and is expected to participate.
Creative solutions will be welcome and we will be glad to consider even the least plausible
alternative.
As the course advances, higher consistency of the proposals is expected, but there is no right or
wrong. Sharing personal views and proposed actions will enrich every one of the participants.
Consequently, each of the students will be working in groups. Group and individual work will be
assessed based on:
- The student performance in two intermediate quizzes
- The discussion of two case studies and the prep work done in groups
- The presentation of take aways for open discussion at the end of the course.
- Individual session prep and Q&A all along the course
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Quizzes 25 %
Reading and 15 %
session
preparation
Group Work 25 %
Take-aways 25 %
Presentation and
Discussion
Class Participation 10 %
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04th September 2023
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Richard A. Brealey, Stewart C. Myers, Franklin Allen, Alex Edmans (BMA).
(2023). Principles of corporate finance. 14th edition. McGraw Hill. ISBN
9781265074159 (Digital)
Only Connect Access through:
https://connect.mheducation.com/class/j-merladet-2023---a
Recommended
- Damodaran, A. (2012. Investment valuation. Wiley. ISBN 9781118206560
(Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
7
04th September 2023
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
04th September 2023
ADVANCED DATA ANALYTICS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 ADA-
NBA.1C.s.OPT.M.A
Area Operations and Business Analytics
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
[email protected]
I encourage all of my students to reach out to me via email with any questions,
concerns, or to discuss course-related matters. I'm here to support your
learning journey and provide guidance outside of class. Please feel free to
contact me, and I'll do my best to respond in a timely manner. I look forward to
hearing from you and fostering an open line of communication throughout the
semester.
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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Forecasting is embedded in all our planning activities from the beginning of our
history. All socioeconomic issues of the day require some level of prediction.
Planning and preparing for the future requires some forecasting because
today's decisions are functions of what we can foresee today. The users of
forecasts are firms, consumers, investors, government, etc. Models, by
construction, are limited representations of the economic and business
environments, but they will help us to take more objective decisions about the
future strategies and not based them only on our experience and intuition.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- The course's main objective is to provide studentswith a working methodology and a solid
knowledgebase for the use of forecasting models and econometric techniques in the areas of
businessand economics.
- Students will learn how to identify and how to use properly one of the most well-known family of
forecasting linear models.
- Additionally, students will learn how to use R, one of the most powerful software used for
economic and financial applications in major companies all around the world, in the context of
time series analysis.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
2
06th September 2023
2. Features of a Time Series
3. Basic notation and the objective of the Forecaster
4. The basic steps in a forecasting task
5. The statistical forecasting perspective
3
06th September 2023
SESSION 5 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
PRACTICAL CASE
The students are going to develop a practical case based on lesson 3 using R Studio Program.
4
06th September 2023
1. The Information Set
2. Some Information Sets Are More Valuable Than Others
3. Some Time Series Are More Forecastable Than Others
4. The Forecast Horizon
5. Forecasting Environments
6. The Loss Function
7. Some Examples of Loss Functions
8. Optimal Forecast: An Introduction
9. A pause where are we and where are we going?
5
06th September 2023
SESSION 15 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
PRACTICAL CASE
The students are going to develop a practical case based on lesson 8 using R Studio Program.
6
06th September 2023
LESSON 11 Forecasting the Long Term: Deterministic and Stochastic Trends
1. Deterministic Trends
2 Trend Shapes
3.Trend Stationarity
4. Optimal Forecast
5.Stochastic Trends
6. Trend Shapes
7. Stationarity Properties
8. Optimal Forecast
7
06th September 2023
LESSON 15 Forecasting Volatility II
1. The ARCH Family
2. ARCH(1)
3. ARCH(p)
4. GARCH(1,1)
5.Estimation Issues for the ARCH Family
6. Realized Volatility
EVALUATION CRITERIA
The assessment system, in the ordinary sitting, will have the following compulsory rubrics:
- – 10% of the student’s final grade: individual assignments (continuous assessment through
tests and practical exercises).
- – 40% of the student’s final grade: group work (theoretical-practical) is to be carried out during
the course in Word and Power point, making use of the corresponding software (R Studio
Program). The groups will be made up of a maximum of 4 students. Students are going to
present the group work: Forecasting data science project
- – 50% of the student’s final grade: two individual theoretical-practical tests will be completed
(without notes) on the specified dates. A minimum average grade of 4 out of 10 must be
obtained in the tests in order to pass the subject. If the minimum grade of 4 is not obtained, a
weighted average including all other assignments will not be calculated, and the final grade of
the subject will be the average grade of the two tests.
- – The assessment system in the extraordinary sitting is the same as that of the ordinary sitting.
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 50 %
Individual Work 10 %
Group Work 40 %
8
06th September 2023
As a result of IE’s ´liquid learning´ model, all students must abide to the attendance policy for AY
2021-22 where physical (in-person) attendance to class is compulsory for all regular Face-to-Face
courses. Those students who, due to exceptional cases (that have been pre-approved by IE), are
connecting remotely to class sessions and not physically in the classroom are required to fully
connect their camera and microphone at all times , and must actively participate during the
sessions (using all necessary audiovisual equipment), just as their fellow peers who are physically
present in the classroom on campus.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Rob J, Hyndman, George Athanasopoulos. Forecasting: Principles and Practice.
2. Text. ISBN 978098750711 (Digital)
https://otexts.com/fpp2/buy-a-print-or-downloadable-version.html
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06th September 2023
- Gloria González-Rivera. (2012). Forecasting for Economics and Business. 1. The
Pearson Series in Economics. ISBN 0131474936 (Digital)
Recommended
- Tsay, R. (2013). An Introduction to Analysis of Financial Data with R. 1. Wiley.
ISBN 0470890819 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
10
06th September 2023
AGILE METHODOLOGIES: RUNNING BUSINESS
INNOVATION
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 AMRBI-
NBA.1C.s.OPT.M.A
Area Design and Management
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Senior digital business executive & entrepreneur. Investor, advisor and director.
Innovation | Transformation | Digital | Optimist.
Marcos has worked in the digital arena since 1999, in the Internet, telco, mobile
devices, apps, software, Internet of Things, media and broadcast, videogames,
esports, social media and content, gamification, elearning, crisis
communication, education, events and consulting verticals, among others.
He has played international leading roles in innovation, digital transformation,
product/services design, development and standardisation. He has also got
leading responsibilities in corporate and business development and project
management.
He is a serial entrepreneur, investor, mentor, advisor and director in multiple
ventures. He is a cofounder and head of revenue of vidiv, online platform for
mass events, and MAD Lions esports club (acquired by the Canadian
OverActive Media group). Also, a co-founder and president of Barbara IoT, a
deep tech company with a focus on IoT and cybersecurity. Further, founder of
the Innovation as a Service resultancy firm BinaryKnowledge_, and cofounder
of IdeaFoster, innovation agency acquired by the Peruvian company Canvia.
Marcos is a member of the Spanish Institute of Directors-Administrators (IC-A).
He has worked in international organizations, being a member of the board of
the Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) on behalf of the Telefónica Group, a member
of the Spanish Association of Telecommunications Engineers (COIT-AEIT) and
a representative member before the Spanish Engineering Institute (IIE). In
addition, he has been a member of the committee and vice-president of the
Spanish Red Cross in Madrid, a member of the advisory board of the IMAN
Foundation or a member of the Internet of Things Council.
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He is an independent consultant and evaluator of FP7 and Horizon2020 calls of
the European Commission.
As an educator and speaker, he is an adjunct professor at IE Business School,
Headspring (joint-venture with Financial Times that delivers in-company
programs) and other institutions. Furthermore, he has also extensively
collaborated in hackathons, incubation and acceleration programs of many
organizations.
He holds an MSc. in Telecommunication Engineering and an Executive MBA.
He is a candidate PhD and Project Management Professional certified. Marcos
received a Torres Quevedo grant as a researcher by the Ministry of Innovation
and Science of Spain from 2010 to 2012. And he was awarded with Telefónica
I+D Prize for Innovation in 1999 and recognized for excellence as professor
and mentor at IE Business School and University several times.
PREREQUISITES
Before this course, you must have attained fundamental basic knowledge of
business, innovation, and management principles.
Ideally, you should have gained practical experience in a business setting.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The primary goal of this course is to assist you in acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary to
excel both as an adept, efficient individual professional and as a valuable team member capable of
overseeing intricate activities and projects.
Throughout this journey, you will have the opportunity to:
- Discover how to enhance your productivity.
- Comprehend the significance of mental models and organizational culture in managing
activities and projects and overcoming obstacles.
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31th August 2023
- Recognize the importance of agility, lean principles, and customer-centricity.
- Explore various innovation strategies.
- Gain insights into viewpoints, methodologies, and tools that foster the realization of projects
and innovation.
- Identify how Artificial Intelligence impacts the practice and how to integrate it effectively.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
The course follows a collaborative co-creation approach, with students responsible for preparing
and defending relevant topics individually and in teams. It focuses on essential aspects such as
business, organizational culture, performance, and productivity.
The course offers a balanced learning experience combining individual study, teamwork, lectures,
presentations, debates, and practical assignments.
Sessions are designed for engagement and collaboration, with a practical and conversational focus.
They are supported by the introduction of fundamental theoretical concepts, the application of tools
and methodologies, reviewing outcomes, and the inclusion of real cases for open discussion.
Don't hesitate to ask if you have any doubts. Taking responsibility for your learning is essential, so
make the most of it. If you have questions about the course, please first refer to the syllabus,
announcements, and introductory session instructions. Submit your questions to the appropriate
threads on the Online Campus so that everyone can benefit from the answers. Please refrain from
sending questions via email.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities, such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
31th August 2023
- Welcome talent and know about their objectives, interests, skills and mindset.
Get ready for the session:
- Read the syllabus.
- Watch: Start with why - how great leaders inspire action | Simon Sinek | TEDxPugetSound.
https://youtu.be/u4ZoJKF_VuA
- Watch: Guy Kawasaki "The Art of the Start" @ TiECon 2006. https://youtu.be/jSlwuafyUUo
- Prepare your questions.
- During the session:
Introduce the course.
- Review the syllabus.
- Create the groups.
- Open discussion.
- Q&A.
After the session:
- Start working on the preparation of your corresponding Team topic.
Assignment:
- Team topic. Deliver it by your corresponding session. Graded as Team topic.
Multimedia Material: Start with why - how great leaders inspire action | Simon Sinek |
TEDxPugetSound (YouTube)
Multimedia Material: Guy Kawasaki "The Art of the Start" @ TiECon 2006 (YouTube)
4
31th August 2023
- Frame and distil basic concepts about work systems.
- Establish a common ground of understanding and basis for the rest of the course.
Get ready for the session:
- -.
During the session:
- Discuss the meaning and differences between idea, invention and innovation; company and
organisation; system, model, methodology, technique and tool; objective, strategy, process,
tactic and result; effectiveness, efficacy and efficiency; feasibility and viability; program, project,
plan task and project management; productivity; mental model, skill and competence; metric
and KPI; value, behaviour and habit; decision, implementation, and execution…
- Waterfall vs. agile approaches. Innovation; agile and lean vs. traditional.
- Analyse the concept of innovation, its types and challenges.
- Open discussion.
- Q&A.
After the session:
- -.
Assignment:
- -.
5
31th August 2023
SESSION 5 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
HOW TO INNOVATE: INNOVATION FOCUS AND EXECUTION STRATEGY
Objectives:
- Understand the importance of focused and agile innovation and how to make it happen; the
Lean Innovation Map.
- Know and understand different types of innovation execution strategies.
Get ready for the session:
- -.
During the session:
- Introduction to the Lean Innovation Map.
- Review of different innovation execution strategies: exploration, contracting, cooperation,
intrapreneurship, entrepreneurship, corporate venturing, etc.
- Open discussion.
- Q&A.
After the session:
- -.
Assignment:
- -.
6
31th August 2023
Objectives:
- Introduce the Customer Experience and Customer Centricity concepts.
- Know and understand Design Thinking. Tools for idea generation, evaluation, validation and
prioritisation.
Get ready for the session:
- Watch: IDEO: Shopping Cart Design Process. https://youtu.be/izjhx17NuSE
During the session:
- Analyse the meaning and impact of the Customer Experience and Customer Centricity.
- Introduction to Design Thinking.
- Open discussion.
- Q&A.
After the session:
- Start working on the Design Thinking Project.
Assignment:
- Design Thinking Project. Deliver it before SESSION 13. DESIGN THINKING PROJECT PITCH.
Graded as Design Thinking Project.
Multimedia Material: IDEO: Shopping Cart Design Process (YouTube)
7
31th August 2023
- -.
During the session:
- Introduction to OKRs.
- How to apply OKRs to personal productivity.
- Alternative methodologies.
- Open discussion.
- Q&A.
After the session:
- Continue working on your Personal Productivity Plan, including your personal OKRs.
Assignment:
- -.
8
31th August 2023
- Alternative methodologies.
- Open discussion.
- Q&A.
After the session:
- -.
Assignment:
- -.
9
31th August 2023
SESSION 14 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
INTEGRATING RESULTS AND CLOSING THE LOOP
Objectives:
- Analyse the outcome of the program's previous sessions, contributions and conversations to
extract value and create a perspective.
Get ready for the session:
- Check the content of the previous sessions, contributions and conversations and elaborate
your initial standpoint for the open discussion.
- Get ready to discuss and contribute.
During the session:
- Review of sessions, contributions, conversations, ideas and conclusions.
- Open discussion.
- Q&A.
After the session:
- Review the outcome of the session and get ready for the final exam.
- Finish your Personal Productivity Plan.
Assignments:
- -.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Your performance will be assessed based on your results, the processes you follow, and your
active participation and contribution to the learning process of the entire group.
During sessions, the professor will provide feedback on your ideas, projects, assignments, and
progress. It aims to help you improve and progress. You should not resubmit modified versions for
review once they are graded.
By participating in the course, all students implicitly consent to the use of their contributions and
projects for educational purposes. All materials will be considered to be licensed under Creative
Commons BY-NC-SA (Attribution – Non-Commercial – Share Alike). Refer to
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode for further information.
Assignments will be available in advance on the Online Campus, complete with instructions and
additional references. You are responsible for ensuring that you check for available assignments
and submit them correctly for grading.
FINAL EXAM
It will comprise a test with 20 multiple-choice questions and two short essays (maximum 500 words
each).
PERSONAL PRODUCTIVITY PLAN
This assignment is divided into two parts. Firstly, authors will assess their productivity performance.
Following that, a guided process will aid in enhancing their focus and habits. Participants are
expected to complete this process, utilizing additional tools and ideas acquired during the course.
PARTICIPATION AND CONTRIBUTION
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31th August 2023
Your active participation in both live sessions and on the Online Campus will be evaluated and
graded. Attending alone will not earn you participation points.
To receive a positive grade, actively engage by sharing your views, doubts, concerns, thoughts,
findings, conclusions, results, learnings, and experiences. Three main criteria will be used to
evaluate your participation: Frequency, Depth, and Quality of contributions. Valuable comments are
those that contribute meaningfully to the class's progress. Remember, participation is an ongoing
effort, not a one-time occurrence. We encourage you to be open, communicative, and proactive.
On the Online Campus, written participation should be concise and to the point. When referencing
online information or material, always cite the source and provide the link—avoid copying content.
Moreover, you will have the opportunity to earn points by contributing to the sessions by preparing
small topics that have been agreed upon in advance with the professor.
Towards the conclusion of the course, it is essential to summarize and list all your individual
contributions, sharing them with the professor for proper identification and grading.
TEAM TOPIC
Participants will be divided into teams, and each team will be assigned a specific topic to prepare
and present during one of the sessions.
Furthermore, the teams are accountable for defending their assigned topic and linking it to other
relevant discussions and themes throughout the entire course.
Towards the conclusion of the course, it is essential to summarize and list all your team
contributions, sharing them with the professor for proper identification and grading.
DESIGN THINKING PROJECT
This team assignment revolves around product innovation, utilizing the Design Thinking
methodology and tools to cater to a specific customer segment. Subsequently, teams will be
required to present their outcomes through a pitch.
PEER EVALUATION
Each participant within the teams will evaluate their team members based on three key aspects:
- Teamwork spirit, and interaction.
- Workload assumed and contribution to the team's work.
- Quality of the work and strategic thinking.
Detailed instructions for conducting these evaluations will be provided at the end of the course.
Your final grade will be determined by combining individual and group work, each with its specific
characteristics, weighted as follows:
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31th August 2023
Team topic 20 % Responsibility:
Team. Evaluated
by:
Professor/Class
Participation and 20 % Responsibility:
contribution Individual.
Evaluated by:
Professor
12
31th August 2023
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
13
31th August 2023
BANKING & FINANCIAL MARKETS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 BFM-
NBA.1C.f.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Academic Background
- Master in Economy and Finance, CEMFI (Centro Estudios Monetarios y Financieros, Central
Bank of Spain), Madrid, 1991-1993
- MSC in Industrial Engineering, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Madrid, 1985-1991
Academic Experience
- Author of the Book: Financial Markets and its Mathematics, Ariel (2004) and Delta (2012)
- Coauthor of the Book: Derivatives Instruments for Corporates, Delta (2013)
- Professor of Financial Markets, Asset Management, Derivatives… in Universidad Politecnica,
Options&Futures Institute, IEB, Universidad Carlos III, Spain 1997-2012
- Adjunct Professor of Global Markets and International Financial Markets in IE, 2021-2023
- Associate Professor in Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Spain, 2022
Corporate Experience
- Financial Consultant and member of some Boards and Advisory Boards. Professor, Spain,
2020-2023
- Head of Global Markets BBVA USA, USA, 2012-2020
- Chairman of BBVA Securities INC, USA, 2014-2020
- Head of BBVA Global Asset Management Business, Spain-LATAM, 2008-2012
- Head of BBVA Global Equities, Spain-Americas-LATAM, 1997-2008
- Equity Portfolio Manager Santander Investment, Spain, 1994-1997
The professor will make himself available one hour after each of the sessions
to provide feedback and respond doubts.
1
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PREREQUISITES
An introductory or basic course of Finance that allows for the use of such
concepts as: Present Value, Risk Measures (standard deviation and variance),
calculations of a stock return, basic knowledge of stocks and bonds, etc.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This course delivers an introduction to the banking sector and the financial
markets. Regarding the banking sector, students will learn about its structure
and functions, as well as its role in the economy. With reference to financial
markets, topics will include the revision of various financial instruments (bonds,
stocks, derivatives, among others), interest rates, money supply, inflation,
monetary policy, international finance and exchange rates. We will also cover
the main portfolio management concepts and will work with portfolio
construction models.
The course consists of a total of 25 sessions, with 20 in-person sessions with a
duration of 1hr and 20 minutes, and 5 asynchronous sessions. Asynchronous
sessions will have associated studying material and an assignment that should
be turned in due date.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Study the importance of financial markets, financial institutions & banking, money & monetary
policy and international finance & exchange rates.
- Analyze the different types of financial institutions, including banks, insurance companies,
pension funds, and mutual funds.
- Study the structure and function of financial markets.
- Discuss the meaning and function of money, including as a medium of exchange, a unit of
account, and store of value.
- Understand the concepts of present value, nominal rates and real interest rates.
- Define the factors that determine interest rates.
- Understand the concept of the risk structure of interest rates, and the factors that affect it.
- Analyze the different types of financial instruments available in the markets: bonds, stocks,
derivatives, commodities, among others.
- Revise the main components and analysis of the financial structure of a company: equity vs
debt.
- Understand the concept of securitization, and what tranching means.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
2
13th July 2023
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
13th July 2023
SESSION 4 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
A first revision of Money
Objectives: Discuss the meaning and function of money, including as a medium of exchange, a unit
of account, and store of value. Describe the payment system and analyze its evolution. Understand
how to measure the money supply.
Book Chapters: “The economics of money, banking and financial markets” - Chapter 3: What is
Money? (See Bibliography)
4
13th July 2023
Objectives: Analyze the yield curve and its forecasting power. Understand the relationship of the
slope of the yield curve and the business cycle.
Book Chapters: “Investments” - Chapter 15: The Term Structure of Interest Rates (See Bibliography)
SESSION 10 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Financial Structure of a company: equity vs debt
Objectives: Revise the main components and analysis of the financial structure of a company.
Understand valuing multiple cash flows & discounted cash flow methods (DCF). Review concepts
such as: Payback period, IRR, Profitability Index.
Book Chapters: “Investments” - Chapter 19: Financial Statement Analysis (See Bibliography)
SESSION 14 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
International Financial markets
Objectives: Revise the financial markets, risk factors and the benefits from diversification of
international markets.
Book Chapters: “Investments” - Chapter 25: International Diversification (See Bibliography)
Book Chapters: “The economics of money, banking and financial markets” - Chapter 18: The
Foreign Exchange Market (See Bibliography)
5
13th July 2023
SESSION 15 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Derivatives I
Objectives: Understand option contracts, trading and type of options. Analyze the value of options
at expiration. Revise option-like securities such as callable bonds, convertible securities and
warrants.
Book Chapters: “Investments” - Chapter 20: Options Markets Introduction (See Bibliography)
SESSION 19 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Sustainable Finance
Objectives: Review Green bonds, ESG investment and climate risk products.
Reading material provided in class.
6
13th July 2023
Book Chapters: “Investments” - Chapter 6: Capital Allocation to Risky Assets & Chapter 7 (7.1, 7.2 &
7.3) Efficient Diversification (See Bibliography)
SESSION 24 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Special topics (Passive vs Active Management, and Behavioral Finance)
Objectives: Compare the performance and structure of ETFs vs Investment Funds. Revise how
behavioral finance differs from the efficient markets theory approach, showing how concepts such
as overconfidence, mental accounting, loss aversion and anchoring can affect investment
decisions.
Book Chapters: “Investments” - Chapter 11 (11.1 to 11.4): Efficient Market Hypothesis & Chapter 12
(12.1): Behavioral Finance and Technical Analysis (See Bibliography)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
7
13th July 2023
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Frederic S. Mishkin and Apostolos Serlitis. (2021). The economics of money,
banking and financial markets. 1st edition. Pearson. ISBN 978129240948 (Printed)
- Zvi Bodie; Alex Kane; Alan J. Marcus. Investments. McGraw-Hill Education. ISBN
9781260571158 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
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13th July 2023
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
9
13th July 2023
BASIC EXCEL FOR MANAGEMENT
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 BEFM-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Operations and Business Analytics
Number of sessions: 20
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 4.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
ACADEMIC BACKGROUND
- Executive MBA, Business Administration and Management, IE Business School, Spain.
- Master in Computer Science and Statistics, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.
- Computer Science Degree, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.
CORPORATE EXPERIENCE
- Director of Credit Rating, Big Data and Business Analytics, Bravo Capital, Madrid, 2015 –
Present.
- Head of R&D for Risk Analytics Area, Santander Bank Headquarters Spain, Madrid, 2012 –
2015.
- R&D Risk Analytics Area Manager, Santander Bank United Kingdom, Milton Keynes, 2008 –
2012.
- Credit Risk Modelling Manager, Santander Bank Brazil, Sao Paulo, 2007 – 2008.
- Credit Risk Supervisor, ibi bank (C&A group), Sao Paulo, 2006 – 2007.
- Credit Card Risk analyst, Citibank Brazil, Sao Paulo, 2003 – 2005.
[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
For all the sessions it is mandatory to use a laptop or mac computer with
Microsoft EXCEL (version for Microsoft 365 also OK).
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
1
Edited by Documentation
25th August 2023
Microsoft EXCEL is a very powerful tool that allows to manage and analyze big
amounts of different types of data. The results can be summarized dynamically
by means of PivotTables, and presented through many kinds of charts. It has
become a standard worldwide for all kind of the areas in every organization and
it is regularly used by professionals and managers in most of the business
processes.
EXCEL is probably the most used tool in the companies to manage, analyze
and exchange data. However, many users only take advantage of a small part
of its capabilities, loosing options to increase their performance.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
2
25th August 2023
Developing provisional financial statements: P&L and Balance Sheet. Solve circular references,
project into the future
Practical Case : Steel & Coal Corp. (IST010028-U-ENG-WOD)
3
25th August 2023
SESSION 14 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Individual Test 2 (QUIZ FOR GRADING) content from sessions 7 to 13.
Analyzing the situation of the Human Resources of a company with some basic data analysis.
Practical Case : Arnaiz Manufactures (IST010027-U-ENG-WOD)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
4
25th August 2023
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- John Walkenbach. Excel 2016 Bible. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781119067510
(Printed)
- Sarah Jones. EXCEL FUNCTIONS AND FORMULAS: Shortcuts, Formulas and
Functions for Business Modeling and Financial. Amazon Kindle. ISBN 1087119235
(Digital)
- Tim Hill. Excel 2016 for Windows Pivot Tables. CreateSpace. ISBN 1515010732
(Printed)
- Tim Hill. Excel 2016 for Mac Pivot Tables. CreateSpace. ISBN 1515114422
(Printed)
- Jeff Hutchinson. Excel 365 - Formulas, Charts And PivotTables. LearnLogic.
ISBN 1660221943 (Printed)
5
25th August 2023
- Cole Nussbaumer Knaflic. Storytelling with Data. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN
9781119002253 (Printed)
- Dona M. Wong. The Wall Street Journal Guide to Information Graphics. W.W.
Norton &Co.. ISBN 9780393347289 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
6
25th August 2023
BREAKING INTO BUSINESS CASE COMPETITIONS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 BIBCC-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Strategy
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
1
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PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Provide you with the tools and the structure to make the most out of the case competition
experience…
- …and beyond the case competition!
VERY IMPORTANT NOTICE: completing this course will be a mandatory
prerequisite to be entitled to attend any case competition as an IE
University team member, so if interested... THIS IS YOUR
OPPORTUNITY!!!
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
- Multidisciplinary approach
- Insights from all the core business disciplines (holistic view)
- Hands-on approach: contents and frameworks… in action!
- Teamwork will be king: always in teams… but not always the same teams!
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 29.33 % 22.0 hours
Discussions 21.33 % 16.0 hours
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10th July 2023
Exercises in class, 0.0 % 0.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 49.33 % 37.0 hours
Individual studying 0.0 % 0.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 75.0 hours
PROGRAM
SESSION 13 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Final Group Presentations - Preparation
EVALUATION CRITERIA
- Your final grade in the course will be based on both individual and group work of different
characteristics that will be weighted in the following way:
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Group 50 %
Presentation
Individual Work 50 %
3
10th July 2023
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
4
10th July 2023
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
5
10th July 2023
BUILDING AN ONLINE BUSINESS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 BAOB-
NBA.1C.d.OPT.M.A
Area Information Systems and Technology
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
This is a hands-on course and the level of effort required is high. You don't
need to have previous knowledge of digital strategy, e-commerce technology or
digital marketing tools, but make sure you feel comfortable around technology
tools and concepts because you will use many at a medium level.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
1
Edited by Documentation
02th August 2023
Building an Online Business is a hands-on course that takes you through the
process of researching, ideating, defining, building, launching and promoting an
online e-commerce business, and understand the integral part of measurement
in online businesses. We will discuss multiple online business model types, but
the focus of the course will be executing the creation of an online e-commerce
store. Every student will get his/her own hosting space and will create his/her
own store by the end of the course.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
This is not a course for the faint of heart. You don’t need previous experience on digital strategy,
e-commerce or content management systems but need to be comfortable around new technology
tools, because we will use many and in depth. And a lot of the work will have to be completed
outside of class. The purpose of the course is to provide real experiences and put yourself in the
shoes of a real digital e-commerce manager.
This is a hands-on course, aside from covering the theoretical and aspects of online business
models we also experience the whole process with our own personal project.
A key objective is to understand the four pillars of operational efficiency in Digital Strategy.
- Planning: and all the tools involved in the planning process, workflow definition, knowledge
and content management, crisis protocols, etc.
- Research/Monitoring/Listening: millions of sources and potentially dozens of platforms in a
way that makes the information manageable and actionable and helps us find our niche market.
- Distributing, engaging and managing relationships: finding and putting into place the best
ways to distribute the company's message looking for maximum return and automation at the
same time, as well as creating long lasting relationships with influential or relevant users
through conversations.
- Analyzing the effects of our efforts focusing on KPIs that are actionable and allow us to
determine in real or near-real time if course correction is needed.
The skills developed are:
- The students will create their own e-commerce website and will sell real products using
dropshipping, they will create real ads on Google and Facebook and create the social media
presence for their online stores. Along the way we will cover all the basic elements of a digital
marketing strategy definition and implementation.
- To develop a working framework that allows the students to translate the most strategic
aspects of a Digital Strategy plan to the day to day operations in the fields of E-commerce,
Research, Analytics and Social Media management, the group assignment will be an
application of the framework to a real world company.
- Gain insights into what are the right technology tools to interact with those platforms,
and how to implement the different tools in a way that fits with the company's strategy and
culture and the defined target groups.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
2
02th August 2023
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
02th August 2023
We will look at specific tools for trends research, keyword research, content research, audience
research, platform research, etc.
HANDS-ON: WORDPRESS, RESEARCH EXERCISE
(Additional readings will be provided ahead of the session)
Practical Case: AccorHotels and the Digital Transformation: Enriching Experiences through Content
Strategies along the Customer Journey (HBS IN1251-PDF-ENG)
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02th August 2023
campaign.
- Choose the best social media platform(s) for a variety of social media efforts.
- Determine the measures needed to assess the results of a social media campaign.
- Describe best practices for performing social media marketing on Facebook, TikTok, Twitter,
Pinterest, YouTube, LinkedIn, Instagram, and Snapchat.
HANDS-ON: FACEBOOK PAGE SETUP AND FINISHING E-COMMERCE WEBSITES
(Additional readings will be provided ahead of the session)
5
02th August 2023
With all the information from the multiple analytics sources, the final step in the whole process is
developing a measurement plan that is both comprehensive, that assists in the decision making
process and lends itself to optimization and iteration. We will discuss all these aspects in the final
face to face session.
HANDS-ON WITH GOOGLE ANALYTICS
(Additional readings will be provided ahead of the session)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
6
02th August 2023
methodology and adequate research. We will not judge results but in SEM results are generally
a measure of a well executed campaign. The same applies to Social Media ads, but in that
case we will also evaluate a more creative aspect. (30%)
Group assignment will be valued on the basis of:
- Quality of the assessment to a real world company (report): the level of insight offered to the
“client” (50%)
- Quality of the presentation (20%).
- Consistency between research and analysis and the subsequent strategy proposed. (30%)
- Participation is graded on a scale from 0 (lowest) through 4 (highest), using the criteria below. I
expect the average level of participation to satisfy the criteria for a “3”, which would correspond
to 12.0 - 13.5.
0.- Absent.
1.- Grade 12 - 13.9: Present, not disruptive / Tries to respond when called on but does not
offer much / Demonstrates very infrequent involvement in discussion.
2.- Grade 14.0 - 15.9: Demonstrates adequate preparation: knows basic reading facts, but
does not show evidence of trying to interpret or analyze them / Offers straightforward
information (e.g., straight from the reading), without elaboration or very infrequently (perhaps
once a class) / Does not offer to contribute to discussion, but contributes to a moderate degree
when called on / Demonstrates sporadic involvement.
3.- Grade 16.0 - 17.9: Demonstrates good preparation: knows reading facts well, has thought
through implications of them / Offers interpretations and analysis of reading material (more
than just facts) to class / Contributes well to discussion in an ongoing way: responds to other
students' points, thinks through own points, questions others in a constructive way, offers and
supports suggestions that may be counter to the majority opinion / Demonstrates consistent
ongoing involvement.
4.- Grade 18.0 - 20.0: Demonstrates excellent preparation: has analyzed readings
exceptionally well, relating it to other material (e.g., other readings, course material,
discussions, experiences, etc.) / Offers analysis, synthesis, and evaluation of class material,
e.g., puts together pieces of the discussion to develop new approaches that take the class
further / Contributes in a very significant way to ongoing discussion: keeps analysis focused,
responds very thoughtfully to other students' comments, contributes to cooperative argument-
building, suggests alternative ways of approaching material and helps class analyze which
approaches are appropriate, etc. / Demonstrates ongoing very active involvement.
7
02th August 2023
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave
the Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your
failed subjects.
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
8
02th August 2023
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
9
02th August 2023
BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE AND ANALYTICS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 BIA-
NBA.1C.p.OPT.M.A
Area Information Systems and Technology
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
1
Edited by Documentation
25th August 2023
Business analytics is the use of information technologies for analyzing data to help managers make
better decisions about their business and how they serve customers. The innovative use of
business analytics technologies forms a powerful basis for competitive advantage in today’s
economy. The purpose of this course is to explain how data-driven business analytics technologies,
such as data mining, artificial intelligence and machine learning can help in many important
business applications. This course begins by covering these topics at a basic, fundamental level for
those who have little or no experience with these technologies. This course builds on this
foundation to provide a comprehensive exploration of a variety of data analytics techniques.
The course will be divided into 3 main blocks:
- Data mining Process, mapping business problems to machine learning problems. Data
Requirements and Visualization.
- Models training and Models Evaluations.
- Other Data mining problems and techniques.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Understand and learn about various exploratory and predictive techniques, such as classification
and regression trees, clustering, nearest neighbor approaches, association rule mining, neural
networks, etc. Learn how the above business analytics techniques are applied in a variety of
business applications and organizational settings. Understand the process of introducing data
analytics technologies into the business environment.
All of this includes:
- Building the case for business analytics technologies.
- Collecting relevant data and visualizing different types of data.
- Learning different techniques and tools for business data analytics.
- Using R for data mining and analysis.
- Applying data analytics techniques to various business problems.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
2
25th August 2023
PROGRAM
SESSION 7 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Complete the interactive case.
Technical note & tutorials: Machine Learning (IST020075-U-ENG-HTM)
3
25th August 2023
SESSION 8 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Fitting models to data: Classification I
- Classification Tree
- Ensemble Method: Random Forest, Bagging
Book Chapters: Data mining for business analytics : concepts, techniques, and applications in R
(Chapter 9 & 13) (See Bibliography)
SESSION 11 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Lab: Classification II
- Linear models and K-nearest Neighbours in R
4
25th August 2023
SESSION 15 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Continue with session 14
SESSION 17 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Lab: Model Fit & Evaluation 2
- Practice different Evaluation Methods in R
SESSION 21 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Lab: Neural Network
- Practice Neural Network Problems in R.
5
25th August 2023
Quiz 2
SESSION 25 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Group Project Feedback Session
SESSION 28 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Complete the interactive case
Technical note & tutorials: Big Data (IST020061-U-ENG-HTM)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
6
25th August 2023
Intermediate Tests 20 % 2 quizzes
distributed during
the course
Individual Work 10 % lab exercises
completion
Workgroups 30 %
Class Participation 10 % Class attendance
7
25th August 2023
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Galit Shmueli, Peter C. Bruce, Inbal Yahav, Nitin R. Patel, Kenneth C.
Lichtendahl Jr. (2017). Data mining for business analytics : concepts, techniques,
and applications in R. Wiley. ISBN 9781118879368 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
25th August 2023
BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE FOR STARTUPS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 BISS-
NBA.1C.e.OPT.M.A
Area Entrepreneurship
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
1
Edited by Documentation
22th June 2023
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The main objective of the class is to highlight the role of business intelligence along all steps of a
product’s creation, from the birth of an idea, to the creation of a concept quantified by Key
Performance Indicators (KPIs), to the selection of the correct measurement tools, to testing and
analysing the data, to launching the product and reporting on and improving its performance. The
class also covers such challenges as witnessing and reacting to long-term bad trends. Skills that
students should have acquired by the end of the course include:
- Understanding of the most common BI metrics.
- Determining KPIs for a startup.
- Selecting the appropriate measurement tools based on a startup’s needs.
- Choosing the most important events to be measured.
- Identification and creation of streamlined funnels.
- Knowledge of A/B testing.
- Understanding of common BI reports and tests.
- Recognizing the utility of gamification in a product.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
2
22th June 2023
TOTAL 100.0 % 150.0 hours
PROGRAM
3
22th June 2023
Introduction to KPIs, AARRR, and the Lean Canvas.
Assignment to be done prior to class:
Other / Complementary Documentation: Capture Your Business Model in 20 Minutes – Lean Canvas
(Youtube)
Article: Product Marketing for Pirates: AARRR! (aka Startup Metrics for Internet Marketing & Product
Management) (View powerpoint deck on startup metrics) (Master of 500 Hats)
4
22th June 2023
Lifetime value, Cost of acquisition, and Cohort analysis, continued.
Assignment to be done prior to class:
Article: Cohort Analysis – Measuring Engagement Over Time (52 Weeks of UX)
Article: 3 Rules to Actionable Metrics in a Lean Startup (teamlewis.com)
5
22th June 2023
Article: Is Gamification Overhyped? Customer Relationship Management (18 Customer Relationship
Management, February 2013) (CED)
Article: Gamification: Toward a Definition (CHI 2011, May 7–12, 2011) (CED)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Your final grade in the course will be based on both individual and group work of different
characteristics that will be weighted in the following way:
6
22th June 2023
Final Exam 16 %
Group assessment 6 %
of student
participation
7
22th June 2023
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Maurya, Ash. (2012). Running Lean: Iterate from Plan A to a Plan That Works. 2.
O’Reilly Media. ISBN 9781449305178 (Printed)
- Ries, Eric. (2017). The Lean Startup: How Today's Entrepreneurs Use
Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful. RabbitGuides. ISBN
9780307887894 (Printed)
ADDTIONAL MATERIALS
- 3 Differences Between Testing Android and iOS Devices
8
22th June 2023
- How Long Does It Take to Publish Your App?
- Web Analytics vs. Mobile Analytics: What’s the Difference?
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
9
22th June 2023
BUSINESS INTELIGENCE
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 BI-
NBA.1C.d.OPT.M.A
Area Information Systems and Technology
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
A basic understanding of mathematics and statistics, e.g., how to calculate a mean value, what is a
p-value, etc, and a basic understanding of software programming concepts, e.g., data types, data
frame, variables, libraries, debugger, will be useful for this course.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
1
Edited by Documentation
16th June 2023
Business analytics is the use of information technologies for analyzing data to help managers make
better decisions about their business and how they serve customers. The innovative use of
business analytics technologies forms a powerful basis for competitive advantage in today’s
economy. The purpose of this course is to explain how data-driven business analytics technologies,
such as data mining, artificial intelligence and machine learning can help in many important
business applications. This course begins by covering these topics at a basic, fundamental level for
those who have little or no experience with these technologies. This course builds on this
foundation to provide a comprehensive exploration of a variety of data analytics techniques.
The course will be divided into 3 main blocks:
- Data mining Process, mapping business problems to machine learning problems. Data
Requirements and Visualization.
- Models training and Models Evaluations.
- Other Data mining problems and techniques.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Understand and learn about various exploratory and predictive techniques, such as classification
and regression trees, clustering, nearest neighbor approaches, association rule mining, neural
networks, etc. Learn how the above business analytics techniques are applied in a variety of
business applications and organizational settings. Understand the process of introducing data
analytics technologies into the business environment.
All of this includes:
- Building the case for business analytics technologies.
- Collecting relevant data and visualizing different types of data.
- Learning different techniques and tools for business data analytics.
- Using R for data mining and analysis.
- Applying data analytics techniques to various business problems.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
2
16th June 2023
- Introduction to the course
- Prediction & Causality
- Data Mining Process
- Types of Machine Learning problems & some applications
Book Chapters: Data mining for business analytics : concepts, techniques, and applications in R
(Chapter 1 & 2) (See Bibliography)
SESSION 7 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Complete the interactive case.
Technical note & tutorials: Machine Learning (IST020075-U-ENG-HTM)
3
16th June 2023
(Chapter 9 & 13) (See Bibliography)
SESSION 11 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Lab: Classification II
- Linear models and K-nearest Neighbours in R
4
16th June 2023
Lab: Model Fit & Evaluation 1
- Apply Evaluation Methods in R
SESSION 17 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Lab: Model Fit & Evaluation 2
- Practice different Evaluation Methods in R
SESSION 21 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Lab: Neural Network
- Practice Neural Network Problems in R.
5
16th June 2023
- Association Rules algorithm and its application
Book Chapters: Data mining for business analytics : concepts, techniques, and applications in R
(Chapter 14) (See Bibliography)
SESSION 25 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Group Project Feedback Session
SESSION 28 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Complete the interactive case
Technical note & tutorials: Big Data (IST020061-U-ENG-HTM)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
6
16th June 2023
Class Participation 10 % Class attendance
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
7
16th June 2023
- Galit Shmueli, Peter C. Bruce, Inbal Yahav, Nitin R. Patel, Kenneth C.
Lichtendahl Jr. (2017). Data mining for business analytics : concepts, techniques,
and applications in R. Wiley. ISBN 9781118879368 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
16th June 2023
CHANGE MANAGEMENT
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 CHM-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Human Resources and Organisational Behaviour
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Professor Cabanas has taught at IE Business School since 1990, and has
been a visiting research at Insead and the University of Georgetown. She
regularly collaborates with leading media agents in Spain, and publishes each
year the study of The State of Internal Communication in Spain. Furthermore
she created the first elective on career management at IE Business School and
she is responsible for designing the school’s leadership skills development
workshops.
She belives that learning should be experiential and participant centered and
seeks to motivate, inspire and instills a sense of ownership in the students for
their learning process.
Professor Cabanas has worked with international markets across Asia, Europe
and the Americas in roles spanning the areas of: Program Design and
Development; Change and Innovation Management; Facilitation, Coaching and
Teaching; Program Management and Delivery; International Business
Development; Talent Acquisition, Global Recruitment and Admissions;
and Strategic Partnerships and Projects.
She holds a PhD from IE University, an MBA from IE Business School and a
Law Degree from Universidad Complutense. Professor Cabanas teaches in the
BBA, IMBA, EMBA and Executive programmes at IE Business School.
She is a member of the board of a multinational communication consultancy
company.
She has been for more than ten years the head of the academic department
of Organizational Behavior, Human Capital Management and Leadership at IE
Business School and she is the academic director of the Transformation with
Purpose Fellowship.
Since september 2023 she is the Associate Dean for full-time faculty at Ie
University.
1
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21th August 2023
Professor Cabanas is a regular speaker at various international events and
conferences, as well as guest lecturer, facilitator and trainer in international
organizations.
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
What is the main challenge companies are dealing with? What is critical to
succeed today? What going to boost or dump your professional career? Your
ability to successfully deal with and manage CHANGE.
The objective of the course is to prepare you to effectively deal with Change
and make it happen. Change starts at a personal level: You need to know
yourself and reshape your thinking patterns.Then you will need to get People,
Teams and Organizations on board. And finally you will need to skillfully
implement the Change that has been envisioned. During the course, students
will acquire an understanding of change management best practices and their
role in it as leaders or participants; gain experience applying best practice in a
no-risk environment; and be ready to use this knowledge and skills to support
current and future change at organizations. Students will work in teams in order
to develop a common language for understanding change; share individual
experiences within and between teams; identify areas where group process
development is required; move forward with action plans; etc. The content and
practical work during the course will help students learn how to improve
operational efficiencies; apply new strategies successfully; better meet
organizational needs; adapt to changing market conditions faster; and stand
out in an age of scarcity and increasing uncertainty.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
2
21th August 2023
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 13.33 % 10.0 hours
Discussions 20.0 % 15.0 hours
Exercises in class, 26.67 % 20.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 26.67 % 20.0 hours
Individual studying 13.33 % 10.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 75.0 hours
PROGRAM
SESSION 4 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
3
21th August 2023
Change Management in practice: Case Analysis and Discussion
Article: Leading Change: Why Transformation Efforts Fail (HBS R0701J-PDF-ENG) (Optional)
The enclosed Technical Note ("Leading Change: Why Transformation Efforts Fail ") is an optional
reading for this course.
SESSION 11 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Change Management Theory
Change Management Framework & Models
SESSION 13 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Change Management in practice: Case Analysis and Discussion
The Google case: class discussion
4
21th August 2023
EVALUATION CRITERIA
5
21th August 2023
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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21th August 2023
COMPETITION POLICY
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 COPO-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Tax Law and Economic Regulation
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
None
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SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
This course aims to provide students with sufficient skills to adequately analyse
commercial practices and agreements taking into account the different rules
that govern market competition. Students will also gain knowledge on the
relevant competition aspects of corporate transactions (mergers and
acquisitions) and public financing (State aid) which may have a big impact on
how a given transaction is finally envisaged.
The course will cover all legal and economic aspects of competition policy and
it will be mostly focused on real case studies which help the students to
understand how competition policy may affect the companies' behaviour in the
market. Therefore, the course will improve the students' ability to detect
potential competition concerns before making business decisions and to know
how to address such concerns.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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26th June 2023
SESSION 1 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Introduction to competition policy: Areas of competition policy. Competition Economics and you:
Impact of competition policy in business decisions. Underlying theories and general concepts:
Market power.
SESSION 6 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Market definition: relevant product market and relevant geographic market. Competitive
constraints: demand substitution, supply substitution and potential competition. Evidence relied on
to define relevant markets.
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Horizontal cooperation agreements: concept, actual vs. potential competition, basic rules,
block and individual exemptions and underlying economic issues. Specific categories of horizontal
agreements.
Case studies to be discussed in class.
Working Paper: Commission Regulation (EU) No 1218/2010 of 14 December 2010 on the
application of Article (Official Journal of the European Union)
Working Paper: Guidelines on horizontal cooperation agreements (Official Journal of the European
Union)
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26th June 2023
SESSION 14 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Claims for damages arising from infringements of competition law: Methods to quantify
damages
Working Paper: Quantifying harm in actions for damages (European Comission)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Final grades will be based on a combination of class participation (20%), two case studies
(40%) and the final exam (40%).
The final exam will be open book, meaning that students can consult legislation and books or any
notes they may have taken in class.
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26th June 2023
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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26th June 2023
CORPORATE ENTREPRENEURSHIP &
INNOVATION
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 COEIn-
NBA.1C.e.OPT.M.A
Area Entrepreneurship
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Connector, passionate about breaking limits through exponential technologies, driver of positive
change. Experienced professional in Innovation, Operations and Change Management within an
international environment. She has developed her knowledge working for leading organizations
such as Zara, Danone and L’Oréal.
She is innovation coach helping organizations such as Visa, Boston Scientific, HP,
Banco Santander, Boston Scientific ...to grow through corporate entrepreneurship.
She is mother of 4. Her motto: "To learn, share and amplify the skills, tools and technologies
to make happen a better future"
- Harvard Kenedy School - Leadership Program
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Sloan School of Management -
Innovation,bentrepreneurship and leadership Program.
- Executive MBA, IE Business School (Lidera for Women scholarship).
- Major in Eco-industries, Ecole Nationale Superieure des Mines, France.
- Major in Engineering, Universidad Politecnica, Madrid.
Academic Experience
- She teaches at IE University at IE Business School.
- She mentors young entrepreneurs and startup founders at Area31 and Acció innovation hubs.
- Contributor to the development of the book “Exponential Transformation: The Exo
Sprint Playbook to Evolve Your Organization to Navigate Industry Disruption and Change the
World for the Better”
Corporate experience
- Innovation Coach and Corporate entrepreneurship Mentor (Board and C-Level)
- New Operations at Zara.com at Inditex headquarters, Arteixo, Spain.
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- Operations Director, Danone, baby food headquarters, Amsterdam, Netherlands. - SC Unit
- Manager, L’Oréal, Luxury goods factory, Madrid, Spain.
- LAF Manager, L’Oréal, luxury goods headquarters, Paris, France.
- Production Manager, L’Oréal, mass market factory, Paris, France..
- Consultant, Paris, France.
E-mail: [email protected]
Whatsapp: +34666860757
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
The signs and impacts of new technology disruptions are speeding up.
Disruptive technologies and innovation are changing the way we live work and
relate to one another.
New studies show how 21st century crises (COVID-19, Geopolitical conflicts…)
have pushed companies and institutions over the technology tipping point and
transformed business, and our life, forever.
Such disruption and challenges may open numerous new opportunities around
the several future scenarios in front of us. Entrepreneurs are known by their
agility to react, they are currently developing new ideas and creating new
goods and services to solve arising new problems.
But what happen with legacy business? How can corporations implement a
process to develop new businesses, products and services inside their existing
organizations and create value to generate new revenue growth through
entrepreneurial thought and action?
Many companies are, today, struggling to make their corporate
entrepreneurship vision a reality.
What is corporate entrepreneurship? Entrepreneurship inside of established
organizations. All companies want organic growth, but few organizations have
a process in place to support innovation and sustain growth over an uncertain
time. In this elective course we will dive into the process to make corporate
entrepreneurship possible and we will develop corporate entrepreneurship
initiatives to thrive.
We will follow a Sprint approach as the most innovative companies are doing
today.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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- To get a better professional and personal awareness of the disruption impacting every industry.
"Technological and corporate entrepreneurship affinity"
- To gain a new, transformative mind-set based on the winning methodology adopted by the
most innovative organizations (Companies with 10x Impact). Learning from their transformative
models. HOW do they operate 10 times better, faster and more cost-effectively?
- To practice this transformative model, implementing and ensuring 10 times more
impactful corporate entrepreneur initiatives. "Learning by doing"
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
- Block 0: INTRODUCTION, AWAKE and INDUSTRY SELECTION (S1, S2, S3, S4, S5, S6 )
- Block 1: EXPLORE (S7, S8, S9, S10, S11)
- Block 2: IDEATE (S12, S13, S14)
- Block 3: SHARE (S15, S16, S17)
- Block 4: SCALE (S18, S19, S20)
- Block 5: SHARE II (S21, S22, S23, S24, S25, S26)
- Block 6: DISRUPT and LEARN (S27, S28, S29, S30)
DETAILED PROGRAM
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23th June 2023
You will receive an explanation of the Syllabus. We will define how we are going to work and outline
the available resources:
- Scope. In this 1st Session class groups will be discussed. The class will be split into
groups/teams and students will have autonomy to choose, with their group, the Industry
(corporation) you are passionate about and would therefore like to focus on and positively
transform.
- Each team will have a team leader to represent the group and assure weekly assignments are
advancing on schedule. This role may rotate weekly.
- Each team has a dedicated virtual space set up on Drive and whatsapp. This virtual team
space creates a foundation for working autonomously, productively and collaboratively per
group.
- Each week, the team leader will fill a survey with his/her feedback about weekly advancement.
- Each week, the team will have a team restrospectve.
S2 – AWAKE
It is time to awake and realize how fast things are changing around you, at a pace never seen
before. Exponential technologies generate abundance in everything and traditional business
models based on scarcity are becoming obsolete, urging companies to evolve through corporate
entrepreneurship, if they want to participate in the new upcoming world. By following this session,
you will be able to better understand the past, present and future of exponential technologies and
their potential for the future of humanity. You will be able to understand the difference between
linear vs. exponential thinking and what your organization can do to adapt to the rapidly changing
world of today.
Format: Double Session (S1-S2), with a mix of theoretical concepts and hands-on exercises to
generate teamwork, discussion and learning.
THIS SESSION IS KEY FOR STUDENTS TO CHOOSE THEIR COURSE´S SCOPE AND
PERSONALIZED PATH: HOW THEY ARE GOING TO LEARN AND PRACTICE (GROUP,
INDUSTRY)
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23th June 2023
According to Moore´s Law, the performance of anything powered by information technologies
double, on average, every 2 years. Technologies evolves in a n exponential way. However, our
brain works in a linear way, and it can be difficult for humans to grasp exponentials. In this session
we will work the key point about exponential technologies: understanding the implications they can
have in any industry or organization. The result is often impossible to predict, but we might have at
least the right MINDSET these implications.
In this session, each student draws 5 "cards" and reflects on how these exponential technologies
can represent an opportunity/risk for your Industry and/or successful corporation.
From those 5, they choose the two that they consider most relevant, and they place the cards in the
center of the group.
The team discusses the cards presented and chooses the 4 that they think will have the most
impact on the industry and/or successful corporation.
Each team analysis will be presented and discussed at the end of this double Session.
Format: Double Session (S5-S6), with a mix of theoretical concepts and hands-on exercises to
generate teamwork, discussion and learning.
SESSION 9 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Block 1 - "EXPLORE" Assignment DELIVERY
Each team will share with the professor the learning insights for Block 1 assignment. "EXPLORE
the world around you":
- Learn about exponential technologies
- Find about new business models
- Find about new trends
- And they will receive feedback.
Format - Asynchronous Session.
Each team will deliver weekly assignment trough a maximun 10 min recording.
This recording must include:
- Weekly insights,
- Navigation through most important parts of the weekly assignment and tasks,
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23th June 2023
The objective of this double session is to start working together with a creative mind, to keep the
team moving forward, to discuss departure challenges, and encourage communication.
Format: Double Session (S10-S11), with a mix of theoretical concepts and hands-on exercises to
generate teamwork, discussion and learning.
SESSION 14 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Block 2 - "IDEATE" Assignment DELIVERY
Each team will share with the professor the learning insights for Block 2 assignment. "IDEATE"
- Define a Multiple Transformative Purpose (MTP)
- Define Problem/Solution pairs below this MTP And they will receive feedback.
Format - Asynchronous Session.
Each team will deliver weekly assignment trough a maximun 10 min recording. This recording must
include:
- Weekly insights
- Navigation through most important parts of the weekly assignment Templates
SESSION 17 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
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23th June 2023
Block 3 - "SHARE I" Assignment DELIVERY
Each team will share with the professor the learning insights for BLOCK 3 assignment "SHARE I"
Apply Design thinking into your initiatives:
- Convert your idea into a Prototype
- Build a discussion guide
- Interact with potential customers
- Receive feedback.
Format - Asynchronous Session.
Each team will deliver weekly assignment trough a maximun 10 min recording. This recording must
include:
- Weekly insights
- Navigation through most important parts of the weekly assignment and templates
SESSION 20 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Block 4 - "SCALE" Assignment DELIVERY
Each team will share with the professor the learning insights for BLOCK 4 assignment "SCALE"
- Define and or select 1 or 2 ideas
- Define your Exo Canvas
- Define your Business Model
- Identify your key questions o answer
- Receive feedback.
Each team will deliver weekly assignment trough a maximun 10 min recording. This recording must
include:
- Weekly insights
- Navigation through most important parts of the weekly assignment Templates
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23th June 2023
- Run tests to validate/invalidate or refine hypothesis
- Apply the mum test principles
- Implement Learning
- Leap of faith Assumptions: CRUX
At the end of S122 the teams will receive Block 4 - Assignment “Define your experiment” - SHARE
II
Format: Double Session (S21, S22), with a mix of theoretical concepts and a lot of practice,
discussion and learning.
SESSION 23 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Block 5 - DELIVERY
Each team will share with the professor the learning insights for Block 5 assignment. Define your
experiment - SHARE II
- Apply feedback received
- Create your Value Proposition Canvas
- Define your experiments
Each team will deliver weekly assignment trough a maximun 10 min recording.
This recording must include:
- Weekly insights
- Navigation through most important parts of the weekly assignment Templates
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23th June 2023
Conect with your purpose driven ecosytem (experts, startups, corporates...) and of course your
customer.
Format: Double Session (S24, S25), with a mix of theoretical concepts and a lot of practice,
discussion and learning.
SESSION 26 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Block 5 - 2nd DELIVERY
Each team will share with the professor the learning insights for Block 5 assignment. Define your
experiment and connect with your Purpodse driven Ecosystem - SHARE II
How? Trough a maximun 10 min recording.
This recording must include:
- Weekly insights
- Navigation through most important parts of the weekly assignment Templates
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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23th June 2023
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Intermediate Tests 30 %
Group weekly 20 %
work
Final PITCH 25 %
Class Participation 25 %
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23th June 2023
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Salim Ismail. Exponential Organizations: Why new Organizations are Ten Times
better, faster and cheaper than yours. ISBN 0884320896389 (Printed)
- Peter Diamandis. Abundance: The future is betters than you think. free press.
ISBN 9781451616842 (Printed)
- Eric Ries.. The Lean startup. Viking. ISBN 0307887898 (Printed)
- Alex Ostewalder. Business model generation: A handbook for visionaries, game
changers.. Yves Pigneur. ISBN 9780470876411 (Printed)
- Steve Blanck.. The startup owner’s manual: the step by step Guide for building a
great company. Wiley. ISBN 9780984999309 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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23th June 2023
CORPORATE STRATEGY & TRANSFORMATION
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 CST-
NBA.1C.s.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Jose Antonio Martinez’s professional life has always been spinning around
strategy; as a business consultant, he has helped top executives from different
industries and competitive landscapes to turn their companies into high
performance businesses. And throughout these years, his experience has led
him to a logical, but not always so evident, conclusion: “STRATEGY is not
about complex theories or frameworks; it’s something we all use more often
than we think, in so many aspects of life, although we may not be aware of it.
It’s about bringing order out of chaos, it’s about collecting all that mess of ideas,
facts and pieces of knowledge, and providing them with a structure and
sequence which let us decide WHERE WE WANT TO REACH and HOW WE
WANT TO DO IT”.
Jose Antonio enjoys teaching and considers that a Master Program provides
the perfect environment to open up high value discussions and exciting
opportunities to share knowledge as well as create new one. “In the classroom,
the discussion goes back and forth between theory and practice. The students
learn from the professor and from each other, but at the same time, the
professor can deduct new theories by the help of students: from their individual
experiences, their reactions to the theories, and from their ideas and insights.
Our job as management scholars is to understand and explain the business
world, to create knowledge that improves productivity and efficiency in the
business world, and spread this knowledge back to the business world”.
Academic Background
Bachelor’s Degree in Business Administration, University of Deusto, Spain
Executive MBA, IE Business School
Teaching and Academic Experience
Adjunct Professor of Strategy Department, IE Business School
Adjunct Professor of Strategic Management, University of Deusto
Coaching and training in leading Spanish and multinational corporations
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[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
During the course students will be exposed to the analysis of complex management situations that
require a multidisciplinary approach from the perspective of top management.
Through the discussion of cases and related readings, the course focuses on corporate strategy
analysis and how to build corporate advantage in our global economy. The main theories, models
and tools within the field of strategy will be covered with a strong emphasis on its application to real
settings. We will use the tools that help top management analyse the business environment,
formulate strategies and make decisions at the corporate strategy level.
Our goal is to develop a winning strategy and to build a successful organization. This is a tough job.
So let us begin with the most obvious fact: every organization is different. From this simple fact we
can derive something quite useful for us as strategists: different firms in the same industry will have
different strategies. Now let us ask why.
A key reason is that the management teams evaluate differently the competitive environment and
hence decide on different strategies. Yet success does not depend solely on selecting a winning
strategy: the achievement of results depends as well on the effectiveness of management. We
must ask ourselves why one firm builds a strong, adaptive organization capable of creating and
responding to competitive strategy, while a second firm patches together an organization that
stumbles from initiative to initiative.
To sum up, the course, which develops along five main blocks, aims at helping students:
1. To root the analysis of businesses in frameworks that will ease the identification of their key
features. Students should be able to determine whether a business is attractive or not.
2. To conceive business strategies that may be applied to real life business. Students should be
able to justify the merits of different strategic initiatives using the same kind of arguments that
a manager would use.
3. To understand the sources of corporate advantage or disadvantage of a particular business.
Students should be able to propose initiatives aimed at strengthening or developing resources
and capabilities.
4. To understand when collaboration initiatives with other firms for specific projects can be
convenient or dangerous for a company. Students should be able to implement strategic
decisions, such as mergers, acquisitions and divestitures.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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06th July 2023
This course focuses on corporate strategy analysis and how to build a
corporate advantage. In this course we will examine the main theoretical
frameworks and analytical tools that help top management to analyze,
formulate strategies and make decisions at the corporate level. We will study
the main decisions that define where the firm competes (e.g., diversification,
vertical integration and internationalization) as well as decisions regarding the
modes of entry (e.g., M&A and alliances).
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
PART 1 - INTRODUCTION
PART 2 - DIVERSIFICATION
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06th July 2023
SESSION 3 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Diversification
Technical note: Strategies of Related Diversification (HBS 705481-PDF-ENG)
Technical note: Strategies of Unrelated Diversification (HBS 705480-PDF-ENG)
SESSION 8 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Diversification - Group Report
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06th July 2023
ENG)
SESSION 15 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
International Strategy - Group Report
SESSION 16 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
International Strategy - Group Report
5
06th July 2023
Solving the Growth Dilemma: When To Buy
Practical Case: The Walt Disney Company and Pixar, Inc.: To Acquire or Not to Acquire? (HBS
709462-PDF-ENG)
SESSION 27 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Implementation Plan - Final Group Report
SESSION 28 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Implementation Plan - Final Group Report
SESSION 30 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Final Exam
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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06th July 2023
A. CLASS PARTICIPATION
Before each session, the students are expected to read the materials and the case assigned for the
day; the readings are compulsory and they will be part of your evaluations. Participation is a critical
element in this course; to participate effectively, it is necessary to have read carefully and formed a
sound opinion about the main issues raised in the case and reading materials.
Three main criteria will be used in reaching judgment about your class participation:
- Depth and Quality of Contribution: The most important dimension of participation concerns
what it is that you are saying. A high quality comment reveals depth of insight, rigorous use of
case evidence, consistency of argument, and realism.
- Moving Your Peers’ Understanding Forward: Great ideas can be lost through poor
presentation. A high quality presentation of ideas must consider the relevance and timing of
comments, and the flow and content of the ensuing class discussion. It demands comments
that are concise and clear, and that are conveyed with a spirit of involvement in the discussion
at hand.
- Frequency: Frequency refers to the attainment of a threshold quantity of contributions that is
sufficient for making a reliable assessment of comment quality. The logic is simple: if
contributions are too few, one cannot reliably assess the quality of your remarks. However,
once threshold quantity has been achieved, simply increasing the number of times you talk
does not automatically improve your evaluation. Beyond the threshold, it is the quality of your
comments that must improve. In particular, one must be especially careful that in claiming more
than a fair share of “airtime”, quality is not sacrificed for quantity. Finally, your attempts at
participation should not be such that the instructor has to “go looking for you”. You should be
attempting to get into the debate on a regular basis.
Expect cold calling. If you are not comfortable speaking in class for personal or cultural reasons, it
is your responsibility to discuss this with the professor privately at the very beginning of the course
(first week of class). You should be prepared for every session.
B. GROUP ASSIGNMENTS
Each group is expected to complete a final project and present it in class and hand-in in a written
form. The project will give you the opportunity to reflect on what you have learnt in class and apply
it to some practical problems. More details of the project will be provided by the start of the course.
Furthermore, there will be additional group work throughout the course including a business
strategy simulation and further exercises that will be part of the group assignments grade.
C. FINAL EXAM
The exam will comprise essay questions and semi-structured questions to understand your level of
study, including the use of tools and frameworks taught in class, as well as your personal
elaboration and critical thinking on the topics under discussion.
A minimum score of 40% (40 points) will be required in this exam in order to pass the course,
regardless of performance in other assessment components.
More information on the evaluation criteria will be provided during our first session.
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06th July 2023
Group 30 %
Assignments
Other 0%
Group 0%
Presentation
Class Participation 20 %
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06th July 2023
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- L. Capron, W. Mitchell. Build, Borrow, or Buy: Solving the Growth Dilemma.
Harvard Business Review Press. ISBN 1422143716 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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06th July 2023
CREATIVE MANAGEMENT AND CONTENT
STRATEGY
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 CMCS-
NBA.1C.m.OPT.M.B
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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Brian has over 20 years of experience as a professor, trainer, and coach. He
has been an Adjunct Professor at IE University for almost 10 years teaching in
the Masters in Visual & Digital Media and the International MBA Program. He
has travelled to over 40 countries delivering Master Classes both in person and
online to over 50,000 participants on subjects such as Storytelling, Branded
Content, Brands Virality, and Curiosity & Innovation in Time of Crisis.
Website: http//:www.brianhallett.com
Website: http//:www.thebig.es
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brianhalletteyes/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-hallett-2b141630/
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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30th June 2023
From this reality sprung an entirely new genre of communication referred to as
Branded Content. It has its origins in early advertising models but has really
only come into its own with the shift to online digital marketing and the
prevalent use of social networks for consuming, viewing and sharing content.
This course is aimed at providing students with an immersion into the world of
advertising and content creation. The main objective is to develop the basic,
primary skills and understanding of a creative project manager and content
producer, capable of end-to-end creative management in the world of
Commercial Advertising, Branded Content and Brand Storytelling.
Advertising
In spite of the changing landscape in advertising and brand communication,
traditional advertising remains the predominant method of communicating with
customers. Television, radio, print and outdoor advertising remain to this day
the primary method of reaching potential clients in spite of the growing
presence of online and digital media channels. Traditional advertising is the
oldest form of brand communication and thus has been honed over hundreds
of years. The advances and changes in the last century, particularly over the
last 40 years, have shown a shift from typical commerce style advertising to
more brand focused ads which communicate through emotions, values, and
lifestyle. This tradition has allowed a blended environment where traditional
advertising, combined with new advances in Branded Content, create a potent
mixture of channels capable of reaching out to audiences in incredibly effective
ways.
Branded Content
Different changes in several areas - market, consumer, media ecosystem, as
well as sociocultural and economic ones - produced and/or accelerated by the
so called Digital Revolution, have both led to a profound evolution of the
marketing paradigm and leveraged consumers to an unprecedented level of
empowerment, transforming the way they relate with brands. This new
marketing paradigm, together with new media consumption habits, implies a
new way of communicating with consumers, in which traditional tools lose both
effectiveness and efficiency, ushering in new ones based on audiences’
freedom to access and consume content. This new way of communicating is
the essence of Branded Content, a marketing communication technique in
which brands become creators, producers and distributors of content, relevant
to their respective audiences, in a new model based on the pursuit of
engagement, on audiences’ choice of access and on a non-interruption/pull
approach.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
The course uses Experiential Education Techniques that combine active learning opportunities
followed by hands-on experiences and finally, extensive feedback and review processes.
Students will execute Individual Projects as well as Group Projects in which they will be responsible
for the development and execution of "real-life" exercises and production of campaigns.
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Through games, activities, projects, production shoots, presentations and discussions students will
develop their ability to conceptualize, pitch, produce and commission commercial image-making
projects. A special emphasis will be placed on verbal communication of images as well as
storytelling in commercial image-making.
PROGRAM
Part II:
Class Title: Advertising today: the context of the turbulent and disruptive world of push and
pull
Learning Objectives:
- To understand the context of the turbulent and disruptive world of Advertising today.
- To explore the diversity of strategy and tactics in commercial advertising
- To examine a selection of images in terms of the stories they tell
Session Activities:
Lecture and discussion:
- History of Advertising
- Traditional Communications
- Branded Content
- Enter Branded Content
- The current reality of advertising, communications and branding
- The Changing Structure of the Advertising World New work paradigms, new types of teams
- The Advertising Funnel vs the Branded Content Funnel
- How does Advertising work?
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- Anxiety advertising vs aspirational content
- Creating Brand Identity through Story, Look and Feel: examining both print and adfilms
- Examine images created by some of the most creative and expressive brands in the world.
How do images convey Brand Personality?
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30th June 2023
To understand the visual elements used in image-making
To discover how visual language lends to storytelling
To examine how combining elements and techniques creates voice and style
ACTIVITIES:
Presentation and Class Discussion of concepts:
What is storytelling?
Why do you humans tell stories?
Developing intentions to use image-making to investigate the world, interpret subject matter and
formulate concepts
Understanding the Language of Image-making as applied to advertising
Creating Brand style and voice
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Class title: Developing and Presenting the Creative Pitch
Learning Objectives:
To experience the presentation of a Creative Pitch which wins clients and projects
Activities:
Students groups present their Creative Pitches for an Advertising Campaign
The professor and the other students will provide questions and feedback on the Creative Pitch
presentation and deck
Examples
Activity: students will create a viral campaign concept based upon the learnings in class.
Materials included in the syllabus
Book Chapters: Excerpts from Berger, J: Contagious: Why Things Catch on
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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ORIGINAL MATERIAL: Unless otherwise stated by the professor, all material produced for this
class by the students must be original material and must be produced for this class and during the
period of this class. Any material that is submitted from previous work, whether it was made by the
students or by others, will be considered "non-original" work and may result in the student receiving
a "0" on the assignment and/or an incomplete or failing grade in the class.
MILESTONES
EVALUATION OF INDIVIDUAL PARTICIPATION AND ATTENDANCE:
Attendance will be graded according to the sign-in sheets provided at the beginning of each
session.
An absence will be counted as a "zero" for that particular class. Consideration for the reasons for
the absence will be taken into account on a case by case basis. An "excused absence" will only be
granted under special circumstances and supporting documentation may be required. Right of
refusal for the excuse of an absence is at the sole discretion of the professor.
Online forums and discussion groups will take place and participation in these forums will also
count towards the participation grade.
BRAND AMBASSADOR CREATIVE PITCH: Using the techniques discussed around the Creative
Pitch and the Creative Pitch process, students will present a pitch to develop a brand ambassador
program for a particular brand.
BRAND AMBASSADOR PROJECT: During a one week period students will participate in a live and
in real time online activity in which they will represent a Brand Ambassador Program as if they were
Ambassadors of the Brand. They will be responsable for all of the content creation and posts
including the use of self-produced videos, photos, GIFs, infographics and other audiovisual
materials.
ADVERTISING CREATIVE PITCH: Student groups will present a Branded Content Creative pitch
for a video based branded content series.
ADVERTISING FINAL PROJECTS: Students will execute the video based project proposed in their
Creative Pitches and then present those projects to the entire class.
INDIVIDUAL PROJECTS
Throughout the course, Individual Projects will be assigned which permit the students to develop
their skills and aptitudes in brand analysis, branded content campaign creation, and production of
photography, video and other content. Students will be required to execute projects and turn in the
final work for review. The Individual Projects will be progressively more challenging and require
students to understand and execute turnkey audiovisual projetcs which require students to create
original and unique campaigns, utilize a variety of different types of composition, lighting styles,
understand different types of lighting, conceive, as well as to shoot and edit video in a creative way
that tells a story.
Students will be required to execute the projects in a timely manner. Please keep in mind that many
exercises require the use of professional or semi-professional equipment including lighting and
camera gear. Those students who do not possess their own equipment may coordinate with the IE
Media Lab to reserve and check out equipment as per the assignments. Failure to acquire the
necessary equipment will not be considered as an excuse not to complete the assignment. In many
cases, students check out equipment in groups even for the individual assignments and then share
the equipment amongst themselves.
GROUP PROJECTS:
Throughout the course, Group Projects will be assigned which require students to work in a group
to conceptualize, produce and execute projects. Group projects, unlike Individual Projects, permit
students to collaborate and learn from each other, increasing the overall level of all the students.
The same rules regarding reserving and checking out equipment apply to Individual Projects as well
as Group Projects.
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Branded Content 15 %
Creative Pitch
Branded Content 30 %
Project
Advertising Pitch 15 %
Advertising Project 25 %
Class Participation 15 %
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
BEHAVIOUR IN CLASS:
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1. Be on time: Students arriving after roll call has been taken will be marked as
“Absent”.
Only students that notify in advance in writing that they will be late for a specific
session may be granted an exception (at the discretion of the professor).
2. Do not leave the room during the session. If a student leaves the room
during lectures, he/she will not be allowed to re-enter and, therefore, will be
marked as “Absent”. Students who need to use the restroom may do so during
the break, not in the middle of the class session. Exceptions will be made for
students with special needs. Only students that notify that they have a special
reason to leave the session early will be granted an exception (at the discretion
of the professor).
3. Do not engage in side conversation. As a sign of respect toward the person
presenting the lecture (the teacher as well as fellow students), side
conversations are not allowed. If you have a question, raise your hand and ask
it. It you do not want to ask it during the lecture, feel free to approach your
teacher after class.
If a student is disrupting the flow of the session, he/she will be asked to leave
the classroom and, consequently, will be marked as “Absent”.
4. Use of laptops, cellphones, tablets and other technology is strictly prohibited
except when it is for course-related purposes. The use of laptops during the
sessions must be authorized by the professor. The use of Social Media or
accessing any type of content not related to the session is penalized. The
student will be asked to leave the room and, consequently, will be marked as
“Absent”.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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30th June 2023
CUSTOMER CENTRICITY FOR GROWTH
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 CCG-
NBA.1C.p.OPT.M.A
Area Marketing and Communication
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Consumer insights professional unlocking the power of insights and data to help companies
understand their customers and influence their strategies accordingly at a Global level.
Working in the Market Research and Insights industry since 2014.
Proffesional Experience:
- From 2014: Working at Europanel, one of the leading market research agencies globally.
JointVenture between GFK and Kantar, part of the WPP group.
- From 2018: Consumer Insights Director in the Business Intelligence and Knowledge & Insights
division of the Coca Cola Global Account, acting on market and competitive data to extract key
trends and identify emerging business opportunities or risks to support sales growth, customer
retention and asset productivity. Working with brands such as Coca-Cola, Fanta, Sprite,
Innocent, Monster, Costa Coffee, Vitamin Water...
- From 2014: Worked for the Unilever Global account, in the Personal Care division building
category & brand awareness for Dove, Axe, Rexona, Sunsilk... to identify key influencers to
market performance. Worked in the Refreshments division with brands such as Ben&Jerrys,
Magnum, Wall´s...
Educational Background:
- 2012-2013: Masters in International Management at IE Business School, with a specialization
in International Business
- 2009-2012: Bachelor’s degree in Market Analysis and Research at San Pablo CEU University.
- 2006-2009: Bachelor’s degree in Business Studies at San Pablo CEU University.
[email protected]
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PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
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Individual studying 33.33 % 50.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 150.0 hours
PROGRAM
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- Quantitative research
- Tracking Buyer Behavior
- Influencing Customer Behavior
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SESSION 13 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Using Customer Centricity to Tune Retention and Development Tactics
- How firms develop their customers
- Retention and development
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A highly interactive experience that teaches participants how to make data-driven decisions to
maximize customer lifetime value. Participants play the role of a CMO tasked with making real-
world tactical and strategic decisions about customer acquisition, retention, and development. Their
key objective is to increase corporate market valuation by maximizing customer value. Participants
will work on teams of 4-6 people
Multimedia Material: Customer Centricity Simulation (2023, The Wharton School, The University of
Pennsylvania.)
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28th June 2023
- The Los Angeles Dodgers Case: A home run for customer centricity
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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28th June 2023
Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit evaluation for
the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the attendance rule, and
therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must directly re-enroll in
the course during the next Academic Year).
It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a
retaker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4)
allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Peter Fader. Customer Centricity: Focus on the Right Customers for Strategic
Advantage. ISBN 9781613631027 (Digital)
- Peter Fader and Sarah Toms. The Customer Centricity Playbook. ISBN
9781613630907 (Digital)
- David Loshin Abie Reifer. Using Information to Develop a Culture of Customer
Centricity. ISBN 9780124105430 (Digital)
- Bruce Hardie, Michael Ross, Peter Fader. The Customer-Base Audit. ISBN
9781613631607 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
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28th June 2023
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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28th June 2023
CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE AND INNOVATION
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 CEI-
NBA.1C.m.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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Sandra is Associated Professor for the IE Business School, apart from
developing programs of Marketing, Innovation & sustainability for various
multinationals and institutions. She is a usual speaker in many innovation and
business forums, like BNEW Barcelona or Club of Rome.
Sandra is Lic&MBA by ESADE. She did also the superior program of
Communication and Management from IE or the Building of Talent Program of
Lausanne, amongst many other.
Sandra is married and has two children.
PREREQUISITES
n/a
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Nowadays it is key not only to give a good customer service, but to provide with
the best customer experience, ensuring the customer is at the centre.
Customer experience is clearly linked to competitive advantadge and
innovation, which allows companies to reinforce customer loyalty and transform
clients in real ambassadors. To make this happen, the company needs to
satisfy properly the expectations of their target ensuring that interactions are
transformed in differential moments and attributes to its products/services/
innovation.
At the same time, The leading firms are known by having innovation built into
their DNA. Thus, the innovation is listed as a necessary strategy to grow
according to most of the annual reports of Fortune 100 companies. However,
the term Innovation is often used incorrectly and few companies are able to
carry out successful innovation and success rate is extremely low.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Vision the strategic role of Customer experience and Innovation in the company
- Give the necessary tools to analyze the existing relation model with the customers
- Design new relational models with clients that deliver positive and successful customer
experiences
- Get to know emotional marketing tools
- Being able to apply the planning and execution process of Product Innovation in the company
- Understand and being able to adequately integrate the role that creativity plays in innovation
processes in the company
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
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12th July 2023
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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12th July 2023
ENG)
SESSION 16 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Innovation meaning and importance. Innovation type.
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SESSION 19 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
IDEO PRACTICAL CASE study in group: Product innovation process
Practical Case: IDEO Product Development (HBS 600143-PDF-ENG)
SESSION 23 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Service Innovation.Business Model Innovation
SESSION 26 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Organizational culture: key to innovation and change management. (2nd part)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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12th July 2023
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Exam 1 customer 18 %
experience
Exam 2 innovation 18 %
Cases Group 28 %
Work during the
course
Final innovation 20 %
Group Project &
Presentation
Individual Class 16 %
Participation
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit evaluation
for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the attendance rule,
and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must directly re-enroll
in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re- enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
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12th July 2023
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
12th July 2023
CUSTOMER INSIGHTS AND BEHAVIOR
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 CUB-
NBA.1C.m.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
She has given lectures at the master in "Talent Marketing" at the Universidad
Pontificia Comillas, and Master in Distribution at CECO. Marta is fluent in
Spanish, English and French.
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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Contemporary approaches to business emphasize the importance of adopting
a consumer focus. Marketing, in particular, is a consumer-driven function that
begins and ends with the consumer—from recognizing his or her needs to
ensuring post-purchase satisfaction. In this course you will enhance your
understanding of consumer behaviour, that is how and why people choose,
use, and evaluate goods and services. The success of many companies and
nonprofit organizations in genuine insights into the minds, hearts, and
behaviors of consumers. Which product is going to be a hit, and which one is
going to flop? Which aging brand can be revived, and which one is doomed to
die? Whats the next big market trend? How does a business become more
relevant to consumers? These are just a few of the many questions that
businesses constantly face and that require genuine consumer insights. To
gain a comprehensive understanding of consumer insights and behaviour
different consumption companies and consumption situations (e.g., individual
consumption, group consumption) will be studied.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The objective of the course is to provide key tools and frameworks for analyzing consumer behavior
in order to solve marketing problems and define effective marketing strategy. Specifically, you will:
- To better Understand the consumer and its decision process .
- To Learn about relevant theories and research in behavioral sciences (e.g., psychology,
sociolog,..) to study consumer behavior
- To Apply consumer behavior for developing and evaluating marketing strategies.
This course is intended for those interested in careers in brand management,
advertising management, marketing management, and consulting. However,
most of the issues covered are of further interest because in trying to
understand consumers we ultimately seek to understand ourselves
We will use reading materials, case discussions, in-class examples and
practical exercises as means to apply the principles learned during the lectures
to real-world consumer behavior problems. In addition, you will be part of a
team and conduct a consumer research project of your choice. For this
purpose, you will choose a product category and design a strategy to get
insight into the relationship between customers and products and improve this
relationship.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
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26th June 2023
Exercises in class, 6.67 % 5.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 26.67 % 20.0 hours
Individual studying 26.67 % 20.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 75.0 hours
PROGRAM
CONTENT
In the sessions students will be asked to present part of the project, or do practical exercises.
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26th June 2023
SESSION 5 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Consumer Attitude Formation and Change. Perception. Practice Review
SESSION 10 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
. Reference groups and WOM. Practice. Review
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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Class Participation 15 % Individual
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26th June 2023
4. Recommendation.
5. Implementation Plan.
You have to come prepared and be active in the class discussion (same rules as in class
participation). If you are not able to attend class the day of the case, you have to send a soft copy
of the case write-up to the professor via email the day before.
Teams as a whole will be responsible for their general management and teammates will be asked
to provide a written evaluation of their peers (10%). Therefore of all team members are expected to
collaborate and work diligently to achieve the best possible results. Thus, attendance to all practise
sessions will be compulsory to ensure a team effort and any unjustified absence will be penalized.
Peers in each team will assign each other a contribution grade ( % of contribution to the project).
Instructions on how to complete your Peer Evaluation will be given during sessions.
You need at least a grade of a 5 in the total project grade to pass this class. If you have not
obtained a 5 it will not average with the rest of your grades.
C. FINAL EXAM (45%)
The exam will be based on all the materials discussed during the semester (lectures, class
discussions, assigned readings, guest speakers, and class assignments).
Re-grade requests have to be submitted in writing explaining why you believe that your answer, as
written, was incorrectly graded. The re-grade will consider again the whole exam, so the final grade
may be increased as well as decreased. Revisions will be in person and there is no possibility to
change the date, hour or location.
You need at least a grade of a 5 in the exam to pass this class. If you have not obtained a 5 it will
not average with the rest of your grades.
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26th June 2023
RE-SIT / RE-TAKE POLICY
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2)
consecutive academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during
the semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in
June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
Regarding to the newly implemented ´liquid learning´ model, all students must still abide by
the same IEU attendance policy, including those students who are connecting remotely to
class sessions and not physically in the classroom because they are unable to be physically in
Spain, on campus. During the sessions, students connecting remotely are required to fully connect
their camera and microphone at all times, and must actively participate during the sessions (using
all necessary audiovisual equipment), just as their fellow peers who are physically present in
the classroom on campus.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
ØStudents failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must
directly re-enroll
in the course during the next Academic Year).
ØIt is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips,
holidays, etc.)
ØThe June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e.,
continuous evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
ØRe-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well
as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers
in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade
that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary
or extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a
final exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend
the session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor
will inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave
the Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your
failed subjects.
PROFESSOR BIO
OTHER INFORMATION
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a
retaker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4)
allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Leon G. Schiffman, J.L Winsenblit. (2021). Consumer Behavior. 12th edition.
7
26th June 2023
Pearson. ISBN 9780137504503 (Printed)
- Robert B. Cialdini. (2006). Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion. Harper
Business. ISBN 9780061241895 (Printed)
Suggested Additional Readings. Students who are interested in additional
background on consumer behavior or wish to go deeper into certain topics may also
find tthis book useful
- Paco Underhill. (2008). Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping--Updated and
Revised for the Internet, the Global Consumer, and. Simon & Schuster. ISBN
9781416595243 (Printed)
Suggested Additional Readings. Students who are interested in additional
background on consumer behavior or wish to go deeper into certain topics may also
find this book useful
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
26th June 2023
CYBERSECURITY
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 CYBS-
NBA.1C.d.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PERSONAL INFORMATION
He has a professional career of more than thirty years dedicated to security in all its disciplines.
Julio San José is currently Managing Director at Alavarez & Marsal. Previously worked at EY,
where he was the Partner leading of Cybersecurity for Financial Services at EY. Prior to joining EY,
he held positions of responsibility in several banking groups (Bankinter, Sistema 4B, LeasePlan,
etc.) in the areas of security, cyber security and fraud prevention. He is Director of Private
Security, is Certified Information Security Manager (CISM) and Certified in Risk and Information
Systems Control (CRISC) by ISACA. Lead Auditor BS 7799 and BS 25999 by the British Standard
Institution. As a member of the Subcommittee on Computer Security (CTN 71 / SC27), he has
collaborated in the drafting of several standards, both national and international.
He is a cited expert, collaborator and participant in courses, articles and debates on matters relating
to new technologies, information systems and security.
Julio is an accomplished leader with expertise in security innovation, technology and IT
management, IT security, risk management, compliance, and IT audit.
Academic background
- Management program (IESE Business School)
- Master in Information Technology Management (IDE-CESEM)
- Member of the Expert Group of the Risk Management Chair of the Instituto de Empresa
- Editor of part three of the PNE 71505 Electronic Evidence Management System standard
- Lecturer for the Master's in International E-business Master Ceco-ICEX
- Author of several patents in the protection of mobile applications.
Professional Background
- Managing Director at Alvarez&Marsal
- Partner leading of Cybersecurity for Financial Services at EY
- Head of Technical Security
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25th August 2023
- Head of Technological Risk
- Founder member of the Spanish Association of Electronic Evidence (AEDEL).
- Founder member of the Instituto de Continuidad de Negocio (CONTINUAM).
- Co-authored the book “Seguridad de las tecnologías de la información : la construcción de la
confianza para una sociedad conectada”.
- SIC Magazine Award 2011.
Contact details
Email: [email protected]
Email: [email protected]
PREREQUISITES
None
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
In business, cyber security has become a matter of concern for all aspects of
companies. The emergence of new businesses in the digital world means that
the greater the digitalization, the higher the dependence on cyber security. On
the other hand, the rapid adoption of technology means that there is a lack of
qualified professionals who know how to understand the risks derived from the
rapid adoption of new technologies, the main challenge being the training of
these professionals who are capable of facing up to the new situation.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
2
25th August 2023
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
This is designed to be a student-centered, highly interactive course, where students learn from
each other’s experiences and discussion in class, working groups and other forums. In that sense,
while the course is designed to provide you with interesting materials and facilitated discussion to
frame learning, much of your learning depends on you; your engagement, preparation, active
participation, and your ongoing reflection.
In order to help in the learning experience we will use the following channels nline
enriched material, using technology capabilities to share information, concepts and stories using
videos or other multimedia material.
- Lectures and readings, included in the syllabus: you will be exposed to a set of concepts
through lectures, readings, and case discussions.
- One Practical Case and one reading will be presented each session, with additional readings
(optional) to expand your knowledge if interested
You are expected to prepare all material to ensure the time of group and class discussion is used to
enrich our experience by showing application of knowledge.
PROGRAM
3
25th August 2023
We are under attack
The behavior of humans is the most likely cause of the break in the security chain, there are many
cases where a 'small' human error opens the doors of our systems to attackers. But who or what
interest have those attack us?. Are they Lone Wolves, competing corporations, nations?
Article: In Defence of the Human Factor (Frontiers)
4
25th August 2023
One of the main drivers of security investments in the last years has been the compliance with the
complex (and with growing complexity) of regulations, laws, and so on. We will discuss some of the
main ones to comply with, the risks for not compliance, and the opportunity that brings to convince
some of the C-level members that still have doubts. Names such as GDPR become critical as some
of our ways to address the board.
No matter if it is the ISO 27001 framework, or the NIST one, which are the benefits of the use of
internal or external expert view on the protection level of the company?. How can this help us in
different situations, such as insurance cost?
Article: 5 ways for business leaders to win in the 2020s (World Economic Forum)
5
25th August 2023
Our dependence on technology is increasing although we could say that it is total, but what
happens when the intrinsic failures that technology has. Cyber is something transversal, as the
digitalization of things advances, 'trust' will become the protagonist. We will see the case of the
'connect car' and the importance of security that has gone from protecting us against theft to
protecting our lives with autonomous driving.
Article: We need to reduce our dependence on technology if we want to keep innovating (TNW)
Article: “Digital Reliance”: Public Confidence in Media in a Digital Era (Georgetown Journal of
International Affairs, Fall 2017, Vol. 18, No. 3, International Engagement on Cyber VII (Fall 2017),
pp. 3-10) (CED)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Class participation: is essential in order for you to reach the learning outcomes, and also to share
with others. Your active participation will be graded in each of the discussions held in the session,
the idea is to have open discussions and ask anything you are curious to know about... Remember
it is more important to have quality interventions than quantity. In a few words...the idea is to have
open discussions and ask anything you are curious to know about...
Individual contribution: Each student will be 3 times presenting individually to the class in
different situations, for them to convince diverse stakeholders. Each of the interventions will be
graded using design thinking (Feasibility, Viability and Desirability) of their solutions, along with the
capability to convince their stakeholders in the topic assigned. Each intervention will be 5 minutes
long.
Group deliverable: Each group will have to convince to board in their implementation of a security
plan. Details will be shared prior to the challenge. This exercise will require a 15 minutes
presentation and 5 minutes Q&A
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25th August 2023
RE-SIT / RE-TAKE POLICY
RE-SIT / RE-TAKE POLICY
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Lillian Ablon, Martin C. Libicki, Andrea A. Golay. Lillian Ablon, Martin C. Libicki,
7
25th August 2023
Andrea A. Golay. Markets for Cybercrime Tools and Stolen DataHackers. RAND
Corporation.. ISBN 0833087118 (Digital)
This report describes the fundamental characteristics of 'black markets' and how
they have grown into their current state in order to give insight into how their
existence can harm the information security environment.
- Bruce Schneier. Liars and Outliers Enabling the Trust that Society Needs to
Thrive. First. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 1118143308 (Digital)
This book reaches across academic disciplines to develop an understanding of
trust, cooperation, and social stability. From the subtle social cues we use to
recognize trustworthy people to the laws that punish the noncompliant, from the
way our brains reward our honesty to the bank vaults that keep out the dishonest,
keeping people cooperative is a delicate balance of rewards and punishments. It’s a
series of evolutionary tricks, social pressures, legal mechanisms, and physical
barriers.
- Richard A. Clarke, Robert K. Knake. THE FIFTH DOMAIN: DEFENDING OUR
COUNTRY, OUR COMPANIES, AND OURSELVES IN THE AGE OF CYBER
THREATS. Penguin. ISBN 0525561965 (Digital)
Journey through what NATO already knows as the 'fifth domain' showing the
darkest and most sinister aspects of cyberspace through the eyes of researchers,
executives and relevant people working to make it safer.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
25th August 2023
DATA MINING AND MACHINE LEARNING FOR
BUSINESS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 DMML-
NBA.1C.p.OPT.M.A
Area Operations and Business Analytics
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
GILBERT BERGNA
- Mechanical Engineer from the École Polytechnique Fédérale -
Lausanne Switzerland
- MBA Babson College (Massachusetts - USA)
- Independent consultant in Data Analysis and Marketing
Research
- Professor of Data Analytics for Decision Making,at IE Business
School (MIM)
- Professor of Quantitative Techniques for MArketingResearch,at
IE Business School (BBA)
- Professor at the IESA (Institute of Higher Studies of
Administration, Venezuela), for more than10 years, in Marketing
Research and Data Mining for Marketing, among others
- Professor of Data Analytics,at the Masters of Marketing at the
Universidad Finis Terrae, Chile Founder of "Club Inteligente",
multi loyalty club companies, leveraging affiliated companies with
data mining information collected by the program.
1
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07th July 2023
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Data Mining, and particularly, Machine Learning, have become essential tools
for companies, from Start-Ups to Corporations, which use them as an important
decision-making support. The goal is to extract useful information, hidden in the
large amounts of data they generate and/or that they have the possibility to
access.
The business manager has, at least, to be aware of these techniques, to:
1. Know their potential and limitations,
2. To interact with the specialist (Data Scientist), and generate sensible
requirements
3. To understand and interpret the results
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The general objective of the Course, is to provide the student with the
understanding of the most important Machine Learning algorithms, and their
application in Business situations, with a practical approach.
2
07th July 2023
- To learn how to use KNIME, an intuitive software (Graphic drag-
and-drop interface), with “real” business data, to implement the
different algorithms (NO coding required)
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
"Theory" sessions, i.e. exhibition classes describing the different algorithms and
their applications in Business. They correspond to an "intuitive" description of the
concepts, without theoretical presentation of the fundamentals of each technique.
PROGRAM
3
07th July 2023
DECISION TREES
- Theoretical Concepts
- Model Accuracy Measures
- Main indicators
- Indicators case study
- Classification Tasks (Example)
- Practice Classification Trees
- Practice Regression Trees
4
07th July 2023
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS
EVALUATION CRITERIA
5
07th July 2023
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 15 %
Intermediate Tests 15 %
Group Work 2 35 %
Group Work 1 35 %
ØStudents failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
ØIt is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
ØThe June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final
grade for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e.,
continuous evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other
grade components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary
call. Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade
will be capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
ØRe-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be
asked to leave the Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the
exams in order to pass your failed subjects.
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evalu ation
during the June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course
again for the next Academic Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding
tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed calls to
pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
6
07th July 2023
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Sharda R., Dursun D., Turban E. (2018). Business Intelligence, Analytics, and
Data Science: A managerial perspective.. 4TH. Pearson. ISBN 0134633288
(Digital)
- - Berry, M.J.A.,Linoff, g. (2011). Data Mining Techniques For MArketing, Sales,
and Customer Suport. 3D. JOHN WILEYB&SONS. ISBN 0470650931 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
07th July 2023
DERIVATIVES AND RISK MANAGEMENT
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 DRM-
NBA.1C.f.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
1
Edited by Documentation
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SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
The objective of this course is to explain what derivatives are and the applications they have, in
particular in the risk management space.
Very often, both the general public and the investment professionals feel intimidated by derivatives
and perceive them as dangerous. Warren Buffett famously said: “Derivatives are financial weapons
of mass destruction.”. This course will attempt do demistify them and show how useful they can be.
Also, the course will explain the main types of risks than financial institutions face. In 2023 we saw
how faulty risk management can lead to the bankruptcy of large financial instutions like Credit
Suisse or SVB. And these two examples pale in signicance when compared to the events of the
global financial crisis of 2008.
A good understading of derivatives combined with the analysis and management of risk is an
essential tool-kit for those wanting to pursue a career in Banking or Investment Management.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
The course will mix theory with practical application, as well as analysis real-life cases. Students
are expected to actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their
skills.
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 36.0 % 45.0 hours
Discussions 12.0 % 15.0 hours
Exercises in class, 8.0 % 10.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 16.0 % 20.0 hours
Individual studying 28.0 % 35.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 125.0 hours
PROGRAM
2
19th June 2023
UNDERSTANDING FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND HOW THEY TRADE
- OTC vs ETD
- ISDA & CSA Agreements
SESSION 5 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
FUTURES & FORWARDS
- Mechanics & Pricing
- Carrying costs and yield for different underlying types
- CASE: Negative oil future prices in 2020
3
19th June 2023
SWAPS
- Mechanics & Pricing
- Interest rate swaps
- Credit default swaps
- Equity swaps
- CASE: Credit Suisse trades with Archegos
SESSION 11 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
OPTIONS
- Mechanics & Pricing
- Plain vanilla options & Option Strategies
- Exotic Options
- Structrured products
- Greeks (option sensitivities)
- CASE: Tail risk hedging
- CASE: Structured Products
4
19th June 2023
MIDTERM EXAM
SESSION 17 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
MARKET RISK
- Measuring market risk: volatility, drawdown, VaR
- Market risk hedging and managing with derivatives
- Leverage through derivatives
- CASE: Calculating risk metrics for a real portfolio
5
19th June 2023
- Drivers of credit risk
- The credit rating agencies
- The subprime crisis
- Credit risk management with derivatives
- Collateral in derivatives trades
- CASE: The big short (movie)
- CASE: Lehman brothers bankruptcy
SESSION 20 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
CREDIT RISK
- Drivers of credit risk
- The credit rating agencies
- The subprime crisis
- Credit risk management with derivatives
- Collateral in derivatives trades
- CASE: The big short (movie)
- CASE: Lehman brothers bankruptcy
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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19th June 2023
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 30 % FINAL EXAM
Intermediate Tests 30 % MIDTERM EXAM
Intermediate tests 0%
Group Work 0%
Other 0%
Group 20 %
Presentation
Class Participation 20 %
Class Participation 0%
7
19th June 2023
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- John C. Hull. Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives. 11th Edition (previous
editions are also valid). ISBN 9781292410654 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
19th June 2023
DIGITAL MARKETING AND ANALYTICS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 DIMA-
NBA.1C.m.OPT.M.A
Area Marketing and Communication
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
After/before the lessons, upon students’ previous request. Anytime via e-mail /
twitter /Linkedin. Contact details: Email: [email protected] / Twitter:
@augerpie
PREREQUISITES
1
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29th June 2023
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Within this subject, the students will become acquainted with the principles of
the Internet, digital marketing, metrics and analytics as well as the digital
trends, while gaining a general understanding of on-line ecosystems. Becoming
aware of the new age of media (paid, earned and owned), marketing and e-
business, as well as instinctively knowing how to take them into account when
running a company or marketing a brand, is today a must for entrepreneurs and
marketers in a world where the digital breach is growing among businesses.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The objective of this course is to introduce students to the concepts and activities that include and
cover any digital business, as well as to provide practice in addressing and solving digital business
and digital marketing problems. Above all, to obtain a specific mindset that allows a quick and
balanced adaptation and integration of new technological and digital business trends.
This course is designed for students:
- To be able to understand, evaluate, put in place and manage: digital marketing and digital
business, media, social media and specific digital strategies (search, mobile, ecommerce...).
- To be able to use them for the benefit of a brand or a business, driving positive sales and
awareness.
- To be able to approach and understand a digital transformation process.
- Understand how digital metrics are paramount to any digital business
- Develop skills of critical and analytical thinking to evaluate and solve digital marketing-related
problems.
- Understand the importance of ESG in today’s company & overall digital marketing strategy.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
This Digital Marketing course l is a hybrid, flexible and agile model of education that combines
synchronous and a few asynchronous sessions, group works with a hands-on approach.
As a hands-on course, it combines a wide variety of concept learning tools (reading, lectures,
videos, forums...) with skills development exercises (team activities, role plays, sharing, feedback).
The idea is that studen develop their skills to analyze, develop and manage digital marketing
approach, from strategy to the execution with this hands-on methodology, learning from other
benchmarks and learning by doing. The course is composed by 25 Synchronous and 5
Asynchronous sessions, as follows:
- Individual activities: Social media assignment, Mid-term Exam, Final Exam, discussions.
- Group activities: Course Final Project (split into 2 phases / midterm and final term
Presentations), Digital Topics research and final presentation, discussions.
- Diverse learning tools: Readings, slides, videos, forums, exercises, coaching online sessions
face to face with the professor, group works...
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
2
29th June 2023
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 40.0 % 60.0 hours
Discussions 10.0 % 15.0 hours
Exercises in class, 20.0 % 30.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 20.0 % 30.0 hours
Individual studying 10.0 % 15.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 150.0 hours
PROGRAM
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29th June 2023
This Digital Marketing plan will be structured in 2 phases, and therefore there will be 2
presentations (one around midterm covering some specific sections and the final one at the end of
the course)
Exact instructions and detailed expected content to be covered will be explicitly shared in Session 1
and 2.
Activity:
- Discussions and learnings.
SESSION 6 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
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29th June 2023
INFLUENCE MARKETING: The Open Brand Model
Activity:
- Activity in small groups of 3 students: following the methodology proposed by the Professor,
analyse the social media presence and reach of a brand of your choice, as well as a couple of
other brands in the category to benchmark. This exercise is inspired by the OPEN Brand
concept.
- (Reference book): INFLUENCE MARKETING / THE OPEN BRAND CONCEPT (The Open
Brand: When Push Comes to Pull in a Web-Made World).
Book Chapters: Jeremy Preace. "Social Media Marketing for Business 2020" (See
Bibliography)(Optional)
Book Chapters: Andrew Macarthy. "500 Social Media Marketing Tips: Essential Advice, Hints and
Strategy for Business" (See Bibliography)(Optional)
Book Chapters: Kelly Mooney and Nita Rollins, "The open brand: when push comes to pull in a web-
made world" (See Bibliography)
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29th June 2023
SESSION 9 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
USER EXPERIENCE SITES ANALYSIS AND BENCHMARK
Activity (in groups) : You will be given a chosen Company, and a brief to analyse their site from a
User perspective.
THE IDEA IS TO UNDERSTAND AND LEARN BOTH FROM BEST PRACTICES AND
MISTAKES¡, and present in Session 10 the do's and don't and your findings, once benchmarked
other comparable in the same sector brands...
SESSION 12 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
INBOUND MARKETING case / Forum
Activity:
- Forum activity by subgroups of 3 students.
Practical Case: HubSpot: Inbound Marketing and Web 2.0 (HBS 509049-PDF-ENG)
Article: 5 Companies with Inbound marketing that work (Mashable; September 13, 2012)
Other / Complementary Documentation: HubSpot Case Studies
Technical note: State of Marketing Trends Report 2022 (Hubspot)
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INBOUND MARKETING
Activity:
- Discussions and learnings.
- Course to date review.
SESSION 18 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
SEARCH ENGINES.
Activity (individual): Go through the Google training programme /Hubspot Fundamentals... take the
course... and get the Certificate, that once uploaded will doublecheck and you can get granted +0,5
pts
Activity (group):
1. work in your Final project building adwords campaigns,
2. explore: GOOGLE ADWORDS / SEARCH / UBBERSUGGEST.
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- Environment
ECOMMERCE
Activity:
- Lecture/Discussion.
Technical note & tutorials: The Customer Journey (MKS020215-U-ENG-VID)
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Why IoT is considered as one of the key enablers of digital twins? Clearly, the explosion of IoT
sensors is part of what makes digital twins possible. And as IoT devices are refined, digital-twin
scenarios can include smaller and less complex objects, giving additional benefits to companies.
Digital twins can be used to predict different outcomes based on variable data.
Activity:
- Discussions and learnings.
Technical note & tutorials: Using the metaverse in business (IST020362-U-ENG-VID)
SESSION 27 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
WORKING SESSIONS WITH PROFESSOR / DIGITAL MARKETING final project
Working session with each team (scheduled team by team. 10 minutes per team) to guide and
support for final presentation.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Students final grade will be based on both individual and group work of different characteristics that
will be weighted in the below detailed structure.
Should a student not participate in its group activities, the Professor and the group members will
decide which indivudual grade to grant.
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Final Course 25 % Minimum grade to
Exam pass: 5 out of 10
Midterm Exam 15 % Minimum grade to
pass: 5 out of 10
Individual 10 %
assignment/3
students subgrps
Peer Evaluation 5%
(average of group
team mates
evaluation)ther
Group Topics 15 % 50% Report, 50%
Research Presentation,
Presentation
Group Digital 20 % 50% Report, 50%
Marketing Project Presentation,
(split 50%/50%)
Presentation
Class Participation 10 % see detailed A)
class participation
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Each student must complete the assignments that the Professor will require. For each of them,
there is an upper limit of two text pages (assuming 11-point font size, Times New Roman, double
spacing) plus no more than one page of exhibits. Alternative format could also be power point. A
digital copy of the document must be submitted to the professor via e-mail before the next session.
In the case the assignment is not delivered on time , the grade wll be a "0".
Make sure the case write-up is easy to read. Consider using bullets, headings, etc., to make the
case write-up easy to follow.
The objective of this process is to give you practice writing concise executive summaries –
something that would make the reader believe that you have done a thorough analysis supporting
your recommendations. This is the type of briefing that must typically be prepared for senior
management – before they provide the resources for a more detailed research .
Good case briefs are concise, but also provide a fact-based rationale for your recommendations
and implementation plan. The rationale should reflect a good understanding of the important issues
of the case and may integrate previous material from the class or your experience. You might also
note factors that argue against your recommendation, and how your implementation plan might
minimize the impact of these factors.
C. GROUP TOPICS PRESENTATION AND DOCUMENTATION
Each team will be assigned a different topic at the beginning of the course and the whole team will
be responsible for presenting that topic findings and case to the class and to moderate the
discussion of that case. Any no presentation on time will generate a “0”. The objective of such
exercise is to foster students research in a certain field, develop synthesis capacities and the ability
to present in a convincing way to the rest of the group. In case a student does not participate in the
group work, once doublechecked the group members version, the Professor might decide to grant a
zero or a different grade than the rest of the group in line with the work participation and
presentation quality. No attendance will equal to a “0”
D. GROUP WORK PRESENTATIONS AND PAPER REPORT
Group Work Presentations and doc consist of developing a digital marketing plan of a start up,
business, app or any offline business migrated to digital. That digitization marketing plan will be
developed in 2 parts and presented to the group. For both the group work and its presentation and
report, you are expected to complete a final project with your group and present it in written form.
The objective is twofold: firstly to develop your skills working in group, and secondly the project that
you will have chosen with your peers will give you the opportunity to reflect on what you have learnt
in class and apply it to some practical problems. More details of the project will be provided by the
start of the course.In case a student does not participate in the group work, once doublechecked
the group members version, the Professor might decide to grant a zero or a different grade than the
rest of the group in line with the work participation and presentation quality. No attendance will
equal to a “0”
E. MID TERM AND FINAL EXAMS
The midterm is designed to provide, both to the student and the professor, and idea of the level of
understanding of the materials covered up to that session. It will be written in form, and it will
include both multiple-choice and open questions. No attendance to exam will generate a “0”.
The final exam is similar in format to the mid-term exam and covers all topics discussed during the
entire course.A minimum 5 grade is required in each of these exams to pass. No attendance will
equal to a “0”
The objective here is is to make sure that the student is able to display the level of understanding of
the different topics of the subject, as well as the ability to apply digital reasoning to a business
situation.
F. PEER EVALUATION
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The presence of “free riders” in teams is a problem that needs to be taken very seriously. The
willingness and ability to work in teams is highly regarded in this class. Teams are responsible for
their internal management, and teammates will be asked to provide a written evaluation of their
peers. Both the Case presentations and the Marketing Plan Project are important team efforts with
a considerable weight in the overall grading of this class. I therefore expect all members of all
teams to collaborate and work diligently to achieve the best possible results. Therefore each group
will be tasked to evaluate each peer, and the average of team mates evaluation will be the final
grade that will be weigted. In case a student does not participate in the group work, once
doublechecked the group members version, the Professor might decide to grant a zero or a
different grade than the rest of the group in line with the work participation and presentation quality.
G. RE-SIT / RE-TAKE POLICY:
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0). After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either
the ordinary or extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session
(whether it be a final exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please
be available to attend the session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding
your grade. Your professor will inform you about the time and place of the review session. !
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects. !
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In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Chris Anderson. The Long Tail. Revised edition (July 8, 2008). Hachette Books.
ISBN 1401309666 (Printed)
- Jeremy Preace. Social Media Marketing for Business 2020. (April 30th, 2020).
Independently published. ISBN 9798642143643 (Printed)
- Andrew Macarthy. 500 Social Media Marketing Tips: Essential Advice, Hints and
Strategy for Business: FACEBOOK, TWIT. self. ISBN 9781792796036 (Printed)
- Steve Krug. Don't Make Me Think, Revisited: A Common Sense Approach to
Web and Mobile Usability. Addison Wesley. ISBN 0321965515 (Digital)
- Gary Graham et al. (2015). Content is king: news media management in the
digital age. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781623567507 (Digital)
- Kelly Mooney and Nita Rollins. (2008). The open brand: when push comes to pull
in a web-made world. New Rider Press. ISBN 9780321550255 (Digital)
- Rick Levine and Doc Searls. (2011). The cluetrain manifesto. Basic Books. ISBN
0465024092 (Digital)
- David A Vise and Mark Malseed. (2008). The Google Story: For Google's 10th
Birthday. Delacorte Press. ISBN B006G85FBO (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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DIGITAL OPERATIONS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 DO-
NBA.1C.d.OPT.M.A
Area Information Systems and Technology
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
No needed.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
The signs and impacts of new technology disruptions are speeding up. Disruptive technologies and
innovation are changing the way we live work and relate to one another.
New studies show how current crises (such as COVID-19, international conflicts, global Supply
chain, Global warming...) are accelerating digital transformation and pushing our society and every
industry over the technology tipping point.
In contrast the potential of the Industry 4.0, or the revolution that new technologies bring, is still far
from being realized. Many companies are struggling to make the vision of digitized operations a
reality.
What is Digital Operations transformation? It is the revolution of companies through advanced
digital technologies to drive new levels of efficiencies, customer experiences and sustainability.
The race for digital operations transformation will create winners out of companies that
performed it and losers out of those that didn’t. Where do you stand?
In this elective course, we will:
- Align digital operations and strategy for improved performance,
- Evaluate how technologies are being applied to digitally transform operations and Supply Chain
management and optimize the speed and scale of processes, enable strategic operations and
increase sustainability.
- Learn by doing, working on real and on-going business cases, analysing its operations and
identify opportunities for digital transformation and efficiency improvements.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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- To get a better professional and personal awareness of the disruption impacting every industry
and its operations "Technological affinity".
- To gain a transformative mind-set trough digital operation, the back bone of any digital
transformation.
- To practice, How to have a 10 times more effective Value Chain. "Learning by doing".
- To excel and lead your learning experience. "We can teach and lead, only if we are willing to
learn"
To reach the course objectives most effectively, you will need to:
- Read, discuss and analyse the material of each session,
- Be prepared and participate in class discussions, maximize your own learning and in
consequence the entire class learning.
- Prepare this course deliverables.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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Questions:
- What are the impacts caused by the 4th industrial revolution?
- What are the new digital operational models that are emerging as a result of this impact?
Session structure:
- Welcome & Introduction to the course
- Why this course - Awake - The 4th Industrial Revolution - How this Course
Technical note & tutorials: The Story of the Fourth Industrial Revolution (IST020107-U-ENG-VID)
SESSION 5 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Online Discussion Forum.
- We will discuss on Campus interactive questions and short exercises around S6 and S7 cases.
- The discussion forum will be active during 24 hours (+ Recap & learnings) and used by the
leading team to help other students to prepare next sesions cases.
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- What were the company’s most significant innovations?
- What are the challenges and opportunities that Domino’s faces at the end of the case (2021)?
- What should Domino’s focus on next? Future
SESSION 7
Digital Supply Chain Management.
End-to-end (process) management on information creation, production, distribution and
consumption. And the impact of digitalization on the restructuring of information chains through:
- the lowering of marginal costs of production, transportation, and storage;
- the shift of network effects from supply to demand;
- convergence.
Questions/Discussion:
- Map the movie information chain, from content creation to the customer. What were the key
distribution channels before the rise of the internet and what are they today? In which stages of
the information chain is Disney present? How has Netflix evolved over the years?
- What are the strengths and weaknesses of Disney’s business model? What are the
opportunities and threats of the movie production industry?
- Should Disney offer its own streaming services? Why or why not? If so, how should it
implement this service: grow organically or acquire content? Make the content exclusive or
license it to other streaming services?
- What is Disney’s alternative growth options?
Practical Case: Tech with a Side of Pizza: How Dominos Rose to the Top (HBS 421057-PDF-ENG)
Technical note: Disney and 21st Century Fox: Reshaping Disney's Strategy for the Digital Age (HBS
IN1528-PDF-ENG)
SESSION 8 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Online Discussion Forum.
- We will discuss on Campus interactive questions and short exercises around S9 case.
- The discussion forum will be active during 24 hours (+ Recap & learnings) and used by the
leading team to help other students to prepare next sesions cases.
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Understanding Digital Operations in the fast fashion #1 retailer. "Zara, its secret ingredient",
material provides by the professor.
Article: The Future of Fashion: From design to merchandising, How Tech is reshaping the Industry
(cbinsights.com)
SESSION 13 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Online Discussion Forum.
- We will discuss on Campus interactive questions around S14 and S15, Final Case and
exercise.
- The discussion forum will be active during 24 hours (+ Recap & learnings) and used by the
professor to help other students to prepare next sesions cases.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Evaluation of your performance will be based on class participation, individual work, and group
assignments, weighted as follows:
- Individual class participation will be evaluated based upon whether a contribution substantially
enriches the discussion. I will take notes after classes to points on these criteria, you will asses
your team members and other class mates when you are the leading team.
- The individual work covers a maximum of 3 pages written of an individual report about the
learning from the Digital store visit, to be prepared after the Session. You can do it by pairs.
- Groups presentations, there will be groups appointed to present their solutions on certain cases
and lead those sessions. More details will be shared during the course.
- Final Case is a practical assignement where students must through Moderna case and show
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their leranings from this course.
More detailed guidelines will be shared and explained in class.
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the Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your
failed subjects.
- ! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re- taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
CLASS ATTENDANCE
For In-Person programs, students should attend their live in-person sessions on campus.
As per the IE University policy, bachelor students must attend at least 70% of sessions. This policy
applies to any type of session: live in-person sessions on campus, asynchronous sessions, or
remotely online as planned in the syllabus. Students attending less than 70% of sessions will be
graded with a FAIL for the course. For Bachelor-degree programs, this fail will apply to the ordinary
and extraordinary calls of the current academic year. For Master-degree programs, students must
obtain a Low Pass in the subject ?s retake or otherwise they will face program expulsion.
Attendance to asynchronous sessions will be monitored by the professor and will count in the same
way as synchronous sessions. As asynchronous sessions involve students’ activities, the professor
will monitor these activities to record their attendance.
Under exceptional circumstances (such as serious health problems, visa delays, and travel
restrictions), a student could ask for a temporary attendance waiver. A written and documented
request must be made in advance to the Program Management Team. Last minute changes in
attendance or verbal requests will not be considered. If the request is approved, an attendance
waiver will be granted over one or more sessions and the allowed 30% will be applied to the
remaining sessions.
Personal trips, appointments, minor illnesses, family celebrations, or other personal matters will not
be treated as an exceptional case and should be considered part of the 30% of allowed absences.
Professors will be informed by Program Management of all exceptional cases. Under no
circumstances will faculty members have the responsibility/power to justify a student’s absence. As
a general rule, Professors and Program Management shouldn’t contemplate the design of make-up
activities for any type of absence.
Although students without attendance waiver can attend the session remotely online, they will be
considered as absent. This absence will negatively affect their attendance % as well as their
participation grade.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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GENDER EQUALITY AND SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 GESD-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Economics
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
1
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30th June 2023
Patricia Gabaldon is the Director of the Bachelor in Econmics, ViceDean of
Pedagogical Innovation at the IE School of Global and Public Affairs, and
Associate Professor of Economic Environment at IE Business School in Madrid
(Spain). Patricia Gabaldon received her PhD in Economics from the University
of Alcala, Spain. As an economics professor, she combines theory and practice
to understand real life issues, from an applied economic perspective. Professor
of economics at IE since 2008, her research interests focus on the role of
women in the economy, corporate governance, and public policies regarding
women on boards and female entrepreneurs. She has collaborated with
multilateral organizations in gender equality topics.
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This Course will provide students with a general introduction to Gender Equality
which have been for the past few years at the forefront of the global agenda to
achieve sustainable development. As the World Development Report 2012
“Gender Equality and Development” stated, progress and persistence in gender
equality matter, because gender equality is a core development objective in its
own right but it is also "smart economics", enhancing productivity and
improving other development outcomes, including prospects for the next
generation and for the quality of societal policies and institutions.
We will analyze the conceptual framework proposed in the WDR 2012 report
and will further investigate the relevant dimensions identified of gender equality
such as endowments, economic opportunities and agency and how they impact
in the economic and social development of countries. We will also work
together, through real examples, in understanding the relevant aspects of
gender equality such as the barriers and enablers of female leadership and
female entrepreneurship, as well as the policies that companies and
governments are implementing to break those barriers and to enhance gender
equality.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
By the end of this course, students will have a wide and relevant knowledge of
what gender equality means and why it is important for individual, families,
societies, countries, governments and businesses, among others. Students will
also understand that it is an essential aspect to achieve sustainable
development and economic growth in the countries that cannot be longer
ignored.
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30th June 2023
Furthermore, this course will equip students with the practical skills and tools to
effectively mainstreaming gender while planning and implementing public
policies and corporate policies. Finally, by acquiring these skills, students will
be able to identify in the future gender inequalities and gaps in their respective
professional fields and address them using the adequate strategies and
mechanisms.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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30th June 2023
Article: SDG 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls (UN Women)
Article: The Global Gender Gap report 2020. Chapter 1. (World Economic Forum)
Article: CEDAW, 1979 (UN Women) (Recommended) (Optional)
Article: Beijing Platform for Action, 1995. (World Conference on Women) (Recommended) (Optional)
Article: World Survey on the role of women in development 2014. Gender Equality and Sustainable
Development”. Chapter 2. (UN Women 2014) (Recommended) (Optional)
Article: Why Gender Equality is the most critical of all the global goals. (The Huffington Post, 2015)
(Recommended) (Optional)
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30th June 2023
Economic Opportunities: Female Entrepreneurs, Access to Finance and Microcredits
Article: “Investing in Women ´s Employment, Good for Business, Good for Development”.
(International Finance Corporation, 2013.)
Podcast: Investing in Women: New evidence for the Business Case. (IFC, (2017)
Article: . Access to Finance, Mind the Gender Gap. (EBRD)
Article: Access to Finance: Why Aren’t Women Leaning In. (IMF)
Multimedia Material: What is Microcredit (Grameen Bank)
Article: A Grameen Bank concept: Micro-credit and poverty alleviation program in Bangladesh.
(International Conference on Emerging Trends in Computer and Image)
Article: “Women-Owned SMEs: A Business Opportunity for Financial Institutions. A Market and
Credit Gap Assessment and IFC ´s Portfolio Gender Baseline”. (International Finance Corporation,
2014) (Recommended) (Optional)
Article: “Strengthening Access to Finance for Women-Owned SMEs in Developing Countries”.
(Global Partnership for Financial Inclusion and International Finance Corporation, 2011)
(Recommended) (Optional)
Article: "Social Entrepreneurship Amongst Women and Men in the United States". (National
Women´s Business Council) (Recommended) (Optional)
Technical note: Global Findex Database. (The World Bank Group.)
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(Recommended) (Optional)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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30th June 2023
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 50 %
Mid term exam 30 %
Class participation 20 %
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30th June 2023
PLAGIARISM / ACADEMIC HONESTY
Plagiarism is the dishonest act of presenting another person’s ideas, texts or words as your own.
This includes in order of seriousness of the offense:
- providing faulty sources;
- copy-pasting material from your own past assignments (self-plagiarism) without the instructor’s
permission;
- copy-pasting material from external sources even while citing them;
- using verbatim translations from sources in other languages without citing them;
- copy-pasting material from external sources without citing them;
- and buying or commissioning essays from other parties.
IEU students must contact the professor if they don’t know whether the use of a document
constitutes plagiarism. The professor will advise the student on how to present said material. All
written assignments have to be submitted through Turnitin, which produces a similarity report and
detects cases of plagiarism. Professors are required to check each student's academic work in
order to guarantee its originality. If the originality of the academic work is not clear, the professor
will contact the student in order to clarify any doubts. In the event that the meeting with the student
fails to clarify the originality of the academic work, the professor will inform the Director of the
Bachelor Program about the case, who will then decide whether to bring the case forward to the
Academic Ethics Committee. Very high similarity scores will be automatically flagged and forwarded
to the Academic Ethics Committee. Plagiarism constitutes a very serious offense and may carry
penalties ranging from getting a zero for the assignment to expulsion from the university depending
on the severity of the case and the number of times the student has committed plagiarism in the
past.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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30th June 2023
HOW TO LEAD CHANGE AND PEOPLE
TRANSFORMATION
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 HLCPT-
NBA.1C.s.OPT.M.A
Area Human Resources and Organisational Behaviour
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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Ever since her arrival at IE in 2000, Mayo also stands out as one of IE’s stellar
professors. Her courses on Organizational Behavior, Leadership Development,
Teambuilding and Coaching, Managing People and Leading with Purpose are
taught across undergraduate and master programs—as well as in-company
Executive Education programs– and have regularly earned her the Teaching
Excellence Award.
Margarita Mayo holds a PhD in Management Psychology from State University
of New York, a Masters in Psychology from Clark University, and a B.A. in
Psychology from Universidad Autonoma in Madrid (Valedictorian). She has
worked with companies and organizations such as Al Ghurair Group, Zegna,
Endesa, Abu Dhabi Distribution Company, Performance Strategies, Celonis,
ArcelorMittal, Intras, Moving Forward, TotalEnergies, Novartis, McKinsey,
Everis, Making Science, and AT&T and international organizations such as
United Nations, OECD, Africa Development Bank and World Knowledge Forum
on issues relating to leadership development, executive coaching, 360
feedback and change management in Europe, Asia, the Middle East and
United States.
More about her work can be found on the website: www.margaritamayo.com
Academic Background
PhD in Management Psychology, University of New York at Buffalo, USA
Fulbright Scholar, Harvard University, USA
MA in Social Psychology, Clark University, USA
BA in Psychology, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Academic Experience
Professor of Organisational Behaviour, IE Business School, 2000 to present
Visiting Professor at Lancaster Management School, Lancaster University, UK,
2009
Academic Director of the Centre for Diversity and Global Management, IE
Business School, 2003-2009
Director of the PhD Programme, IE Business School, 2004
Assistant Professor of Business Administration, Richard Ivey School of
Business, University of Western Ontario, USA, 1997 to 2000
Lecturer, Organisational Behaviour, University of New York at Buffalo, USA,
1994 to 1997
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This course offers frameworks, knowledge and tools to help you be more
effective leading change and people transformations in both your work and
your personal life. You will learn concepts and tools to help you achieve your
personal development goals and higher order purposes including
understanding yourself and others, leading people for transformation, and
managing change in crisis as well as opportunity scenarios understanding who
is involve; how they are engaging; and what tools you need to be used to
achieve change and transformation.
2
11th July 2023
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
11th July 2023
PART 2: PEOPLE TRANSFORMATION
4
11th July 2023
SESSIONS 12 - 13 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Change Management II
Planning & Implementation
Article: Leading Change: Why Transformation Efforts Fail (HBS R0701J-PDF-ENG)
Article: Inside GE´s Transformation (HBS R1705B-PDF-ENG)
Article: Cracking the Code of Change (HBS R00301-PDF-ENG)
Multimedia Material: Experience Change Simulation (EXP)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
5
11th July 2023
Personal Development Plan (individual): 20% of you grade.
Final Exam (individual): 30% of your grade: The final exam takes place at the end of the course
and covers all topics and readings addressed in the course.
RE-SIT / RE-TAKE POLICY
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
Ø Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit evaluation
for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the attendance rule,
and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must directly re-enroll
in the course during the next Academic Year).
Ø It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
Ø The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Ø Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to
leave the Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your
failed subjects.
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year
as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4)
allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
6
11th July 2023
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
11th July 2023
HOW TO LEAD CHANGE AND PEOPLE
TRANSFORMATION
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 HLCPT-
NBA.1C.s.OPT.M.A
Area Human Resources and Organisational Behaviour
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
1
Edited by Documentation
11th July 2023
Ever since her arrival at IE in 2000, Mayo also stands out as one of IE’s stellar
professors. Her courses on Organizational Behavior, Leadership Development,
Teambuilding and Coaching, Managing People and Leading with Purpose are
taught across undergraduate and master programs—as well as in-company
Executive Education programs– and have regularly earned her the Teaching
Excellence Award.
Margarita Mayo holds a PhD in Management Psychology from State University
of New York, a Masters in Psychology from Clark University, and a B.A. in
Psychology from Universidad Autonoma in Madrid (Valedictorian). She has
worked with companies and organizations such as Al Ghurair Group, Zegna,
Endesa, Abu Dhabi Distribution Company, Performance Strategies, Celonis,
ArcelorMittal, Intras, Moving Forward, TotalEnergies, Novartis, McKinsey,
Everis, Making Science, and AT&T and international organizations such as
United Nations, OECD, Africa Development Bank and World Knowledge Forum
on issues relating to leadership development, executive coaching, 360
feedback and change management in Europe, Asia, the Middle East and
United States.
More about her work can be found on the website: www.margaritamayo.com
Academic Background
PhD in Management Psychology, University of New York at Buffalo, USA
Fulbright Scholar, Harvard University, USA
MA in Social Psychology, Clark University, USA
BA in Psychology, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Academic Experience
Professor of Organisational Behaviour, IE Business School, 2000 to present
Visiting Professor at Lancaster Management School, Lancaster University, UK,
2009
Academic Director of the Centre for Diversity and Global Management, IE
Business School, 2003-2009
Director of the PhD Programme, IE Business School, 2004
Assistant Professor of Business Administration, Richard Ivey School of
Business, University of Western Ontario, USA, 1997 to 2000
Lecturer, Organisational Behaviour, University of New York at Buffalo, USA,
1994 to 1997
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This course offers frameworks, knowledge and tools to help you be more
effective leading change and people transformations in both your work and
your personal life. You will learn concepts and tools to help you achieve your
personal development goals and higher order purposes including
understanding yourself and others, leading people for transformation, and
managing change in crisis as well as opportunity scenarios understanding who
is involve; how they are engaging; and what tools you need to be used to
achieve change and transformation.
2
11th July 2023
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
11th July 2023
PART 2: PEOPLE TRANSFORMATION
4
11th July 2023
SESSIONS 12 - 13 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Change Management II
Planning & Implementation
Article: Leading Change: Why Transformation Efforts Fail (HBS R0701J-PDF-ENG)
Article: Inside GE´s Transformation (HBS R1705B-PDF-ENG)
Article: Cracking the Code of Change (HBS R00301-PDF-ENG)
Multimedia Material: Experience Change Simulation (EXP)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
5
11th July 2023
Personal Development Plan (individual): 20% of you grade.
Final Exam (individual): 30% of your grade: The final exam takes place at the end of the course
and covers all topics and readings addressed in the course.
RE-SIT / RE-TAKE POLICY
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
Ø Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit evaluation
for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the attendance rule,
and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must directly re-enroll
in the course during the next Academic Year).
Ø It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
Ø The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Ø Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to
leave the Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your
failed subjects.
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year
as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4)
allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
6
11th July 2023
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
11th July 2023
IMAGINING YOUR FUTURE WITH YOUR BEST SELF
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 IYF-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Human Resources and Organisational Behaviour
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
1
Edited by Documentation
23th August 2023
There are no prerequisites for this course.
The workshop is focused on how to have a better life and invest in being your best self. In order to
do that, you need to be brave, to reflect and to be honest with yourself. The 21st century needs a
different type of leader and the skills you will learn are intended to prepare you for that
challenge! Please don’t choose this program if (PLEASE READ!):
- You don’t want to reflect about your life.
- You don’t want to share your personal experience with the class (we will apply Chatham House
Rules).
- Or it’s not the right moment and place to do either.
- You are not ready to help other people and open to be helped by your colleagues.
- You don’t want to work hard!
- You don’t have enough time to invest in your homework’s (2 hours/ week).
- You don’t like dynamic & participative sessions (this is a hands-on program!).
- You are not open to practice techniques such as mindfulness.
- You are not ready to contribute in each session.
- You can not survive without using your PC & phone for 2-3 hours.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
This course has been designed with the intention of helping students to develop sensitivity to their
inner self, to strengthen their awareness and reflect critically on their impact and to create the
space to practice and grow to craft with intention the life path forward and take ownership for the life
they want to live.
More specifically, this course aims to foster:
1. Greater appreciation of the holistic self.
2. Depth in understanding of critical skills for well-being and resilience.
3. A long-term perspective of happiness.
4. Appreciation of purpose and how to craft a life of meaning.
2
23th August 2023
5. The ability to reflect, learn and grow, leveraging essential skills.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
23th August 2023
Mindfulness
There has been a lot of hype around mindfulness, however what is mindfulness and how does it
impact your happiness and wellbeing? We will slow down to better understand the role mindfulness
play in leading a happy life and consider ways to incorporate mindfulness practices into our day to
day routines. We will also practice a little!
Article: Mindfulness Isn't Much Harder than Mindlessness (HBS H02LOM-PDF-ENG)
Article: How to Override Your Default Reactions in Tough Moments (HBS H00RJ6-PDF-ENG)
Article: The Construct of Mindfulness (Journal of Social Issues, Vol. 56, No. 1, 2000, pp. 1–9) (CED)
Article: The Wise Leader (The European Business Review)
4
23th August 2023
We will be introducing acts of kindness into our daily routine.
Article: 60 Powerful Kindness Quotes That Will Stay with You (Reader's Digest, Aug. 17, 2023)
Article: If You Want Your Business to Succeed, Cultivate Kindness (Next Big Idea Club, 9 May,
2016)
SESSION 11 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Manage Mentor – Leading People
For this session, please complete the Harvard ManageMentor course Leading People. See Session
Materials. You will need to access the course through your Harvard Business Publishing account
(or create one if you do not already have one).
The course learning objectives are the following:
1. Define your purpose, vision, and values as a leader.
2. Cultivate your emotional intelligence.
3. Build trust in your leadership.
4. Engage and motivate employees.
5
23th August 2023
5. Lead with a global mindset.
Multimedia Material: Harvard ManageMentor: Leading People (HBS 7167-HTM-ENG)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Participation
As a class, we will work together to consider the various concepts, readings and cases, which serve
as tools to foster the learning and application of knowledge. Your participation is key to creating the
discussion and debate, where we can all gain insights from your experience and
perspectives. Therefore, your preparation in advance of the class and your engagement in the
course is critical.
Participation will be evaluated based on being on time, mentally present and prepared, as well as
on staying engaged and most importantly, on making valuable contributions to class discussion that
demonstrate understanding of the reading and of the themes being discussed in class.
6
23th August 2023
Keep in mind, quality is more valued than quantity.
Homework
Short preparation assignments will be required in advance before some of the sessions.
Individual Assignment – Reflection and Learning
What advice would your future self be giving you now?
You will be expected to keep a personal journal throughout the class to document your key insights
and learnings from the class, as well as your personal observations and reflections regarding how
the concepts play out in your life, areas you feel comfortable and areas you look to further
understand and apply. The personal journal is confidential, you do NOT have to turn it in. However,
it is critical to keep a personal journal to be able to carry out the reflection and write the reflection
paper. Your write-up will make it evident whether or not you kept a personal journal throughout the
course.
You will need to deliver an in-depth reflection paper as to your understanding and experience with
the essential skills covered in the course. From this, you will be expected to outline a personal plan
of intention to incorporate learnings into your life to build experience and confidence in shaping your
ideal future.
We will discuss the individual assignment in more detail during Session 1.
Group Project – Leadership and Essential Skills
How do these essential skills contribute to our ability to lead ourselves and others? Each group will
be expected to create a leadership framework, which they will present to the class, as to how
students can leverage their time at IE to develop the essential mix of skills for greater life
satisfaction, happiness and success. A short written report is also required.
We will discuss the final group project in more detail during Session 1.
7
23th August 2023
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Karen Bluth and Kristin Neff. (2018). The self-compassion workbook for teens :
mindfulness and compassion skills to overcome self-criticis. New Harbinger
Publications. ISBN 9781626259843 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
23th August 2023
INDUSTRY 4.0
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 I40-
NBA.1C.d.OPT.M.A
Area Information Systems and Technology
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
1
Edited by Documentation
26th June 2023
The fourth industrial revolution is transforming business and society. In this
course, students will examine the impact advances in technology are having,
and will have, on the capabilities and business models of industry. The course
will expose students to the dramatic changes that are currently taking place
around the world in the way products are designed, manufactured and
delivered to market, as well as how value adding services are being layered on
top of traditional products.
By the end of the elective, students will understand the challenges and
opportunities that technology provides to industry and how to best position
themselves to exploit the changes ahead to their advantage.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
2
26th June 2023
SESSION 1 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Into Industry 4.0
In this first session we will introduce the structure and main topics of the course.
- Course introduction
- Overview of main topics
3
26th June 2023
- Process automation
- Intelligent machines
- Robots
- Cyberphysical systems
- Industrial IoT
- Edge Computing
4
26th June 2023
Apocalypse now
In this session we will cover:
- A cuationary tale
- Technology and risk
- Existential risksCircular economy
EVALUATION CRITERIA
5
26th June 2023
This grade reflects your active involvement and participation during class room discussions and is
based on engagement with the core ideas presented during the course as well as comments and
questions that benefit us all. Both quantity and quality are relevant and whilst consistent
contribution is ideal a few points of genuine insight can go a long way.
Class Quizzes (Individual Grade)
There are two mini-assessments that will be delivered as multiple-choice open book exams. The
first will cover sessions 1-7 and the second will cover sessions 8-14.
These are designed to follow the course and to check your understanding of the core concepts
presented during class. Each assignment will need to be completed before the start of the next
session.
Team presentations (Group Grade)
Team’s will deliver a presentation to the class of their chosen industry 4.0 case study. Grades for
the presentation will be based on:
- Explanation of the case 40%
- Use of course frameworks and tools 40%
- Communication of ideas 20%
Industry 4.0 Strategy Paper (Group Grade)
Teams will be tasked with completing a strategy report of their chosen technology or industry.
Grading will be based on:
- Demonstrating understanding of the course concepts 40%
- Robustness of chosen strategy 30%
- Concise and clear communication of ideas 20%
- Format and presentation 10%
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Intermediate Tests 30 % Individual Grade
Workgroups 25 % Group Grade
Group 25 % Group Grade
Presentation
Class Participation 20 % Individual Grade
6
26th June 2023
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0)
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
26th June 2023
INNOVATION & CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 ICI-
NBA.1C.s.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
1
Edited by Documentation
28th June 2023
- BBVA Project Manager- Transformation, Productivity and New Business Models.
- BBVA International Branch manager.
Professor
- IE Business School. Project Management, Business Process Management, Innovation and
Processes. Operations.
- Other Business Schools.
Publications
- “Financial impact of Lean and Six Sigma in the European Banking Industry”.
- “Impact on results of Business Process Management methodologies in the Global Financial
System”.
- Author of academic contents in Banking Management, Business Process Management,
Operations and Project Management.
[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
None.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Innovation, New Technologies, Transformation and New Business Models (NBM) are necessary in
the current environment. This course will:
- Introduce students into the principal concepts of Innovation and Business Process
Management/Transformation/New Technologies. Both Innovation/NBM, represent critical areas
for today managers.
- Provide students with the necessary abilities, knowledge, methodologies and tools to
implement these concepts in the real current business environment.
- Provide management capacities for process improvement and innovation in the current
environment, in a practical way.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
2
28th June 2023
- Discuss how organizations can facilitate or hamper the generation and transfer of innovation,
NBM, and why large companies struggle with disruptive innovation.
- Propose ways in which innovation can be managed across organizational borders, and how
firms can use external ideas (e.g. customers as innovators) for internal innovation.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
28th June 2023
- Introduce the innovation process.
- Analyze the idea generation process.
Technical note: Creativity and Innovation in Organizations (HBS 396239-PDF-ENG)
Practical Case: What's the BIG Idea? (A) (HBS 602105-PDF-ENG)
SESSION 6 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION & DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
Goals
Examine the impact of digital transformation in an industry such as banking, addressing customer
habit changes, new emerging competition and digital disruption.
Understand the importance of aligning company strategy with technology strategy, realizing IT
decisions are business decisions, and overall digital solutions strategy and execution developed
towards customer’s importance.
Recognize the long-term approach of innovation in company culture, along with short-term
execution.
Identify the changes happening in banking sector, and how Over-The-Top players (OTTPs) are
entering into industries that are out of their domains today.
Learn how to respond against the new competition driven by these Over-the-top players,
developing and executing a digital strategy.
Illustrate how fundamental is to offer digital solutions to your customers. Realize the difference
between customer-driven decisions versus industry-driven decisions.
Reproduce and apply customer-focus decision making models for business problems, where
technology plays a key role in the solution.
Summarize and contrast the impact of digital transformation in banking industry to other industries
or business models: customer habit changes, new emerging competition and digital disruption.
Practical Case: Disruptive Innovation at BBVA (IST010063-U-ENG-HTM)
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28th June 2023
Goals
Understand how Lean revolutionizes process innovation.
Contents
- Lean innovation.
- Techniques to eliminate waste.
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28th June 2023
SESSION 12 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
INNOVATION IN SERVICES: CURRENT CHALLENGUES
Contents
- Excellence in services.
- Customer satisfaction.
- New innovative business models.
- New market opportunities.
Technical note: Delivering Excellent Service: Lessons from the Best Firms (HBS CMR214-PDF-
ENG)
Practical Case: AmazonFresh: Rekindling the Online Grocery Market (HBS 615013-PDF-ENG)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
The performance evaluation of the knowledge acquisition will be based on the following elements:
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28th June 2023
- Prototype.
- Co-creation with customer. Direct customer engagement.
- Define an implementation plan.
- Consider actual environment: AI, Blockchain, task automation, digital transformation, Big Data,
Internet of things...
RE-SIT / RE-TAKE POLICY
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
Regarding to the newly implemented ´liquid learning´ model, all students must still abide by the
same IEU attendance policy, including those students who are connecting remotely to class
sessions and not physically in the classroom because they are unable to be physically in Spain, on
campus. During the sessions, students connecting remotely are required to fully connect their
camera and microphone at all times, and must actively participate during the sessions (using all
necessary audiovisual equipment), just as their fellow peers who are physically present in the
classroom on campus.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
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28th June 2023
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
28th June 2023
INNOVATIVE BUSINESS MODELS AND DIGITAL
TRANSFORMATION
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 IBMDT-
NBA.1C.s.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
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Basic knowledge of strategy, entrepreneurship, and/or innovation is required.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
What is a business model? How do you design one and change it to another
one? What is a value proposition? Why do firms use certain revenue models
but not others? What is business model innovation and how do you make that
happen? How do new technologies such as AI, blockchain, and Internet of
Things link to novel business model designs? These are some of the most
relevant questions that this course deals with and tries to answer through in-
class discussions and many helpful examples from real life.
Business model innovation involves rethinking and redesigning the way an
organization creates, delivers, and captures value. It can help organizations
discover new sources of revenue, improve their efficiency and effectiveness,
and better meet the needs of their existing and new customers. Business
model innovation is important because it allows organizations to create new
value and drive growth. In today's fast-paced and competitive business
environment, organizations must continuously evolve and adapt in order to stay
relevant and succeed. By adopting a culture of business model innovation,
organizations can stay ahead of the competition and position themselves for
long-term success.
This course will introduce students to the concepts of business model and
business model innovation and explore how organizations can use this
approach to find novel sources of value and boost development. Through a
combination of lectures, discussions, case studies, and hands-on exercises,
students will learn how to identify and evaluate potential business model
innovations, develop and test new business models, and implement business
model innovations in different types of organizations. Although the primary
focus of this course lies on digital solutions, offline and low-tech industries are
discussed as well. Consequently, this course will equip students with a
thorough understanding of how firms design and innovate their business
models and how they grow. Hence, students will be able to comment and
analyze on existing business models and ideally be capable of becoming
designers of innovative business models.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Understand the concept of business model and business model innovation and their role in
driving organizational growth and success.
- Distinguish between business model and strategy.
- Identify and evaluate potential business model innovations in a variety of contexts.
- Develop and test new business models using a systematic and iterative approach.
- Know how to implement business model innovations successfully.
- Understand how digital technologies facilitate novel business models.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
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IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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Business model design methods.
Book Chapters: Business model innovation strategy; Chapter 7 (See Bibliography)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
1. The final exam (60% of the overall grade) will include all content from session 1 to session
14 included in the textbook, slides, case studies, and other possible readings. A necessary
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20th June 2023
requirement to pass the course is getting a minimum of 50% of the questions right in the final
exam. If the student does not reach the minimum threshold, the course will be considered
FAILED. Students will lose the grades of the group assignments, case competition, and
participation and they will have to retake the exam.
2. The group assignments (15% of the overall grade) include development of new business
models in assigned contexts. The teams develop solutions according to the instructions of
each assignment that will be uploaded with time and in accordance with the structure of the
course and its learning objectives.
3. The case competition (15% of the overall grade) will take place in session 14. You will work
in teams and be assigned a short case with questions to solve. You will upload your slides
and deliver a final presentation of your solution.
4. Individual participation (10% of the overall grade) will be evaluated based on three main
criteria:
1. Depth and quality of contribution: The most important dimension of participation
concerns what it is that you are saying. A high quality comment reveals depth of insight,
rigorous use of case evidence, consistency of argument, and realism.
2. Moving your peers’ understanding forward: Great ideas can be lost through poor
presentation. A high quality presentation of ideas must consider the relevance and
timing of comments, and the flow and content of the ensuing class discussion. It
demands comments that are concise and clear, and that are conveyed with a spirit of
involvement in the discussion at hand.
3. Frequency: Frequency refers to the attainment of a threshold quantity of contributions
that is sufficient for making a reliable assessment of comment quality. The logic is
simple: if contributions are too few, one cannot reliably assess the quality of your
remarks. However, once the threshold quantity has been achieved, simply increasing
the number of times you talk does not automatically improve your evaluation. Beyond
the threshold, it is the quality of your comments that must improve. In particular, one
must be especially careful that in claiming more than a fair share of “airtime”, quality is
not sacrificed for quantity. Finally, your attempts at participation should not be such that
the instructor has to “go looking for you”. You should be attempting to get into the
debate on a regular basis.
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final exam 60 %
Group 15 %
assignments
Case competition 15 %
Individual 10 %
participation
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20th June 2023
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that academic year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next academic year.
The extraordinary call evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June/July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next academic year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.).
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only, i.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous academic year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that academic year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, an assignment, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next academic
year as a re-taker and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of
four allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Amit, R. & Zott, C. (2020). Business model innovation strategy: Transformational
concepts and tools for entrepreneurial leaders. John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken, NJ,
USA. ISBN 9781119689683 (Digital)
Recommended
- Osterwalder, A. & Pigneur, Y. (2010). Business model generation: A handbook for
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20th June 2023
visionaries, game changers, and challengers. John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken, NJ,
USA. ISBN 9780470876411 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
20th June 2023
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 IFI-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
No one can deny that knowing the theory is key to developing a professional career within the
financial world. But it is also true that mastering a set of theoretical concepts in most cases is not
enough to pass an interview process successfully to enter this challenging industry.
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This subject will show the functioning of the different financial markets from the inside, taking
advantage of the teacher’s privileged position within the Global Markets unit of a bank, providing
the students with a clear understanding of what is traded in the market, who are the main
participants and what skills are needed in the most important roles of the industry.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The main goal of the subject is to provide students with a great understanding of financial markets
with a practical approach: what products can be traded, who are the important players in the market
and what different roles can be found in these companies.
At the end of the semester, students are expected to have a clear understanding of:
- The different asset classes that can be traded in financial markets (fixed income, both
corporate and public; equity; currencies; commodities,…)
- How different markets work in real life, both organized markets (exchanges) and over-the-
counter markets (trades on the phone, Bloomberg chats,…)
- Which are the main participants in the markets: Investment Banks, Institutional Funds,
Sovereign Wealth Funds, Central Banks Reserve Management,…
- What different roles can be found inside the companies above (traders, research analysts,
Sales,…) and what skills are needed
- Which are the main monetary authorities, which are their different mandates and how they
influence the markets
All the previous would enable students to make an informed choice of potential career path. Here
are only a few of the questions that may be on students’ minds and, hopefully, will get clarified after
the semester:
- Who does what in Financial Markets? What is the difference between a Total Return Fund and
a Pension Fund?
- My profile is not very quantitative (actually I hate Excel), but I love Financial Markets… Should I
give it a try? Is there any role that suits my skillset?
- I love Financial Markets and I am great at Financial Maths and Equity Valuation Models! I have
real fun running correlations in Excel…. Does my skillset fit into a Quant role inside the
Investment division of a top bank or should I apply for a role as Portfolio Manager in a Hedge
Fund?
- Are rating agencies really independent or are they a strong lobby? How useful they are? Can
the market live without them?
- How does a country fund its needs in the markets? What is a Government bond auction? Who
can attend it? And a syndication?
- I am the CFO of a SME and need to take decisions to minimize some risks my company is
facing. How should I proceed? In theory I can trade some derivatives but, are they available to
such a small company? Do I have more alternatives?
- I don’t understand anything when I read the Financial Times. Should I quit and apply for a role
in marketing?
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
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19th June 2023
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 26.67 % 20.0 hours
Discussions 13.33 % 10.0 hours
Exercises in class, 20.0 % 15.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 26.67 % 20.0 hours
Individual studying 13.33 % 10.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 75.0 hours
PROGRAM
SESSION 4 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Forum: create an order book among all the students. Keep record of all the executed trades and
calculate individual Profit and Loss
Private: Corporate Bonds Market (how companies fund themselves? Is there a secondary market?
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Public: Government bonds market
SESSION 7 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Forum: Following the timing of a Government Bond auction (bonds announcement, size
announcement, auction day). Elaborate on price action around it
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- Public / Semi-public actors:
- Countries: Debt Agencies and Treasuries (concepts and real functioning of auctions,
syndications, Primary Dealers, market makers,…)
- A day in the life of the Head of an European Treasury
- A day in the life of a Market Maker Government Bonds Trader
- Central Banks: what is their role? Main Central Banks and to what extent they influence
the markets (Quantitative Easing,…) Supranationals: ESM, EFSF
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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19th June 2023
Class Participation 15 % Students are
expected to
participate actively
(and voluntarily)
during lectures.
Given the
approach of the
class, it will be key
for the good
functioning of the
sessions. Class
participation grade
will be based on
attendance,
punctuality,
participation and
class conduct –
there may be a
penalty if the
student creates a
disruption, talks
excessively or use
electronic devices.
Individual Work 30 % At least two
assignments
(essays on visit to
BBVA and guests)
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19th June 2023
Ø Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
19th June 2023
INTRODUCTION TO LUXURY MANAGEMENT
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 ILM-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Strategy
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
“The IE classroom is an outstanding environment to develop a truly strategic mindset”. David Millán
believes in the educational and experiential value of the course. “This is a time when students are
encouraged to go through an analytical process which enhances their capabilities”, he says. Hence
the teaching approach is focused on the concepts but also in the ability to develop those personal
skills. When it comes to areas of interest, Prof Millán believes that one of the truly strategic
concepts is the process of value creation. “It is amazing how corporation decide which their sources
of value creation are and how they put them into practice. One needs to understand that value is a
far more important concept than sales or growth”, he says. On the professional side, Prof Millán is
dedicated to help corporations to take strategic decisions and hence build competitive advantages.
“In these days we are living, we need to rethink the sources of competitive advantage. I believe we
are currently living not only a change in the international relationships but also, and more
importantly, a change in the mindset of our society. This is why we can not rely on the same
competitive forces of the past”.
Academic Background
- International PhD in Business Administration, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, Spain
- IMBA, IE Business School, Spain
- IMBA Intensification in Marketing (with honors), Schulich School of Business, Toronto, Canada
- Degree Science Engineering, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, Spain
- Mechanical Engineering intensification, Swiss Institute of Technology, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Academic Experience
- Adjunct professor of Strategic Management and Luxury Strategy, IE Business School.
- Visiting professor of Strategy and Marketing, INCAE Business School.
- Visiting professor of Strategy and Marketing, International University of Monaco.
- Visiting researcher, INSEAD.
Publications
- Book. “Strategic Luxury Management". Routledge, 2021
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- Award. Best Case, IE Case Competition (2020). Case study: "El Confidencial. Leading the
revolution of the newspaper industry".
- Award. Best Entrepreneurship Case, EFMD 2018. Case study: "MB&F, The management of
creativity".
- Award. Best Case. IE Case Competition (2014). Case study: “Porsche AG. Beyond the limits of
luxury?.
- Award. Mention of Honor, IE Case Competition (2013). Case study: “LVMH & Bulgari. Time for
Luxury”.
- Article. "El concepto de lujo. Un enfoque estratégico". Harvard Deusto Business Review, 2013
- Article. "Competencia internacional en un entorno sin paradigmas” Harvard Deusto Business
Review 2012
- Book. “Cuestión de Valor. De querer Vender a saber Competir”. Wolters Kluwer, 2011
- Award. Best Management Article of the Year, Fundación RuralCaja, 2010
Corporate Experience
- Independent Senior Management Advisor.
- Marketing Director, DOMA Yachts, Alicante, Spain.
- Consultant Product Launch, Turrones 1880, Jijona, Spain.
- Project Manager, ALTEC Automotive GmbH, Stuttgart and Hof, Germany.
- Development Engineer, CYPE Ingenieros, Alicante, Spain.
- Design Engineer, Rolls Royce, Berlin, Germany.
- Trainee Engineer, ABB Turbo Systems, Baden, Switzerland.
[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This is an introductory course to the luxury industry, where the students will be
exposed to the fundaments and principal aspects of the analysis of luxury firms.
The current environment and the traditional paradigms associated to luxury
corporations will be object of discussion. The student will gain a wide
perspective to analyse today’s challenges. Likewise, the course will cover the
fundamental strategic issues across several industries, such as Leather &
Fashion, Watches, Yachting, Wine & Spirits or Jewellery.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Through the identification of the main characteristic of the different luxury industries, the course
focuses on strategic analysis and how to build competitive advantage at the business level. The
main theories, models and tools within the field of strategy will be reviewed with a strong emphasis
in its application to ambiguous real settings.
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This course seeks to develop the following competencies and skills:
- Gain an understanding about the different luxury markets and its main characteristics (e.g.
automobile, fashion & accessories, watches & jewellery, gourmet & wines and yacht).
- Gain an understanding of the main frameworks, processes and methodologies commonly used
to formulate the strategy of luxury goods.
- Gain an understanding about the managerial dilemma between the “creative driven” approach
and the “market driven” approach.
- Gain practical experience in developing strategies where creativity is key, and understand how
it differ from other traditional methodologies to formulate the strategy.
- Develop your skills toward the appreciation of creativity as a business asset.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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28th June 2023
We will pay attention to what luxury meant for previous/ancient societies and what we can learn out
if it.
SESSION 6 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Essence of Luxury: The source of Extraordinariness.
What qualifies a luxury firm? How companies can create value as a luxury player?
In this session we will approach to the value creation process of luxury.
Group Work: See group project description for details.
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SESSION 8 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Nature of Luxury: The role of creativity.
Why creativity is so important for luxury firms?, And what implications does creativit bring to the
managerial of luxury?
Creativity is a fundamental driver behind the rationale and success of a luxury player.
In this session we will unveil the critical difference between the creative process and the
management of creativity.
SESSION 9 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Means of Luxury: Unveiling Luxury competion.
Book Chapters: Strategic Luxury Management (Chapter 6) (See Bibliography)
Group Work: See group project description for details.
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28th June 2023
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Class participation
Class participation is essential in order for you to get the maximum benefits from the course. I will
rely on the quality of interventions, rather than their quantity, to evaluate your participation. A good
intervention advances the class understanding of the issue and builds on previous comments.
Class participation is more valuable when is the outcome of previous preparation of the readings
and content covered on each session.
Likewise the student will be asked ot perform individual assignements that will contribute to his
class partipation grade. Further information will be provided in class.
Individual Exam
More information will be delivered in class on Session 1.
Group Presentation - Luxury firm analysis.
Guidelines
Today luxury firms face a wide array of challenges to remain competitive. The evolution of the
market and the client base make more difficult for luxury firms to sustain or even enhance their
market positioning. This project is intended to reserach the current state of a luxury firm to gain a
deeper understanding of the way the firm competes in the market.
The instructor will offer alternatives of luxury frims to choose from. Nevertheless the groups are free
to select their own company, always under the supervision of the instructor.
A part of the sessions described below will be used by the teams to transfer the lessons of the
course into their analysis of the luxury firm selected. The teams can use the following description as
a guidance.
Sessions 3 - Company selection.
In this session the team will work on the identification and justification of the firm selected. At this
stage the group should gain an understanding of why this is a luxury. Likewise the group will
research the industry and gain critical lessons (like the role technology, client profile evolution,..)
and identify key players of the industry.
Session 6 - The firm, antecedents and its strategy.
In this session the team will concentrate on the firm. The team must gain a deep understanding of
their origins, the reasons for its early success/failures and their current strategic positioning.
Aspects to be clarified at this stateb are: the source of Competitive Advantage, key resources and
capabilities to sustain their market positioning, the firm's marketing mix.
Session 9 - The firm and its current situation.
In this session the tema will explore the current situation of the firm. The analysis in the previous
stages was meant to provide an advance knowledge of the firm and the industry. Here the team will
use those lessons to identify potential areas of improvement and analyze what market changes
could impact its current situation. Likewise, the team is expected to reflect of the role of creativity,
idenitfying the creative value system. To conclude, the team will concentrate on the lessons gained
and the articulation of the final presentation. Which lessons have we obtained with this project?, Are
we sure we have a clear answer to the question we originally defined?, which are the key course
lessons that have helped gained a better understanding of the selected firm?
Presentation.
The presentation will cover the following parts. This is a suggested strucutre to help you understand
the delviery, feel free to modify or change if needed.
Part 1. Analysis of the Luxury Firm
- Source of extraordinariness (ESSENCE). why this is/was a luxury firm?, rationale for their value
creation and existence as a luxury firm.
- This might include the understanding of their Origins (founder, reasons for early/later success,
6
28th June 2023
reasons for decay if any, reason for iconic products, key R&C…)
- The firm today (MEANS): Comprehensive overview of the firm and how they compete (financial
overview, product portfolio, price range, target customer, distribution systems, communication
tactics…)
Part 2. Analysis of the Luxury Market (Industry)
- Situation analysis. Key current market facts (market size, growth, trends, players…)
- Creative Value System (NATURE). Role of Creativity in this industry: how does it work and
why.
Part 3. Assessment of Current Situation.
- Any major problem/issue identified? Any area of improvement/inconsistency?
- No need for an actual recommendation or plan.
- Insights/Lessons of the team based on firm’s strategy.
- How positive/negative are you about the future development of the firm?, why?
Delivery
- 15 min presentation, plus 5min Q&A. (subject to be modified based on total number of
students).
- Creativity welcome (no need of ppt, role play...)
- Include a final slides stating all the sources used in your research.
Grade Scheme
The academic performance of students is based on a 10 point scale according to the grading
ranges below:
- 0.0 - 4.9: Fail (F)
- 5.0 - 6.9: Pass (P)
- 7.0 - 8.9: Very Good (VG)
- 9.0 - 10: Excellent (E)
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 40 %
Group 40 %
Presentation
Class Participation 20 %
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28th June 2023
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- David Millán Planelles. (2021). Strategic Luxury Management. Routledge. ISBN
9780367858377 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
8
28th June 2023
provide further indications.
9
28th June 2023
INVESTMENT ANALYSIS AND PORTFOLIO
MANAGEMENT
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 INAN-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PAOLO GIANCANE
Paolo Giancane has been the Deputy General Manager of UniCredit’s
corporate finance team in Beijing and Hong Kong from the establishment of the
practice in 2005 through 2009. During this period he participated in several
equity financings on behalf of Chinese clients. He also advised European
clients in prospective investments in China and divestitures of European assets
to Chinese buyers. In the last 2 years, Mr. Giancane has continued to advise
Chinese private equity funds and European strategic investors in cross-border
investments, currently on behalf of a leading Chinese merchant bank.
He has lived and worked in China since 2005, principally in Beijing and Hong
Kong, where he developed strong relationships with local businessmen,
government officials, and foreign multinationals' China operations. Such
experience has helped Paolo navigate the intricacies of Chinese culture and
business environment and design the most appropriate route to achieve an
investment goal in Mainland China.
From 2002 through 2005, Mr. Giancane worked as a Vice President at
UniCredit Corporate & Investment Banking in the Milan office advising
multinational clients including Telecom Italia, Enel, Heineken and Autostrade
(Italy’s largest highway operator) in cross-border transactions.
Prior to joining UniCredit in 2002, Paolo Giancane worked at Lehman Brothers
in Milan, London and New York in the corporate finance and leveraged finance
groups. He was exposed to M&A, equity and debt transactions in Continental
Europe, United States and emerging markets.
1
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19th June 2023
Mr. Giancane holds a BA Degree from Bocconi University in Milan and a MSc
in Finance from London Business School. He attended executive management
programs at Imperial College in London and the Spanish Institute of Energy in
Madrid. He has also spoken at various conferences organized by the UniCredit
Group in the field of mergers & acquisitions to and from China and given
interviews to economic magazines and news channels on financial and
economic topics.
Paolo Giancane holds the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation which
- according to CFA Institute - has become the most respected and recognized
investment credential in the world.
PREREQUISITES
Previous attendance of Corporate Finance and/or Macroeconomy courses is strongly advised for
students willing to enroll.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This course is intended to help students understand how professional managers manage their
clients’ money to derive the maximum benefit from what they earn. It mixes investment instruments
and capital markets with theoretical detail on evaluating investments and opportunities to satisfy
risk-return objectives, in a global investment context. Blending theory with practical examples, the
program outlines the most important issues surrounding modern investment analysis & portfolio
management.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Investment professionals require broad-based financial skills: they not only must possess an
extensive understanding of the financial markets, including structure, organization, efficiency,
portfolio management, risk and return, and planning and construction, but they must also have a
strong sense of how to evaluate industries and companies prior to engaging in an analysis of a
specific stock.
The objective of this course is to provide a comprehensive overview of the fundamental principles
of investment analysis (for both traditional asset classes and alternative investments) and portfolio
management. We will do so outlining the entire flow of the portfolio management process, from
formulating an Investment Policy Statement to portfolio construction, trade execution, and
monitoring and rebalancing of a portfolio.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
2
19th June 2023
Exercises in class, 8.0 % 10.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 4.0 % 5.0 hours
Individual studying 64.0 % 80.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 125.0 hours
PROGRAM
3
19th June 2023
- The appropriate strategic asset allocation for an individual investor’s specific investment goals
and constraints: case studies
- The importance of “Human Capital” as part of the lifetime financial advice
SESSION 3 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
The first part of the course focuses on the process of private wealth management and the
preparation of an “Investment Policy Statement” or “IPS” for the individual investor. The IPS is a
fundamental reference in the investment process of clients’ assets: it allows the manager to identify
needs, goals, and risk tolerance of the investor, as well as limitations under which the investment
portfolio must operate. The ultimate goal is to formulate an investment strategy to tax-efficiently
match such potentially diverging requirements.
We will then address the concepts and practices relevant to prepare the investment policy
statement for institutional investors (in this course we will narrow our focus on pensions plans,
insurance companies and banks). Additional attention will be given to the practice of asset/liability
management and its implications for asset allocation and risk management.
- Source of wealth, measure of wealth, and stages of life and their impact on an individual
investor’s risk tolerance
- Analysis of different investors’ personality types
- The process of creating an investment policy statement
- The appropriate strategic asset allocation for an individual investor’s specific investment goals
and constraints: case studies
- The importance of “Human Capital” as part of the lifetime financial advice
SESSION 4 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
The first part of the course focuses on the process of private wealth management and the
preparation of an “Investment Policy Statement” or “IPS” for the individual investor. The IPS is a
fundamental reference in the investment process of clients’ assets: it allows the manager to identify
needs, goals, and risk tolerance of the investor, as well as limitations under which the investment
portfolio must operate. The ultimate goal is to formulate an investment strategy to tax-efficiently
match such potentially diverging requirements.
We will then address the concepts and practices relevant to prepare the investment policy
statement for institutional investors (in this course we will narrow our focus on pensions plans,
insurance companies and banks). Additional attention will be given to the practice of asset/liability
management and its implications for asset allocation and risk management.
- Source of wealth, measure of wealth, and stages of life and their impact on an individual
investor’s risk tolerance
- Analysis of different investors’ personality types
- The process of creating an investment policy statement
- The appropriate strategic asset allocation for an individual investor’s specific investment goals
and constraints: case studies
- The importance of “Human Capital” as part of the lifetime financial advice
4
19th June 2023
- Constraints
- Investment policy statements for pension funds, insurance companies and banks
- Asset/Liability imbalance and the concept of expanded balance sheet
Book Chapters: Managing Investment Portfolios: A Dynamic Process - Chapter 3 (See Bibliography)
5
19th June 2023
Once completed the Investment Policy Statement for its client, the manager will start building
capital market expectations, as an investment decision is not simply a binary "buy" or "sell," but
more so a continuous spectrum. Investment analysis and valuation information helps determine
whether to have relatively more or relatively less of a given asset class. Valuation is not just a
matter of finding a number; rather, it is trying to bracket a "range of reasonableness", accepting the
fact that there is inevitably a range of uncertainty in any investment decision.
- The role of capital market expectations in the portfolio management process
- Formal tools: statistical analysis, discounted cash flows models, the risk premium approach,
and financial equilibrium models
- The phases of the business cycles and their impact on short-term and long-term capital market
returnsThe Taylor Rule and central bank behavior
SESSION 11 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
- Major approaches to economic forecasting
- Economic information as a tool to forecasting asset return
- How to suggest and to justify changes in global market portfolios based on expected changes
in macroeconomic factors
- The role of developing countries, especially BRICs, in a global invested portfolio
Book Chapters: Managing Investment Portfolios: A Dynamic Process - Chapter 4 (See Bibliography)
6
19th June 2023
SESSION 14 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
After having duly reported in the investment policy statement the client’s risk and return objectives
as well as specific constraints, and formulated capital market expectations, the manager’s next task
is to match both aspects and to determine the relevant strategic asset allocation. Minimum and
maximum permissible asset class weights can be used as a risk control mechanism.
- Strategic versus tactical asset allocation
- Asset-only and asset/liability management approaches to asset allocation
- Selection and justification of an appropriate set of asset classes for different types of investor:
case studies
- Major steps pertaining to the establishment of an appropriate asset allocation
- The case for international diversification
Book Chapters: Managing Investment Portfolios: A Dynamic Process - Chapter 5 (See Bibliography)
7
19th June 2023
- Selection and justification of an appropriate set of asset classes for different types of investor:
case studies
- Major steps pertaining to the establishment of an appropriate asset allocation
- The case for international diversification
8
19th June 2023
SESSION 22 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
- Selection of an appropriate benchmark for a fixed-income portfolio
- Pure bond indexing, enhanced indexing and active investing
- Classical immunization strategy and cash flow matching
- Selection of an equity investment approach based on the investor’s IPS
- Alternative methods to establishing passive exposure to an equity market
- Style analysis and equity style box analysis
- Sell actions performed by active investors
SESSION 24 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
COURSE RECAP / MOCK EXAM
SESSION 25 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
FINAL EXAM
EVALUATION CRITERIA
9
19th June 2023
Class Participation 30 %
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- John L. Maginn, Donald L. Tuttle ,Dennis W. McLeavey, Jerald E. Pinto. (2007).
Managing Investment Portfolios: A Dynamic Process. 3rd edition. John Wiley &
Sons Inc. ISBN 9788126564446 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
10
19th June 2023
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
11
19th June 2023
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
12
19th June 2023
INVESTMENT BANKING
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 INBA-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Prof. Dr. Alexander de Groot holds a PhD in Finance and a Master in Research
from IE Business School as well as an MBA from Vlerick Business School
(Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium) and a BBA from Nyenrode, The
Netherlands University of Business. He has taught at the University of London
and the University of Gibraltar.
He started his career in investment banking in fixed income derivatives in
London and then founded KBC-Petercam Derivatives in 1992, which became
one of the leading equity derivatives trading houses in Europe. Subsequently
he became managing partner and member of the management committee of
Petercam, the largest Belgian investment bank, responsible for all Financial
Markets, M&A and Risk Management.
PREREQUISITES
- Students should have completed successfully an introductory course in corporate finance and
should be familiar with concepts such as time value of money.
- Willingness to learn new methods and work with databases like Bloomberg.
- Good working knowledge of Excel.
- Strong quantitative skills would give an advantage in the course.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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Edited by Documentation
16th June 2023
This course delves into the structure, management and practices of investment banking (IB)—from
larger more universal players to boutique operations. It examines the business activities of fixed
income and equities trading, mergers and acquisitions, financing and investment; and, the creation
of value through financial advisory services. It looks into the business practices of private equity,
hedge funds and trading operations; and, the role of each in facilitating investment, the deployment
of capital and the changing face of risk-taking activities. The course emphasizes the role of the IB
financial advisor and his/her importance in securing and facilitating IB business opportunities. This
course is about the businesses of investment banking.
Importantly, through our class discussions and case-study work, each student will bring the
answers to these questions into personal focus. Students are exposed to both the diagnostic and
prescriptive processes of IB allowing them to partake in the financial advisory process; and,
understand what it means to be an IB practitioner or valued client.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The main objective of the course is to provide students with the necessary theoretical and
conceptual tools used in investment banking. This course will provide an introduction and general
understanding of investment banking activities and the mechanics and financial analysis required to
value, negotiate and successfully close transactions.
The course will provide the intellectual framework used in the investment banking process: financial
analysis, valuation and the mechanics of deal structuring and trading. Other learning objectives
include analysis and valuation in M&A and LBO settings and understanding the sources of capital in
the context of these transactions.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
2
16th June 2023
SESSION 2 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Fixed Income Valuation Techniques: Overview
Book Chapters: Zvi Bodie, Alex Kane & Alan Marcus. (2022). Essentials of Investments - Ch. 10 &
11 (IE Library)
To be provided
To be provided
3
16th June 2023
Leveraged Buyouts Analysis
Book Chapters: Joshua Rosenbaum & Joshua Pearl. (2021). Investment Banking - Valuation,
Leveraged Buyouts, and Mergers & Acquisitions - Ch. 5 (IE Library)
To be provided
Rosenbaum, Pearl Ch 7
Book Chapters: Joshua Rosenbaum & Joshua Pearl. (2021). Investment Banking - Valuation,
Leveraged Buyouts, and Mergers & Acquisitions - Ch. 7 (IE Library)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
4
16th June 2023
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Zvi Bodie, Alex Kane & Alan Marcus. (2022). Essentials of Investments. 12th.
McGraw Hill. ISBN 9781260772166 (Printed)
- Joshua Rosenbaum & Joshua Pearl. (2021). Investment Banking - Valuation,
Leveraged Buyouts, and Mergers & Acquisitions. 3rd. Wiley. ISBN 9781119823421
(Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
5
16th June 2023
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
6
16th June 2023
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
16th June 2023
LEAN THINKING
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 LT-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Operations and Business Analytics
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
No special prerequisites are needed to attend this course. All students are
welcome to discover together the fascianting world of Lean Thinking.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
We can define Lean Thinking as a philosophy of working which main objective is to maximize value
for Customers minimizing waste during the process.
This business strategy was created by Toyota in a manufacturing environment (Lean
Manufacturing). Toyota Production System was created as a smart analysis of the possible waste
in the car manufacturing line. At the same time, Toyota developed several tools to reduce all kind of
identified waste. The results of this philosophy were outstanding and guide Toyota to leadership in
its sector.
The initial concept was later extended to Service Companies (Lean Service) and also to other
business sectors (Lean Banking, Lean Tourism, Lean Health Care, Lean Education, Lean
Government, Lean Construction, etc.). Even new products and services development were
captivated by the principles of Lean to create “Lean Design Thinking”.
A new trend in Lean is to involve all the areas of the organizations and establish Lean Thinking as a
new way of working and getting differentiation.
There are two components of the formula Lean Thinking we are going to explore during this course:
- Maximizing the Value for Customers: It is mandatory for the companies to be Customer
oriented and to identify needs and to analyse Customer Satisfaction to offer the right
product/service at the right place, and in time. At the same time we must get differentiation
through Customer Experience, and try to understand customers’ satisfaction and meet the
“Value for money” customers are willing to pay.
- Minimizing Waste: “Muda” or Waste is everything in the process not adding value for
customers, and it is very important to analyse all kind of waste (unnecessary movement,
defects, lost time, overproduction, stocks, non used talent, etc.). Once identified waste, we
need to develop a complete “Lean Tools Kit” to reduce or eliminate them.
Strategic Management, Marketing, Operations Management and Human
Resources Management play an important role in the definition and
implementation of Lean Thinking, so integration all among the organization is
needed.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Discover all variants of Lean Thinking and its principles which guide companies, not only in the
2
21th June 2023
strategic definition of Lean Thinking, but also during the implementation of this philosophy.
- Lean Manufacturing
- Lean Sercice
- Lean apply to specific business sectors (Construction, Banking, HealthCare,
Government, Tourism). Identify Value Proposition and its link to Satisfaction and Quality
Service.
- Identify and classify Waste and all all the tools and technic to eliminate them (Lean Tools Kit)
- Study the propper Change Management to transform a traditional Company into a Lean
Thinking Organisation.
- Study the latest applications of Lean Thinking: Lean Design and Lean Start-ups.
- Analyze the appropiate process, steps and best practices to implement Lean Thinking
- Build an organisation oriented to Lean Thinking and analyze the best Human Resource
Strategy
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
21th June 2023
SESSION 2 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
FIRST COMPONENT OF THE LEAN FORMULA: MAXIMIZING THE VALUE FOR THE
CUSTOMER
- Dimensions of Value
- Value creator and value destructor
- Best practices in Customer centric organizations
- From Push to Pull Strategy as Lean Thinking requirement
- Mass Customization: The four faces of Mass Customization
- Customer Experience as a key factor to create Customer Value
During this session we shall do a live team-work activity related to "Customer Value". All the
instruction will be given at the beginning of the session and every team will have time to prepare
and present this activity during this double session. Read carefully all the assigned lecture before
this double session.
Technical note & tutorials: Focus on Customers (MKS020002-U-ENG-WOD)
Article: Cracking the Code of Mass Customization (HBS SMR315-PDF-ENG)
Article: The great enemy of Customer Centricity: Business Silo mentality (LinkedIn)
4
21th June 2023
SECOND COMPONENT OF THE LEAN FORMULA: MINIMIZING WASTE. WASTE DEFINITION
AND LEAN TOOLS KIT TO REDUCE IT
- Lean Tools Kit to reduce waste, part 2:
- SRM (Supplier Relationship Management)
- Keiretsu
- Lean Six Sigma
- Principles of the waiting lines
- Heijunka
- Quality at the source
- Total Quality Management
Multimedia Material: Top 25 Lean Tools (Lean Production)
SESSION 8 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
LEAN CONSUMPTION. LEAN APPLIED TO SERVICE INDUSTRIES AND BUSINESS SECTORS
- Lean consumption
- Lean Service best practice: Southwest Airlines
Article: Lean Consumption (HBS R0503C-PDF-ENG)
Practical Case: Southwest Airlines in Baltimore (HBS 602156-PDF-ENG)
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21th June 2023
- Lean consumption
- Lean applied to business sectors:
- Lean Tourism
- Lean Banking
- Lean Construction
- Lean Health-Care
- Lean Education
- Lean Government
- Lean Hospitality
Teamwork Presentations. Every team will present a 10 minutes presentation about a service
industry. Professor will give all the indications to each group from the very beginning of the course.
SESSIONS 10 - 11 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Fieldwork at a company to analyze a best practice in Lean Thinking. Activity to be done in
teams: Lean Thinking at IKEA.
Professor will give all the indications to prepare this teamwork activity.
6
21th June 2023
Every student will present her/his individual presentation in a topic selected by her/him: A Pecha
Kucha Presentation: 20 slides temporized to 20 seconds (a 6 minutes and 40 seconds
presentation).
Summary and Wrap up.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
7
21th June 2023
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- James P. Womack & Saniel T. Jones. (2003). Lean Thinking. Banish waste and
create wealth in your corporation.. Business and Economics. ISBN 0743249275
(Digital)
- Jeffrey Liker. The toyota way: 14 Management Principles from the World's
greatest manufacturer. McGraw Hill. ISBN 0071392319 (Digital)
- Dabashis Sarkar.. (2007). Lean for service organizations: a holistic approach for
achieving operational excellence and improve. ASQ Quality Press. ISBN
0873897242 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
8
21th June 2023
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
9
21th June 2023
MARKETING & VIDEOGAMES
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 M&V-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Marketing and Communication
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
The Videogame sector has been left aside for decades as a kids&teen sector not worthy of
analysis. In this subject, the professor will explain the current videogaming situation, trend analysis,
innovation process and main marketing tools. On top of it, several guest speakers from major
videogame players (Xbox, Playstation, Nintendo, etc) will show their own part of the picture.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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At the end of the subject, the student will have obtained the necessary theoretical knowledge to
manage brands and identify latest trends in the Videogame industry. Additionally, the student will
be able to make decisions at a strategic level to properly prioritize available resources.
To balance this knowledge, the student will have learned , through case studies, to face real life
situations and critical issues related to the day to day life of a Videogame Product / Brand Manager
, his/her relationship with agencies and the ability to search info, use the most relevant studies
available and identify potential research.
The main objective of the course is to show students the different phases that compose Videogame
brand management, both at a strategic and an operational level, as well as the use of sources and
tools that allow the right decision taking.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
SESSION 5 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Pre-reading: Offline and online communication
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19th June 2023
SESSION 7 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Brands and Videogame production
SESSION 10 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Industry Leader Practitioner - Hobbyconsolas Editor in Chief Spain
SESSION 13 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Videogames and PR
EVALUATION CRITERIA
3
19th June 2023
As a result of IE’s ´liquid learning´ model, all students must abide to the attendance policy for AY
2021-22 where physical (in-person) attendance to class is compulsory for all regular Face-to-Face
courses. Those students who, due to exceptional cases (that have been pre-approved by IE), are
connecting remotely to class sessions and not physically in the classroom are required to fully
connect their camera and microphone at all times , and must actively participate during the
sessions (using all necessary audiovisual equipment), just as their fellow peers who are physically
present in the classroom on campus.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
Ø Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit evaluation
for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the attendance rule,
and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must directly re-enroll
in the course during the next Academic Year).
Ø It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
Ø The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Ø Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
4
19th June 2023
ISBN 9780132171472 (Printed)
- Morgan Ramsay. (2012). Gamers at Work: Stories Behind the Games People
Play. 1st. Apress. ISBN 9781430233510 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
5
19th June 2023
MARKETING STRATEGY FOR DECISION MAKING
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 MSDM-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Marketing and Communication
Number of sessions: 20
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 4.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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21th June 2023
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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21th June 2023
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Finally, it’s absolutely mandatory to read the simulation manual carefully before
the first online session. The manual is a very easy-to-read description and
overview of the market, the products, the customers, and the general
environment you are going to face in the simulation.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
3
21th June 2023
Practical Case: Markstrat for executives: The srategic marketing simulation (MKS010081-U-ENG-
WOD)
Complementary Information: Marketing strategy for decision making (A) (MKS040134-A-ENG-PPT)
Complementary Information: Marketing strategy for decision making (B) (MKS040034-B-ENG-PPT)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
The evaluation would be a combination of group performance in the simulation and individual
participation as well as a deliverable individual report and a quiz. The entire course is about
teamwork and group decision making; that is why the group performance in the simulation is a very
important component of the final grade, accounting for 40% of the overall score of the participant.
But there will be also an individual grade based on the performance of each of the participants in
terms of individual participation and involvement in the course (including a peer review evaluation)
and an intermediate Markstrat quiz The final component will be an individual essay to be submitted
after finishing the course where every student would describe his/her learnings from the simulation,
the strategies their team adopted, what went right and what went wrong in the eventual outcome.
4
21th June 2023
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
5
21th June 2023
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
6
21th June 2023
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS: CURRENT
TRENDS, ECONOMIC DETERMINANTS &
STRATEGIES
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 MCCT-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Economics
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
1
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20th June 2023
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
It is well acknowledged that multinational firms are currently key players in the
world economy. Moreover, processes of market integration and globalisation
have increased multinationals´ activities. As a consequence, the geographical
pattern of capital formation, trade and technological spillovers is to an
increasing extent determined by the different business strategies chosen by
multinational firms (Why, When, Where and How to invest).
The emphasis of this course is to analyse the fundamentals of multinational
corporations from an economic perspective and to understand their business
strategies. The overall aim of the course is to provide students with a
conceptual and theoretical knowledge and skill set that will allow them to
successfully perform in international business environments.
The course first concentrates on defining and analysing the main concepts
regarding multinational activity and its current facts and overall trends
worldwide. Additionally, a comprehensive description and discussion of the
international economic context is outlined focusing on globalisation, regionalism
and the digital economy. After that, students will learn and understand a broad
set of theories explaining the different forces, processes, methodologies and
consequences in multinationals´ business strategies. Along the different
lectures, relevant multinational firms’ examples will be provided for a better
understanding. Furthermore, the theoretical sessions are supported by real
case studies and exercises about multinational corporations that will be
carefully discussed in practical-discussion sessions.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The aim of the course is to provide students with a broad and up-to-date knowledge on a major
dimension of international business: multinational corporations. This course equips students with a
clear insight into current trends, economic determinants, strategies and economic effects of
multinational firms.
Objectives to be attained along the course:
- Define the multinational firm and analyse its evolution, current trends and associate business
decisions regarding why, when, how and where to invest.
- Address current globalisation, regionalism and digital economy to understand the challenges
and opportunities that multinationals face in the current international context.
- Critically examine the economic determinants of multinationals activities.
- Provide a detailed understanding about FDI economic theories.
- Understand the various entry modes and organisational structures that multinationals may
choose when entering in a foreign market.
- Analyse the potential economic impacts of multinational activity in host and home countries.
- Carefully discuss real world examples and relevant case studies about multinational firms.
- Prepare students for careers in the international business field.
Skills to be acquired during the course:
- Apply theories and concepts to analyse the multinational firm and to formulate and implement
international business strategies.
- Address and debate controversial issues and case studies related with multinationals
2
20th June 2023
strategies.
- Demostrate independence of thought during class discussions and coursework.
- Search, select, synthesise and analyse data in order to build arguments and present
information effectively and logically.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
The content of the course is structured into fifteen sessions, divided into four Units that are detailed
below. Sessions are a combination of theoretical lectures with practical discussions/exercises and
case studies. The course material (lecture slides and readings) will be available on Campus Online
(see also the blibiography section).
UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO MNEs & INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT: sessions 1-4.
UNIT 2: ECONOMIC DETERMINANTS OF MNEs ACTIVITY: sessions: 5-8.
UNIT 3: SRATEGIC CONFIGURATIONS OF MNEs: sessions 9-10.
UNIT 4: MNEs EFFECTS ON HOME & HOST COUNTRIES: sessions 11-14.
Note that the last session is devoted to the final exam (session 15).
3
20th June 2023
Sustainability Topics:
- Economic Development
CURRENT FACTS AND TRENDS IN MULTINATIONAL ACTIVITY
Lecture 2: Summary and discussion about current stylised facts and overall trends in multinational
activity worldwide using multinational activity data.
4
20th June 2023
SESSION 8 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Sustainability Topics:
- Economic Development
COUNTRY-LEVEL CASE STUDIES
Class 2: Analysis of one country-level case study about multinational activity: Ireland´s FDI
Success. Asynchronous exercise.
SESSION 10 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Sustainability Topics:
- Economic Development
COMPANY-LEVEL CASE STUDIES
Class 3: Analysis of one company-level case study about multinational firms: Huawei´s
Internationalization Success. Asynchronous exercise.
SESSION 13 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Sustainability Topics:
- Economic Development
MULTINATIONAL FIRMS: HEROES OR VILLAINS OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
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20th June 2023
Class 4: Non-economic effects of multinational activity. Asynchronous exercise.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
ORDINARY EVALUATION
Your final grade in the course will be based on a combination of different items that are described in
the table at the end of this section and that are described in detail next.
A. CLASS PARTICIPATION (10%)
Two main criteria will be used in reaching judgment about your class participation:
Attendance: Attendance to class is compulsory. (1) Students must comply with the 70%
attendance rule. (2) Punctuality will be taken into consideration when grading this assistance item
and the teacher reserves the right to allow attendance to class to those students not being on time.
Finally, (3) general attitude and behaviour in class will be also considered. Students affecting the
class environment in a negative way will lose points in the assistance grade.
Active participation: participation in class will be evaluated positively if students: (1) attain a
threshold quantity of contributions that is sufficient for making a reliable assessment of comment
quality. Additionally, (2) participation will be evaluated in quality terms. A high quality comment
reveals depth of insight, rigorous use of case evidence, consistency of argument, and realism. A
high quality presentation of ideas must consider the relevance and timing of comments, and the
flow and content of the ensuing class discussion. It demands comments that are concise and clear,
and that are conveyed with a spirit of involvement in the discussion at hand.
B. GROUP ACTIVITIES (40%)
Students are expected to complete exercises in the practical sessions. There will be some group
assignments that the students will have to solve regarding those practical sessions. Groups must
be of 3-4 students. More details about these assignments will be given in class.
C. FINAL EXAM (50%)
The final exam will take place at the end of the semester and will cover all the content of the
course. The exam will be about the most relevant issues discussed during the course. More details
about this exam will be provided in advance in class.
The passing grade of the course is 5 out of 10. You need to score at least 3.5 on the final exam to
pass the overall course, even if you have already passed the course through the other course
assessments.
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20th June 2023
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 50 % Exam
Group Work 40 % Exercises and
Asynchronous
Activities
Class Participation 10 % Participation
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit evaluation for
the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the attendance rule, and
therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must directly re-enroll in
the course during the next Academic Year).
It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
7
20th June 2023
- UNCTAD. UNCTAD. World Investment Report 2022. ISBN 9789211129 (Digital)
- Barba-Navaretti, G. and A. J. Venables. Multinational Firms in the World
Economy. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691214276 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
20th June 2023
NEGOTIATION
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 NEG-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Negotiation
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
1
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21th August 2023
There are no mandatory prerequisites for this course.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This course is part of the BBA Elective group of courses. It mixes theory and
practical cases to enhance participant´s negotiation skills.
Negotiation is in the air. We engage into negotiations with potential employers,
classmate, spouses, roommates, landlords, parents, merchants, and many
others. Determining what price we will pay, how much we want to be paid, who
will cook dinner tonight.. all of these are negotiations. However, while we
negotiate often, many of us know very little about the strategy and psychology
of effective negotiations. Why do we sometimes get our way while other times
we walk away feeling frustated with our ability to achieve the agreement we
desire.
Negotiation is the art and science of securing agreements between two or more
interdependent parties. This course has two purposes. First, we will discuss
and apply theories developed as guides to improving negotiation (the science).
Second, students will develop and enhance negotiation skill by negotiating with
other students in realistic simulations (the art).
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
2
21th August 2023
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 20.0 % 15.0 hours
Discussions 20.0 % 15.0 hours
Exercises in class, 20.0 % 15.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 20.0 % 15.0 hours
Individual studying 20.0 % 15.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 75.0 hours
PROGRAM
3
21th August 2023
- Facing a cooperative negotiation
In class practice Interest Exploring Simulation and debate
Practical Case: Kukui Nuts (2 ROLES) (DRRC) (to be delivered by professor)
4
21th August 2023
SESSIONS 13 - 14 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Negotiation Teams and Cultural Aspects
- Multicultural negotiations
- Negotiating in teams
- Closing a Negotiation
- Course Wrap-up
In class negotiating in intercultural team’s simulation practice and debate
Practical Case: Alpha Beta (2 roles) (DRRC) (to be delivered by professor)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Your final grade in the course will be based on both individual and group work of different
characteristics that will be weighted in the following way:
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21th August 2023
Ø The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Ø Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Fisher, Roger and Willian Ury. (1991). Getting to Yes: Negotiation agreeement
without giving in. Penguin Books. ISBN 1844131467 (Printed)
- Fisher, Roger and Saphiro. (2006). Beyond Reasons: Unsing Emotions as you
Negotiate. Penguin Books. ISBN 9780143037781 (Printed)
- William Ury. (2002). Getting Past No: Negotiating with Difficult People. Bantam
Books. ISBN 9780553755589 (Printed)
- Horacio Falçao. Value Negotiation. Pearson. ISBN 9789810681 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
6
21th August 2023
provide further indications.
7
21th August 2023
NEW TRENDS IN MKT MANAGEMENT
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 NTM-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Marketing and Communication
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Online Office hours: Available after each class day in order to provide feedback
and answer any doubts. (Bear in mind, that a previous e-mail is required to
agree the time) Contact details: [email protected]
PREREQUISITES
Due to the specific features of this subject, it may be required for the students
to have previous fundamental knowledge regarding basic marketing concepts
acquired in the previous University years for the correct development of the
learning process.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
1
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13th July 2023
In our fast changing world, understanding the trends that will shape our future
is crutial if companies want to be successful. Offering to the consumer what
they want (product or service) at the right time and place makes the difference.
And being a succesful marketing profesional means to work and know about
innovation, evolving your offering or creating new opportunities, requires not
only to anticipate these trends but also to make them happen.
This course is designed with very inpiring material to stimulate students
creativity, to improve their ability to innovate in marketing, and adapting the
marketing strategies to this fast changing customers needs. The course is
covering different market trends that are shaping the way brands communicate
daily with consumers analising different sectors and companies strategies and
creating new ways to stablish these relationships. These trends covers from the
marketing evolution, digital marketing, relational marketing, sensorial
marketing, emotional marketing to new economy models, technology suchs as
Smart data, blockchain, Green marketing, Edutech, Fintech world and some
new market demands.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Subject main objective is to analyze the different trends that are shaping our
future and are affecting the companies’ relations with the consumers. The focus
during this course, by means of theoretical classes and practical business
cases of the following trends defined below, will be:
To identify different commercial fields and to understand the differences
between them in the marketing area.
To recognize the importance to adapt to each trend specific marketing
strategies and policies in varied context.
To extend student capacity to implement to real context theoretical
concepts learned in practical examples.
To develop efficient communication skills to present and explain ideas and
strategies to the rest of the class.
To encourage students to search and analyze information to take strategic
marketing decisions.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
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13th July 2023
TOTAL 100.0 % 75.0 hours
PROGRAM
SESSION 1 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Defining Marketing and the Marketing Process; Digital Marketing, Social Media and Mobile
Marketing.
Technical note & tutorials: Positioning and Marketing Planning Process (MKS020164-U-ENG-VID)
Technical note & tutorials: Business Goals for Digital Marketing (MKS020203-U-ENG-VID)
SESSION 7 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Innovation Business Models (WORKING BACKWARDS AND LEGO SERIUOS PLAY)
Technical note & tutorials: Disruptive Innovation (IST020197-U-ENG-VID)
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13th July 2023
Practical Case : Innovation Island (STR010110-U-ENG-HTM)
SESSION 10 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
ESG
Technical note & tutorials: Foundations of Sustainability (CSR020013-U-ENG-HTM)
Practical Case : Loewe case study: Sustainability and Durable Luxury (STR010093-U-SPA-WOD)
Technical note & tutorials: Corporate social responsibility and sustainability (FIN020293-U-ENG-
VID)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
A. CLASS PARTICIPATION
A Three main criteria will be used in reaching judgment about your class participation:
Depth and Quality of Contribution: The most important dimension of participation concerns what it is
that you are saying. A high quality comment reveals depth of insight, rigorous use of case evidence,
consistency of argument, and realism.
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13th July 2023
Moving Your Peers’ Understanding Forward: Great ideas can be lost through poor presentation. A
high quality presentation of ideas must consider the relevance and timing of comments, and the
flow and content of the ensuing class discussion. It demands comments that are concise and clear,
and that are conveyed with a spirit of involvement in the discussion at hand.
Frequency: Frequency refers to the attainment of a threshold quantity of contributions that is
sufficient for making a reliable assessment of comment quality. The logic is simple: if contributions
are too few, one cannot reliably assess the quality of your remarks. However, once threshold
quantity has been achieved, simply increasing the number of times you talk does not automatically
improve your evaluation. Beyond the threshold, it is the quality of your comments that must
improve. In particular, one must be especially careful that in claiming more than a fair share of
“airtime”, quality is not sacrificed for quantity. Finally, your attempts at participation should not be
such that the instructor has to “go looking for you”. You should be attempting to get into the debate
on a regular basis.
B. ONLINE FORUM PARTICIPATION/ INDIVIDUAL WORK
Open debates will be open in the virtual campus where participation is a part of this subject,
contributing with examples and ideas.
The aim of this forum is to improve your knowledge in marketing-related last-minute news, where
you will have to be up to date with what are the latest news in this field and discuss with your
classmates about different marketing trends.
D. FINAL GROUP PRESENTATION AND REPORT
You are also expected to complete a final project with your group and present it in written form to
the teacher, as well as conducting a 10-minute power point online presentation to your classmates.
The project will give you the opportunity to reflect on what you have learnt in class and apply it to
some practical problems. More details of the project will be provided by the start of the course.
E. FINAL EXAM
The final exam will check your understanding of marketing and will focus more on the application of
marketing concepts in the different trends. Hence, it might involve the analysis of a “mini” case
study or to work on some short marketing exercises. It might also include some multiple-choice
questions where more than one can be correct and the wrong answers might subtract points.
*Bear in mind that due to some speakers’ agenda, some of the planning mentioned above might
change. However you will be informed at least with one week in advance through your virtual
campus. This might affect also to the presentations day or exam day.
IMPORTANT: during this subject the professor will use a power point presentation that will be
uploaded to the virtual campus one week after each session.
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13th July 2023
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
Ø Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit evaluation
for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the attendance rule,
and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must directly re-enroll
in the course during the next Academic Year).
Ø It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
Ø The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Ø Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Philip Kotler. (2019). Marketing Management. PEARSON. ISBN 9781292248448
(Printed)
- KOTLER. (2023). Principles of Marketing. 19th edition. PEARSON. ISBN
9781292449364 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
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13th July 2023
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
13th July 2023
PRICING FOR VALUE AND PROFITABILITY
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 PVP-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Marketing and Communication
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
no prerequites
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
1
Edited by Documentation
19th June 2023
Pricing is one of the most important marketing decisions, but less understood. Learn and practice
concepts and techniques and get the latest insights on evaluation and formulation of pricing
strategies. Analyse the way companies try to capture value, in addition to profits, in the income they
get.
After this course, you can actively participate in the process of formulating pricing strategies for
your own products and services, or those of your company. This course also focuses on the
dynamics of pricing and the reaction of competitors. As such, a very pragmatic approach is used
and directly applicable to the day-to-day professional life.
The objective of this course is to introduce you to the concepts, analyses, and activities that
comprise marketing management and to provide practice in assessing and solving marketing
problems.
The course is designed to further develop your critical thinking skills. Ultimately, you should develop
decision-making skills, including the ability to analyse problems, evaluate alternatives, and make
better marketing decisions. If this course is successful, you will feel more prepared to approach new
situations, make decisions and develop strategies based on careful pricing analysis
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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19th June 2023
Book Chapters: The Strategy and Tactics of Pricing; Read Chapter 1 pg. (1-12) (IE
Library)(Optional)
Book Chapters: Pricing and revenue optimization; Read Chapter 2 (IE Library)(Optional)
COMPULSORY
1.-Technical note 1: Beyond the 3 Cs
NON COMPULSORY
Read Chapter 1 pg. (1-12)( T.T. Nagle, J.E. Hogan)
Read Chapter 2 (Robert L. Phillips)
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19th June 2023
Value-based II: demand-based models
1.- Willingness to pay and price optimization; Understanding and researching the price
response curve
2.-Theoretical models: linear, logit, constant elasticity.
3.- Elasticity in practice: Test A/B for elasticity assessment and price optimization
All the theoretical models their relationship with w.t.p. Particular review of price optimization
considering constant elasticity. Tests A/B for elasticity assessment and price optimization
Book Chapters: The Strategy and Tactics of Pricing (Book)
Book Chapters: Pricing Strategy setting price levels, managing price discounts. establishing price
structures; Read Chapter 2 pg 34-38(Optional)
Book Chapters: Pricing and revenue optimization; Read Chapter 3.1,3(Optional)
COMPULSORY
1. Technical note: willingness to pay a practical application
2. Technical note: theoretical models and Test A/B
3. Exercises/short case/quizzes
NON COMPULSORY
1. Read Chapter 3.1,3 (Robert L. Phillips)
2. Read Chapter 2 pg 34-38 (Tim J. Smith)
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19th June 2023
1. Technical note: willingness to pay a practical application
2. Technical note: theoretical models and Test A/B
3. Exercises/short case/quizzes
NON COMPULSORY
1. Read Chapter 3.1,3 (Robert L. Phillips)
2. Read Chapter 2 pg 34-38 (Tim J. Smith)
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19th June 2023
1. Technical note 8
2. Read Chapter 10 Managing conflict thoughfully (T.T. Nagle, J.E. Hogan)
3. Exercises/short case/quizzes
NON COMPULSORY
1. Read chapter 15 Competion and pricing (Tim J. Smith)
6
19th June 2023
Book Chapters: Pricing Strategy setting price levels, managing price discounts. establishing price
structures; Read Chapter 14 Yield management(Optional)
Book Chapters: Pricing and revenue optimization; Read Chapter 11 Customized pricing(Optional)
COMPULSORY
1. Technical notes
2. Short video class
3. Exercises/short cases/ quizzes
NON COMPULSORY
1. Read Chapter 11 Customized pricing (Robert L. Phillips)
2. Read Chapter 14 Yield management (Tim J. Smith)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Your final grade in the course will be based on both individual and group work. The evaluation is
based on:
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19th June 2023
quality of your comment is more important.
4. Class preparation: showing that the student has read the content and/or slides
given participating with knowledge based questions or comments
Note that if you miss the class, regardless of the cause for the absence, you will automatically be
forfeited the opportunity to earn participation credit allocated for that session.
Participation is also attendance and punctuality. Being present at the classroom is absolutely
necessary. The attendance will be checked by you signing the sign-in sheet every single session or
joining online session, that is, twice if there is a double session. It is extremely important not to
forget this, because your attendance record will depend on it. Also, tardiness will affect your grades.
B. CAPSTONE/GROUP ACTIVITY
Each Group should present an analysis of an original case or pricing situation and propose
solutions using the frameworks and expertise gather during the course and presenting it in the
sessions planned in the Syllabus.
At the beginning of the Course, we will discuss further the allowed ideas.
It is particularly valuable how innovative is the situation/ business case and the solutions proposed.
The grading can include some part of peer assessment if the is some reason to think about a
possible unfar workload.
The group activity could include some peer assessment.
C. INDIVIDUAL ACTIVITY: COMPULSORY QUIZZES
There will be some quizzes during the course:
- COMPULSORY: related to the compulsory content, usually online quizzes
D. INTERMEDIATE EXAM/FINAL EXAM
The intermediate and final exam will focus more on the application of pricing concepts. Hence, it
might involve the analysis of several mini cases, a test and some short exercises. There will be only
about the COMPULSORY CONTENT
RETAKE/ RE-SIT POLICE
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
8
19th June 2023
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- T.T. Nagle, J.E. Hogan. (2017). The Strategy and Tactics of Pricing. 6th edition.
Routledge. ISBN 9781138737518 (Printed)
Recommended
- Tim J. Smith. Pricing Strategy setting price levels, managing price discounts.
establishing price structures. Ohio : South-Western ; Andover : Cengage Learning.
ISBN 9781111571290 (Digital)
- Robert L. Phillips. Pricing and revenue optimization. Palo Alto : Stanford
University Press, 2006.. ISBN 9780804781640 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
9
19th June 2023
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
10
19th June 2023
PRIVATE EQUITY
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 PEQ-
NBA.1C.f.OPT.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PROFESSOR BIO
Julio Jiménez-Blanco has 10 years of experience in investment banking, mostly
focused in mergers & acquisitions. He currently works as a Principal at
Greenhill, a leading independent investment bank focused on providing
financial advice globally on significant mergers, acquisitions, restructurings,
financings and capital advisory to corporations, partnerships, institutions and
governments. He is part of the of the founding team of the first Greenhill office
in Spain and has led the execution of several corporate transactions across
different sectors in Spain and globally advising Private Equities and Board of
Directors of diverse companies. Before Greenhill, Julio worked for one of the
leading activist funds in Europe (Alantra QMC) and at the M&A division of
BBVA, one of the largest financial groups globally.
Julio holds a BSc in Business Administration & Finance from CUNEF.
PREREQUISITES
In order to get the most out of this course students must have knowledge in
corporate finance and in the different valuation methodologies
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
1
Edited by Documentation
19th July 2023
With a record level of assets under management, Private Equity (“PE”) has
become a key asset class worldwide, attracting the interest from many. From
regulators and pension funds to companies seeking to raise money to grow or
being disposed, investment banks and various professionals seeking a position
in the industry.
After posting a record-breaking performance in 2021 and 2022, private equities
now face a tough outlook. Spiking interest rates have caused a sharp decline in
deals, exits, and fund-raising during, almost certainly signaling a turn in the
cycle. While this environment will challenge PE to find new ways to create
value and underwrite risk, the long-term outlook for PE remains fundamentally
sound.
In this course, you will lever on the experience you have gained in other
courses, such as corporate finance, to understand the PE industry, its
attractiveness, and its contribution not only to investors but also to the overall
society.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
This course will provide an overview of the type of work performed by a PE fund and a global
perspective of the value creation process in and after the acquisition of a business, which is
something useful for any role in a company. This knowledge could be used not only when working
for a PE, but also for investment banks, consulting firms, for the M&A department of many
companies, for a family business or even by current / future entrepreneurs seeking to raise capital
or dispose their companies.
Among many others, in this course you will:
- Learn the various stages of a PE investment, from deal origination through harvesting returns
- Understand the PE valuation frameworks
- Study tools that PE firms use to structure and finance a deal, create value, and determine exit
timing
- Understand the key drivers in the PE market and key differences between funds’ strategies
- Analyze a deal from the different points of view of a PE firm
- Work in teams to create a paper very similar to what PE present to their investment committees
to approve a deal
- Be exposed to different people that form the Spanish PE network
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
In the first part, the course will set up the foundations and key fundamentals of the PE industry. In
the second part, we will put these into practice by combining real life case method analysis with
suggested readings and guests (mostly leading industry executives).
The course is designed to be highly interactive, and students will learn from discussion in class. In
that sense, while the course is designed to provide students with interesting materials and
facilitated discussion, much of their learning will depend on their engagement, preparation, and
active participation.
In sessions 23 and 24, students will be asked to present an investment opportunity to the rest of
class as if they were the investment committee of a PE. Further instructions (including team
formation and time limitations) will be confirmed after session 1.
Final session (25) will comprise an exam that will test the overall understanding of all the previous
sessions.
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19th July 2023
Students are encouraged to bring their personal computers to class.
PROGRAM
3
19th July 2023
Exit
How to plan and execute divestments
4
19th July 2023
Session with industry professional
5
19th July 2023
Session with industry professional
EVALUATION CRITERIA
6
19th July 2023
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.).
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
7
19th July 2023
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
19th July 2023
PROFESSIONAL ETHICS AND CORPORATE
RESPONSABILITY
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 PECR-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Accounting and Management Control
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Alberto Moreno de Tejada has a PhD in Political Science from the Universidad
Complutense de Madrid and Instituto de Investigación Ortega y Gasset. His
doctoral thesis was a study on ethical leadership in public administration
applying the case study´s methodology. His prime research interest is on
ethics, leadership and governance in organizations. He has published articles
in different newspapers and journals. He is the author of several case studies
of ethics in organizations and of the book: “Funcionarios Ejemplares. Carácter
y liderazgo en la Administración Española”, INAP, 2013.He also holds a MBA
and a B.Sc. in Business Administration as well as LL.B and a Diploma in
Religious Science and in International Finance.
He started his professional career as an investment banker. He is currently a
professional ethics lawyer at Madrid´s Bar. He teaches ethics in finance in
several programmes at the IEB. He was Associate Director of the Executive
Master in Responsible Banking at IEB. He was also a consultant for the OECD
on Ethics Training Programmes for public officials and director and secretary of
the board of a multinational public company.
PREREQUISITES
None
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
1
Edited by Documentation
22th June 2023
Professional Ethics is the part of ethics which applies to the practice of a
profession. For this course, the business ethics concept will be identified to
best practices in business meaning doing the right thing from a holistic
approach to ethics and corporate social responsibility. As students have
already completed an introductory ethics course, they are now familiar with
moral dilemmas, tools and practical knowledge to be applied in everyday life
problems. With this new course we want to go a step further. Students are
required to accomplish in depth knowledge of business ethics that enable them
to acquire the necessary skills to solve ethics conflicts and moral dilemmas that
will appear in their future business careers as a managers or entrepreneurs
and to manage the corporate responsibility inside their business.
Therefore, we develop a theoretical framework to professional ethics and
corporate responsibility focusing on practical tools to understand and apply
business ethics issues. Our approach is person-centred as we believe that
people are the ultimate responsible for the development of ethical cultures in
business organizations. Students will be expected to understand the current
topics, ethical issues and dilemmas generally discussed in the business ethics
field. Moreover, they should become familiar with the tools used in business
organizations to reduce ethics and reputational risks. We will provide numerous
cases to be discussed, along with illustrative examples in order for students to
get a practical knowledge that they could apply in their future business careers.
But above all, they should understand that ethics is a foundation of human
excellence, and deontology an indispensable pillar in entrepreneurship or
business excellence to become better companies to work, to invest or to buy.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The main objective of this course is to grow in personal commitment to building organizational
cultures that promote and reinforce ethical conduct and corporate responsibility.
The course is designed:
- To understand the role of ethics in business
- To gain an understanding of the individual responsibility within the Organization
- To acquire an idea of the mainstream theories and approaches used in business ethics
- To identify the risks to misconducts, malpractice and other unethical actions in business
- To awake a conciseness for the value and necessity of ethics in business
- To develop a compromise with deontology practice as an indispensable pillar towards
achieving business excellent
- To understand the fundamental tools used in corporations to develop ethical cultures
- To appropriate a desire to help oneself and others act ethically at work and in life in general
- To manage the main tools of CSR management: strategy, materiality, reporting, accountability
and measuring
- To understand the value generated by the CSR implementing inside and outside the Company
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
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22th June 2023
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
SESSION 3 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Student presentations and discussions
Practical Case: Audi A8 - The world's first level-3 autonomous vehicle (HBS W20134-PDF-ENG)
Multimedia Material: The Inventor (Prime Video)
3
22th June 2023
Topic: Firms and their purposes
Book Chapters: Business Ethics in Action (Chapters 6 & 7) (See Bibliography)
SESSION 7 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Student presentations and discussions
Article: The Social Responsibility of Business is to Increase its Pro?ts (The New York Times,
September 13, 1970) (CED)
Book Chapters: Doughnut economics (ced)
Multimedia Material: Why it's time for 'Doughnut Economics' (TEDx event) (Youtube)
SESSION 11 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Student presentations and discussions
Technical note: Captured by Cotton (May 2011) (SOMO and ICN)
Technical note: Global Code of Conduct (Pepsico)
4
22th June 2023
EVALUATION CRITERIA
5
22th June 2023
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects. ! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during
the June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next
Academic Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students
have a total of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the
program. Once you have made the changes and agree with the modifications, please resend
the syllabus using the same method as before.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- D. Mele. (2020). Business Ethics in Action. 2nd edition. Red Globe Press. ISBN
9781137609175 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
6
22th June 2023
PROGRAMMING FOR MACRO-FINANCE
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 PFMF-
NBA.1C.f.OPT.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
E-Mail: [email protected]
13.00 to 15.30.
PREREQUISITES
Willingness to work hard, to have a passion for Economics and Finance and to
enjoy programming.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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13th July 2023
This course offers a step-by-step approach to perform top quality macro-
finance analysis like in the research departments of many banks and consulting
firms.
We will cover the basic concepts of programming using Python. It is an open
source interpreted high-level programming language for general-purpose
programming. Python has a design philosophy that emphasizes code
readability, notably using significant whitespace. It provides constructs that
enable clear programming on both small and large scales.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The first objective of this course is to equip the students with programming
skills in Python. These coding skills transfer well to other software or languages
like Ada, C, C++, C#, Fortran, Julia, MATLAB, Perl, etc. The goal of (most)
companies is to solve problems efficiently, while the programming language is
merely a tool. Our goal is to train students who are able to use computers to
solve problems.
The second objective of this course is to train the students with basic skills to
manipulate and interpret macroeconomic and financial data.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
2
13th July 2023
Introduction to Python (ii): Familiarizing with the syntax and semantics.
SESSION 12 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Mathematical Tools: optimization.
SESSION 13 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Portfolio analysis and asset allocation.
3
13th July 2023
SESSION 15 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Excel integration.
SESSION 17 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Financial Derivatives Valuation Framework.
SESSION 18 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Financial Derivatives Valuation Framework (ii).
SESSION 20 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Simulation of Financial Models.
SESSION 21 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Pricing Financial Derivatives.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
4
13th July 2023
RE-SIT / RE-TAKE POLICY
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
Regarding to the newly implemented ´liquid learning´ model, all students must still abide by the
same IEU attendance policy, including those students who are connecting remotely to class
sessions and not physically in the classroom because they are unable to be physically in Spain, on
campus. During the sessions, students connecting remotely are required to fully connect their
camera and microphone at all times, and must actively participate during the sessions (using all
necessary audiovisual equipment), just as their fellow peers who are physically present in the
classroom on campus.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now
reenrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
5
13th July 2023
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Guttag, John V.. (2021). Introduction to Computation and Programming Using
Python with Application to Computational Modeling. Third Edition. The MIT Press.
ISBN 9780262542364 (Digital)
- Hilpisch, Yves. (2019). Python for Finance. 2nd Edition. O’Reilly. ISBN
9781492024330 (Printed)
Recommended
- Oosterlee, Cornelis W. and Lech A. Grzelak. (2020). Mathematical Modeling and
Computation in Finance. With Exercises and Python and MATLAB Computer Code.
First Edition.. World Scientific.. ISBN 9781786347 (Digital)
- Weiming, James Ma. (2015). Mastering Python for Finance. Packt Publishing.
ISBN 9781784394516 (Digital)
- Garita, Mauricio. (2021). Applied Quantitative Finance. Using Python for Financial
Analysis.. First Edition. Palgrave macmillan. ISBN 9783030291402 (Digital)
- Kelliher, Chris. Quantitative Finance with Python. First Edition.. CRC Press. ISBN
978103201443 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
6
13th July 2023
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 PM-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Sustainable Development
Number of sessions: 20
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 4.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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* Linkedin: +.30.000 contacts. up to 32.000 followers
* Owner of the second largest linkedin group in the world about Project
Management call “Dirección Estratégica de Proyectos IE Business School”.
+13.000 members
* Twitter: +8.000 followers
* Klout number +65 (Influencer)
+ IE BUSINESS SCHOOL
* Awarded “the Best Teacher Award Business School IE Open Programs-
Executive Education 2009-2010”
* Award for commitment executive education training 2012 at IE Business
School
* Special award-company executive in 2014 at IE Business School
* I have been awarded 38 times for academic excellence since 2008 until
today.
* Outplacement: + 3.000 mentoring
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
In this world, companies that survive are not the strongest nor the most intelligent, but the most
adaptable to change. For this reason, the market demand now more than ever professionals who
are capable of understanding the world around us, to be able to define a consistent and robust
strategy to implement the necessary changes through well-defined projects and correctly executed
In recent years, we are experiencing major environmental changes that have ever produced,
resulting in a new competitive environment affecting all sectors. In this current environment,
companies need and demand Project Managers who can strategically plan and manage projects in
order to make the necessary changes and thus compete differently.
The company and projects are increasingly linked. Companies need to innovate and therefore do
research projects have to be more efficient and thus make improvement projects must adapt to the
changing world and therefore make plans to adapt to new technologies or regulations, or they must
help others to do so, as in the case of consulting, or as with engineering firms that perform changes
in the environment in which we live.
Gone are the days when the success of the projects is only measured by traditional criteria of time
and cost. The current criteria measure the value of the investment (VOI) and not just the return on
investment (ROI), alignment with the strategy of the Company, the evolving capacity of the solution,
the appropriate use of new technologies and their since everything related to corporate social
responsibility or the absolute respect for the environment.
Project management is a relatively young and new profession, and as such, with great opportunities
for development. The methodologies and doctrines that explain provides enormous benefits in
terms of cost, quality and control for companies, besides being a powerful tool for managing
organizational change, reasons why more and more companies seeking qualified professionals
who can optimally implement it in their daily work.
2
19th June 2023
Undoubtedly, project management there are many books written, most focusing on party planning,
cost control, risk management, and the critical path is calculated on a PER diagram etc. Moreover
viewing which is aimed course, most of you have experience in managing projects and I'm sure the
theoretical part of the project management and have seen several times and although it will be
reviewed will be given a expansion with a focus on business school.
Looking at the statistics (not opinions) today still most projects fail in one of its important
dimensions, as is time, cost and objectives. So I applied so far not work. From this course you want
to take a new approach to teach you to do projects in a different way
In summary I would say that the sessions would run to try a new approach to project management
in general
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
3
19th June 2023
PROGRAM
4
19th June 2023
- Planning tools
- Critical path
- WBS: Work Brakedown Structure
5
19th June 2023
we would discuss in forum the follow
We should have to identify top takeaways of
- Scope management
- Time Management
- Risk management
- Cost management
- Quality management
6
19th June 2023
7. Golden rules. Dale Carnegie
8. Organizational structures. Its importance when planning the same
9. Understand why projects fail. Analysis of the interests of those involved
10. Acquisition staff
a. Competition
b. Troubleshooting
c. Responsibility
11. How to outsource the company?
12. Management salaries. How important is the wage in the retention of talent?
13. What is the difference between groups and teams?
14. Review Belbin roles
15. What conclusions are drawn from Belbin roles?
16. How do you get a team to be effective?
17. Understand that means the resistance to change
a. What is it?
b. How is it prevented?
EVALUATION CRITERIA
7
19th June 2023
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Class Participation 20 % class attention
Final Exam 40 % final test
Group 40 % group presentation
Presentation
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
? Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must
directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
? It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips,
holidays, etc.)
? The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e.,
continuous evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
? Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3 rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave
the Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your
failed subjects.
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year
as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four
(4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
19th June 2023
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
9
19th June 2023
REAL ESTATE ECONOMICS & FINANCE
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 REEF-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
1
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19th June 2023
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, Banco de España,Banco Interamericano de
Desarrollo, Banco Popular, Banco Santander, Banesto, Banif, Bankia, Bolsa de
Valores de Colombia, Bulbank (Sofia-Bulgaria), Comisión Nacional del
Mercado de Valores (CNMV), Confederación Española de Cajas de Ahorro
(CECA), Deusto, Deutsche Bank, Ernest & Young, Escuela de Economía,
Escuela de Finanzas Aplicadas, Escuela de Negocios
NovaCaixaGalicia, Fundacion Abanca, Fundación de Estudios
Financieros, ICADE, IESIDE, IFAES, ING, Instituto Canario de
Empresa, Instituto de Crédito Oficial, Instituto de Estudios Bursátiles
(IEB), Instituto de Estudios Financieros (IEF), Instituto de Estudios Superiores
de Administración (IESA) Caracas-Venezuela, Instituto de Estudios Superiores
San Pablo CEU, Instituto Español de Analistas Financieros, Instituto
BME, Ministerio de Finanzas Ecuador, Morgan Stanley, Options & Futures
Institute, Peat Marwick, Tesoro Público, UNED, Unespa, Universidad de
Oviedo, West LB- Düsseldorf, Zurich Insurance.
Professional experience:
Analistas Financieros Internacionales. Head of Data Analytics, (May 2020-
currently)
Jones Lang Lasalle Head of Valuations & Senior Advisor (2017- currently)
SAREB (Spanish Bad Bank). Director of Risk and Valuations (2013-2017)
Banesto. Director of Treasury Risks (2008-2013)
Barclays. Director of ALM Risks and structuring (2002-2008)
Santander Bank. Director of Methodologies Market Risk (1996-2002)
Analistas financieros Internacionales: Derivative Instruments analyst (1991-
1996)
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This subject will cover the fundamental aspects related to investment in real estate assets as well
as their financing. The different types of real estate assets and the vehicles through which both
direct and indirect investments can be made will be explained. The risks, advantages and
disadvantages and general characteristics of the different real estate investments will be identified.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The main objectives are to provide the student with all the knowledge that revolves around real
estate assets, their impact on the economy, their weight in the portfolios of international investors.
The student will be trained in knowledge, valuation, management and impact of real estate assets
on the economy and finance.
2
19th June 2023
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
3
19th June 2023
a. Interest rate basic treatment, conventions and algebra
b. Yield curve analysis
c. Curves treatment
Excel based exercises
4
19th June 2023
Real Estate Valuation
c. Real estate valuations methodologies: residual value methods
5
19th June 2023
SESSION 21 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Real estate capital markets
Private debt and equity
c. Pricing mortgage loans
d. Non-Bank balance sheet lenders
EVALUATION CRITERIA
The approach of the subject is eminently practical and both fundamental concepts and practical
implementation of everything explained will be evaluated. For this purpose, technical cases will be
constantly developed in class with the use of spreadsheets.
The students' ability to implement models that allow the evaluation of real estate investments is
valued.
6
19th June 2023
Individual 0%
presentation
Group Work 0%
Other 0%
Group 20 %
Presentation
Class Participation 20 %
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- William J. Poorvu.. The real estate game.. ISBN 9780684855509 (Digital)
- Peter Linneman. Real Estate Finance and Investment. ISBN 9780615825670
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19th June 2023
(Digital)
- Eric Shapiro. Modern Methods of valuation.. ISBN 9781138673205 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
19th June 2023
REGULATION OF FINANCIAL MARKETS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 RFM-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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Professor: VÍCTOR RODRÍGUEZ QUEJIDO
E-mail: [email protected]
2
19th June 2023
2011-2015 Chief of Staff of the CNMV
Leading a team of 6 people and including the communication and media area
and with two consecutive CNMV’s Chairs. Member of the CNMV’s
Management Committee. Member of the committee in charge of the
surveillance of the arbitrage process for preference shares. Member of the
commission that proposed the new corporate governance code.
June 2006 Technical Secretary of the Advisory Committee of the CNMV
The Advisory Committee is a consultative body that advises the CNMV’s
Board. It is composed by members representing the different areas of the
Spanish financial sector and the regional governments of those regions with a
stock exchange.
Its main task is to issue an opinion about every piece of financial regulation
proposed by the government or the CNMV before its final approval.
2007 – 2011 Advisor to the Office of the Chairman
As deputy chief of staff.
2001 – 2007 Senior Officer in Market Infrastructures and Accounting
Monitoring the activity of the management companies of the stock exchanges,
derivatives and fixed income markets and central securities depositary.
Introduction of the IFRS (International Financial Reporting Standards) in Spain
and member of the committee in charge of the official translation.
International committees of accounting and auditing.
2000 – 2001 Officer in the Secondary Markets Department
In charge of the fixed income market supervision and the surveillance of the
daily settlement of the central securities depositary.
1999 – 2000 Officer in the Financial Intermediaries Department
Financial intermediaries’ solvency supervision.
1998 – 1999 Junior Officer in the Primary Markets Department
Approval of issuances’ prospectus.
Grupo CP (consulting group)
1997 - 1998 Consultant (SAP)
Publications and academic activities
· Member of the FIDE (Fundación para la Investigación del Derecho
Empresarial) Foundation Academic Council and Co-director of its Financial
Markets Forum.
· “Criptoactivos: naturaleza, regulación y perspectivas” (Cryptoassets:
nature, regulation and perspectives). Observatorio de divulgación financiera
(ODF) de la Fundación de Estudios Financieros, November 2019.
· “El IBEX 35: Una historia de éxito” ("IBEX 35: A Success story").
Economic News May 25, 2017.
· “Resolución de entidades de contrapartida central: una aproximación en
un entorno postcrisis” (“Resolution of central counterparties: Approach in the
global regulatory agenda and response in the European Union”), with José
Manuel Portero. Revista de Estabilidad Financiera del Banco de España, Num.
29, November 2015.
· “Hacia un sistema financiero español más equilibrado: el papel de los
mercados de valores” (“Towards a more balanced Spanish financial system:
the role of the securities markets”), Papeles de la Fundación de Estudios
Financieros nº 47, 2012.
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19th June 2023
· “Transparency in securities markets”, with Fernando Restoy. Moneda y
Crédito, nº 230, 2010.
· “La nueva estructura de la supervisión financiera europea” (“The new
structure of European financial supervision”), with Montserrat Martínez Parera.
Quarterly Bulletin, IV 2009. CNMV.
· “La crisis financiera y el valor razonable. Debate en torno a su impacto y
evaluación de las medidas adoptadas” (“The financial crisis and fair value.
Debate on its impact and evaluation of the measures taken”), with Eduardo
Manso. Quarterly Bulletin, IV 2008. CNMV.
· “Cambios en los mercados financieros y su reflejo en España” (“Changes
in the financial markets and their reflection in Spain”).
PREREQUISITES
No prerequisites
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This course will focus on the economic principles underlying the regulation and supervision of the
financial sector with a particular focus on non-banking sector or activities, and on the interrelations
between macroeconomic policy and financial stability from the regulatory perspective.
It will analyze, in particular, those elements of non-bank financial markets regulation and
supervision that set it aside from other regulated sectors in the economy, and which are directly
associated with the crucial role of this sector in companies´ funding and investment opportunities
for all kind of investors.
We will examine in some detail the different pillars of financial markets regulation: conduct of
business rules, market and markets´ infrastructures functioning and rules, corporate governance
and financial stability, and their different translation in particular into the regulation and supervision
of financial markets and their actors, with special attention to the relevant European Directives in
this field (Market Abuse Directive, MIFID, etc.)
Financial Stability and Macroeconomic Policy stand nowadays in the core of the work and concerns
of regulators, supervisors and politicians around the world, including all the major multilateral
international organizations. The Covid – 19 pandemic and the fiscal and monetary measures
undertaken by the authorities, with their obvious impact on the soundness of financial institutions
and subsequent effects on systemic risk and financial stability, greatly emphasized this trend which,
in any case, was already under way before the crisis. Thus, a part of this course will be devoted to
the associated issues.
Finally, two major issues are now in the center of attention of the concerns of politicians and
financial actors worldwide. Sustainability (which includes climate related but also governance and
social issues) and Cryptoassets and FinTech. Naturally, these issues will also be covered.
Financial regulation (globally or partially) arouses significant criticism amongst the industry, interest
groups and, last, but not least, academia. We will, thus, time permitting, address some of these
criticisms and, in particular, will examine to what extent the benefits of regulation are larger than the
costs inflicted by it to participants. We will do this by means of examining costs and benefits of
particularly relevant pieces of current regulation
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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19th June 2023
The main objective of the course is to complement students acquired knowledge on financial
markets, institutions, analytical tools and methodologies with a view and understanding (based on
the underlying economic foundations) of the regulatory structure of financial markets and
institutions as it relates to financial activity, financial stability and macroeconomic policies
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
5
19th June 2023
SECURITIES MARKETS REGULATION
In comparison to the banking model and its regulation, the key to the appropriate performance of
securities markets and their regulation lies on the availability of complete and verifiable information
(disclosure), the transparency in the operations and the strict observance of the conduct of
business rules amongst market agents and between them and their clients.
Principles of securities regulation (IOSCO Principles)
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Concept of financial stability
Macroprudential policy
Examples of crisis related to systemic risk (the great financial crisis of 2008 and the COVID-19
pandemic)
Entity size, interconnections, complexity, …keys to systemic risk
Macroprudential tools: Specificity and differences with respect to those applied to banking entities
7
19th June 2023
SESSION 12 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
SUSTAINABILITY AND CLIMATE RELATED ISSUES
Information disclosures for public companies (double materiality) and financial intermediaries (on
products and when providing investment advice)
Taxonomy and classification of economic activities
Data: third party data providers and ESG ratings
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year).
The maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0). After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the
ordinary or extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it
be a final exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to
attend the session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your
professor will inform you about the time and place of the review session.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- John Armour, dan Awrey et al. (2016). Principles of Financial regulation. 1st
edition. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198786481 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
9
19th June 2023
REPORTING KPIS USING EXCEL AND BUSINESS
INTELLIGENCE TOOLS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 RKPI-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Accounting and Management Control
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
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Individual studying 21.33 % 16.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 75.0 hours
PROGRAM
SESSION 4 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
OFFLINE ACTIVITY 1
Offline activity to practice data modelling using Excel Power Pivot
SESSION 8 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
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OFFLINE ACTIVITY 2
Offline activity to practice score design using Power BI
SESSION 13 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
OFFLINE ACTIVITY. WORKING ON THE FINAL PROJECT
Offline activity to complete the final projects
EVALUATION CRITERIA
OFFLINE ASSIGNMENTS
Offline assignments will require students to complete exercises about the contents covered at
class.
FINAL PROJECT
In the last part of the course the students (organized in groups) will have to design and prepare a
final project that will cover the course content and that will represent 80% of their final grading.
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20th June 2023
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final project 80 %
Offline 20 %
assignments
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit evaluation
for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the attendance rule,
and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must directly re-enroll
in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Marco Russoa and Alberto Ferrari. (2020). The Definitive Guide to DAX. Second
edition. Pearson Education, Inc.. ISBN 1397815090697 (Digital)
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20th June 2023
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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20th June 2023
RISKS IN THE INTERNATIONALIZATION OF
COMPANIES : COUNTRY RISK
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 RICC-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Economics
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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- http://universidadeuropea.es/myfiles/pageposts/jiu/jiu2012/pdf/ix_jiiu_2012.pdf#page=167
- Research Interests: Country risk, foreign direct investment, credit risk
[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Some events occurred in the last decades such as the global crisis, terrorism, populist policies in
LATAM, Europe and USA, the debt crisis in the EU or the Arab Spring have caused a generalized
increase in Country Risk. According to the World Bank, the main multinationals and insurers
foresee an increase in socio-political and macroeconomic risks in the coming years. Country risk is
among the main obstacles for the international activity.
Since the beginning of the global crisis in 2008, we are used to talking about the spread in debt
markets, but country risk also affects trade and direct investment. In the decision-making process,
for a proper risk management to be done it is essential to i) know the risks and the factors that
cause them, ii) handle the most rigorous ratings iii) learn the mechanisms of mitigation and risk
transfer available in the market.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After completing this course, students will be capable of analyzing and understanding economic
and sociopolitical events and their effect on multinationals. Students will be capable of identifying
the different modalities of country risk that can affect their companies and of making their own
assessment. They will know how to manage those risks by using the mitigation and risk transfer
tools available in the market.
For this, the risk assessment methodologies of the OECD, Standard & Poor´s and Export Credit
Agencies will be analyzed.
Analytical treatment of the underlying theory will be kept as simple as possible and the course will
have a strong practical orientation. Students will work through the course on a case study project
that will require to develop a country risk assessment and a comparative analysis for two specific
countries.
Students are expected to acquire the following skills:
Cognitive:
- Capacity to frame information, academic or journalistic, on international economic and financial
events in a global vision and in the theoretical debates on country risk.
- Capacity to write analysis, reports and studies on various aspects of economic, sociopolitical
dimensions.
Instrumental:
- Use and interpretation of Index numbers
- Capacity to abstract and work with simplified versions of reality
- Familiarity with databases
- Ability to interpret and communicate financial arguments and financial analysis in precise and
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concise manner
Attitude:
- Think critically about the limits of financial integration and be able to question experts’
assessments with sound arguments
- Be open to different views and arguments regarding financial events
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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- Political violence risk
- Sovereign risk
Readings and practices will be provided in the course
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- Political violence risk in FDI
- Expropriation risk
- Breach of contract
Readings and practices will be provided in the course
Article: Country Risk in Foreign Direct Investment: Similarities and differences with country risk in
exports. (Nómadas. Revista Crítica de Ciencias Sociales y Jurídicas Volumen Especial:
Mediterranean Perspectives | 49 (2016) © EMUI) (CED)
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SESSION 12 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
Workshop: Student´s Comparative Analysis of Country Risk
This chapter consists of a workshop in which students compare the ratings of the main countries of
each geographical area and explain them with the socio-political and macroeconomic arguments
that determine the level of risk.
- LATAM (Except Emerging Economies)
- MENA
- EMERGING ECONOMIES
- ASEAN 5
- SUB-SAHARAN
- POST SOVIET STATES (Former USSR)
- MIDDLE EAST
Materials will be provided
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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Group 40 % Group Work.
Presentation Instructions will be
handed out in a
separate
document
Class Participation 20 % Two main criteria
will be used in
reaching judgment
about your class
participation:
frequency and
quality of your
contributions to
class summaries,
practices and
debates.
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
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15th June 2023
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
8
15th June 2023
SERVICE DESIGN: GOOD DESIGN IS GOOD
BUSINESS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 SDGD-
NBA.1C.p.OPT.M.A
Area Design and Management
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
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There are no mandatory prerequisites. Concepts, abilities, processes, and
knowledge a candidate for an BBA student must be sufficient in order to
effectively follow the development of the subject within the context of their
educational career. Even though, we expect a willingness to learn, an insatiable
curiosity about everything and proactiveness in class.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
The role of design in business has evolved significantly in recent years, with
many corporations incorporating design methodologies in various areas from
customer experience to innovation. Design in Buisness Good Design is Good
Business course provides an overview of design methodology and how it can
be used to provide relevant products and services to end customers. The
course will guide students through the first steps of designing a better business.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
This course aims to provide students with an understanding of the powerful impact that design can
have on business strategy. By introducing service design methodology and tools, the course
explores an alternative approach to traditional business practices. Students will learn about
personas, service blueprints, and various business design aspects, allowing them to connect
experience design with the impact on business. The course includes both theoretical lectures and
hands-on practical exercises, as well as interactive workshops.
- Understand the importance of design in business.
- Learn basic design methodologies and principles.
- Apply design thinking to business challenges.
- Use design to enhance customer experience and drive innovation.
- Develop strategies to create relevant products and services.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
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TOTAL 100.0 % 150.0 hours
PROGRAM
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In the second part of the session, students will engage in a practical exercise to set the structure of
their interview script by identifying their assumptions and questions. They will also define the key
topics to be addressed during the interviews and their objectives.
Assignment 1: Due by Session 11-12
Article: Complete Beginner’s Guide to UX Research (UX Booth)
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In the second part of the session, students will have the opportunity to practice building their own
Customer Journey AS-Is using the information they have gathered through their research. This
hands-on activity will help students visualize the end-to-end experience of a customer with a
service, product, or brand and identify areas for improvement.
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Students will work collaboratively to develop a brand identity for their solutions, incorporating the
insights gathered from their research and the feedback received during the ideation phases.
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Sharing user testing results
In this session, students will have the opportunity to present the key learnings and findings from
their user testing activities. They will discuss how the feedback gathered from users has informed
their design decisions and how they plan to iterate and improve their final solutions based on the
feedback received.
Design Matters - Recap
Following the user testing presentations, students will have a recap of the key design
methodologies and tools learned throughout the course. They will reflect on what they have
learned, how they have applied the tools and methodologies in their projects, and how they plan to
use these skills moving forward. It allows students to reflect on their design journey, celebrate their
successes, and identify areas for growth and improvement. By reflecting on their learning, students
can consolidate their knowledge and skills and use them to tackle future design challenges.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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20th June 2023
There will be two quizzes designed to test and reinforce students' understanding of the key
concepts and principles of the design methodologies covered in the course
C. ASSIGNMENT 1 (15%): PREPARING AN INTERVIEW SCRIPT
This assignment is a group assignment done in groups outside of session hours. Each group needs
to write a user interview script according to the session 4.
Evaluation criteria (15 points, 5 points each)
1. Quality of questions.
2. Overall structure, topics and objectives.
3. Creativity / exercises.
D. ASSIGNMENT 2 (15%): INTERVIEW AND KEY INSIGHTS
This assignment is a group assignment done in groups outside of session hours. Each gruop turns
in a document that highlights key insights from the interviews.
Evaluation criteria (20 points, 5 points each)
1. Quality & quantity of insights.
2. Relevant quotes & other supporting materials.
3. Story telling.
E. FINAL GROUP PRESENTATION (30%)
You are also expected to complete a final project with your group and present it face to face at the
last session. The project will give you the opportunity to reflect on what you have learnt in class and
apply it to some practical problems. More details of the project will be provided by the start of the
course.
Evaluation criteria (30 points, 5 points each)
1. Desirability: Does the solution address the user problem? Does the user want to use it?
2. Viability: Is the solution reasonable to succeed or capable of achieving your goal?
3. Feasibility: Could the solution be easily implemented? Is the technology available or easy to
be developed?
4. Design process: Did the team use an adequate design approach/process to discover relevant
insights and define the right solution?
5. Quality of presentation: Does the team illustrate the solution clearly and creatively?
6. Time (6 mins presentation + 2 mins Q&A): Is the presentation finished within the time?
Overall Grading
- Sobresaliente/Outstanding: 9.0-10.0 (A to A+). Consistently produces work of the highest
quality and craft; exhibits notable progress and development over the course of the semester;
meets all course objectives at highest level; attendance is near-perfect, and contributions to
course discussions are extremely valuable.
- Notable: 7.0-8.9 (B to B+). Completes all assignments with work of above-average quality and
craft; exhibits significant progress and development; meets most course objectives; attendance
and participation are very good.
- Aprobado: 6.0-7.0 (C to C+). Completes all assignments with work of acceptable quality and
craft; exhibits some progress and development; meets a majority of course objectives.
Attendance and participation are acceptable.
- Aprobado: 5.0-6.0 (D). Assignments are delivered but are incomplete and/or of low quality and
craft; exhibits little progress and development; meets few course objectives. Attendance and
participation are poor, but absences do not total more than 30%.
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20th June 2023
- Suspenso: 0-4.9 (F). Work is incomplete, missing, or does not meet course objectives.
Attendance and participation are poor.
- Automatic Failure/Suspenso: 0 (F). Please note that a student who misses 30% or more of the
scheduled sessions receives an automatic 0.0, and loses his or her right to the second
“convocatoria.”
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Quiz 20 %
Assignment 1 15 %
Assignment 2 15 %
Final Presentation 30 %
Class Participation 20 %
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20th June 2023
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Tim Brown. Change by Design. Harper Collins. ISBN 9780062856623 (Printed)
- Jakob Schneider and Marc Stickdorn. This is Service Design Thinking.. Wiley.
ISBN 9781118156308 (Printed)
- Adam Lawrence, Jakob Schneider, Marc Stickdorn, and Markus Edgar. This Is
Service Design Doing. O'Reilly Media, Inc. ISBN 9781491927182 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
10
20th June 2023
SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 SE-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
RACHIDA JUSTO
Dr. Justo is Associate Professor of Entrepreneurship at IE University and head
of the Impact Bridge-IE Chair of Social Entrepreneurship and Impact Investing.
In teaching entrepreneurship at several academic levels (Executive, Graduate,
Undergraduate and PhD), Rachida brings the results of her research to the
classroom. In particular, she tries to prompt students to think more expansively
about their role as entrepreneurs and as managers, and to develop an
awareness of the power of entrepreneurship to create sustainable and social
value. Formerly the Academic Director for the BBVA Momentum Social
Enterprise Accelerator at Headspring, she also serves as Program Chair
for AOM’s Entrepreneurship Division.
Rachida’s research focuses on social and women entrepreneurship. Her work
has been published in leading international journals such as the Journal of
Business Ethics and Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice and she is the
Associate Editor of Journal of Business Venturing Insights (JBVI). She has also
received several awards such as the USASBE Social Entrepreneurship SIG
Award for Excellence in Scholarship, the “Best Women’s Entrepreneurship
Paper Award” from the Entrepreneurship division of the Academy
of Management, and the “Outstanding Award for Best Doctoral Dissertation”
from the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. She has also been engaged in
action research and consulting work, one that is directly relevant for public
policy. She served as a member of GECES, an Expert Group of the
European Commission on Social Entrepreneurship (2012-2015) and has
produced several policy reports for the OECD and the Spanish ministry of
diversity and equal opportunities.
For more information: https://sites.google.com/view/rachidajusto/home
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PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Social Entrepreneurship is an emerging and rapidly changing business field that examines the
practice of identifying, starting and growing successful mission-driven for profit and nonprofit
ventures, organizations that strive to advance social change through innovative solutions.
The Social Entrepreneurship elective aims to assist would-be social entrepreneurs in developing
innovative, sustainable and scalable organizations that deliver measurable social value. Students
interested in working for social enterprises, for social business accelerators, social innovation
centres, CSR departments of for-profit corporations, impact funds, innovative non-profits or
governements can also follow this course. The overall purpose of the course is to enable students
to consider social value creation as a career compass and/or gain a valuable expertise to work in
the growing social innovation/impact investing ecosystem.
The course is designed to prompt students to be critical, pragmatic, and inspired thinkers about key
issues involving social entrepreneurship, socially driven business decisions, and the complexities of
financing social change. To do so, we will look at the field of social innovation as a mindset and as
a practice.
- Social entrepreneurship as a mindset:
To foster this mindset, we will incorporate principles of ethics, social innovation and human
centered design thinking as a set of methods to cultivate our empathy and deep understanding of
social problems. In order fully understand the genesis and evolution of social entrepreneurship and
impact investing, we will also need to study the historical and ideological origins of the
phenomenon, and related areas of corporate social responsibility, socially responsible investing,
social finance, strategic/venture philanthropy, sustainable development, including microfinance and
the government’s role in creating systems that support social and economic development.
Moreover, recent advancements in the field of innovation for social change is reviewed, with a focus
on base of the pyramid strategies, scaling opportunities, and cross-sector alliances.
- Social entrepreneurship as a practice:
The course will not only provide practical tools about how to start, grow and
invest in a social enterprise. It will also train students to evaluate projects for
social entrepreneurial organizations, including for-profit social businesses and
innovative non-profits. It will address social planning along the stages of
entrepreneurial discovery, social impact measurement, and innovative
investment. While not a technical course, students will be exposed to basic
skills and strategies for impact investing such as the ability to source, screen
and structure socially driven investment deals. Most importantly, students
develop a critically refined view of the concept of “impact”, how to measure it,
and how to choose the right organizational form and financing vehicle for the
targeted problem ensuring it is appropriate to the local context.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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- Understand how they are using business skills and the principles inherent in building a
sustainable business to address complex social and environmental problems.
- Master the tools used to define and measure social impact and return, and practice applying
them to different kinds of social ventures;
- Work personally on a final class Project addressing a social/environmental issue to apply
lessons learnt in class.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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IMPACT-CENTRED DESIGN: LESSONS FROM A HIGH-PROFILE SOCIAL ENTREPRISE
Design thinking has become a buzzword in the field of management, and social entrepreneurship is
no exception. But how does design thinking really looks like on the ground, especially when the
entrepreneur seeks to solve complex and entrenched social problems, often in adverse contexts?
During this session will discuss these issues through the analysis of a high-profile social enterprise.
Required:
Watch the Video: The Empathic Civilization or read the article.
Multimedia Material: Video: The Empathic Civilization (Youtube)
Article: Mark Honigsbaum: Barack Obama and the 'empathy deficit' (The Guardian, Fri 4 Jan 2013)
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WORKSHOP
Details will be provided in class
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After a general Q & A in class, teams will have the benefit of 1-1 coaching of 10 minutes each with
the Professor.
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Do you think Arnoud is an entrepreneur? And a social entrepreneur?
What were some of the most important challenges in developing his organization? How would you
address them?
EVALUATION CRITERIA
A. CLASS PARTICIPATION
Three main criteria will be used in reaching judgment about your class participation:
1. Depth and Quality of Contribution: The most important dimension of participation concerns
what it is that you are saying. A high quality comment reveals depth of insight, rigorous use of
case evidence, consistency of argument, and realism.
2. Moving Your Peers’ Understanding Forward: Great ideas can be lost through poor
presentation. A high quality presentation of ideas must consider the relevance and timing of
comments, and the flow and content of the ensuing class discussion. It demands comments
that are concise and clear, and that are conveyed with a spirit of involvement in the discussion
at hand.
3. Frequency: Frequency refers to the attainment of a threshold quantity of contributions that is
sufficient for making a reliable assessment of comment quality. The logic is simple: if
contributions are too few, one cannot reliably assess the quality of your remarks. However,
once threshold quantity has been achieved, simply increasing the number of times you talk
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does not automatically improve your evaluation. Beyond the threshold, it is the quality of your
comments that must improve. In particular, one must be especially careful that in claiming
more than a fair share of “airtime”, quality is not sacrificed for quantity. Finally, your attempts
at participation should not be such that the instructor has to “go looking for you”. You should
be attempting to get into the debate on a regular basis.
4. Non-participation: please note that you won't receive a mark just for being present in class.
being present but fainling to pay attention to the course and/or not contributing with
comments, insights and /or questions will result in a zero.
B. INDIVIDUAL IN-CLASS EXAM
Refer to Session 17. The reference template and workbook/reading will be discussed & shared in
class. Students will work on an individual exam during class.
C. DOCUMENT FOR COACHING SESSION (GROUP WORK)
More details will be provided in class about this final individual exercise.
D. FINAL REPORT (GROUP WORK)
As part of the final deliverable and exam, students will have to prepare and present in groups of
around 5-6 students a “FINAL REPORT”, also called "the Social Enterprise Project". This project is
a group exercise and is highly is centered on experiential learning, where students will have the
possibility to choose among the two options: Consult and Advocate
a) Consult: Working a “consulting report” for a social entrepreneur: Students will be provided with
the unique opportunity to design and engage in a “pro bono consulting project” for a real social
organization. Early in the course, students will have the opportunity to choose from a selection of
social enterprises or propose one of their choices. Once students have expressed their preferences
for client projects, and depending on availability and fit, each team (around 4 students) is assigned
to one of the selected projects. Starting from then teams will collaborate (remotely if the social
enterprise is outside Madrid -via e-mail, telephone, and/or online conferencing) with their “clients” to
shape a viable consulting project addressing a specific area of organizational need. Teams are
expected to undertake careful preparation so as to ensure a productive exchange with the social
entrepreneurs (e.g., identifying necessary stakeholder interviews, developing preliminary
questionnaire that will serve as a basis for the interview, identifying information to be requested to
the client for research, etc.).
b) Advocate: Students can also decide to write a business case on a real social enterprise, acting
as a "professor of the day" and advocating for social entrepreneurship among their peers. From our
perspective, a "good" business case is one that could be used in IE University for teaching a social
entrepreneurship course, included in a social entrepreneurship textbook and/or published in an
academic case journal. Specific guidelines will be provided by the professor, but in a nutshell,
writing a case requires careful problem framing, perceptive application of concepts and frameworks
discussed in class and clear logical writing. Authors of best cases might be able to turn this project
into a line in their CV by publishing a revised and extended version of it with the professor (more
details will be provided in class).
Classes will provide students with the topical knowledge and practical skills needed to best serve
their clients or develop their own projects/cases. As each project/consulting engagement will have
unique requirements, students are expected to be self-directed, supplementing classroom learning
with the appropriate level of research that is required for their specific projects. The professor will
however organize coaching and advisory sessions with each team in which students will receive
guidance into the process of crafting the report. The meeting will also to ensure the quality and on
time completion of the final client deliverables and help students solve possible doubts or issues.
The professor will also provide additional readings and information related to specific issues or
topics analyzed by each team when necessary. The objective is that students end up having a well-
rounded knowledge of the issues faced by social entrepreneurs.
The final reports (either case or pro-bono consulting) should not be longer than 10 pages including
exhibits (content details to be given in class).
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E. ORAL PRESENTATION (GROUP WORK)
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14th July 2023
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
10
14th July 2023
SPORT BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE TOOLS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 SBIT-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Accounting and Management Control
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
N/A
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
The sports industry is constantly evolution, from traditional sports to the trend
sports, this evolution is being led by technology that manages to engage new
fans/consumers and build up loyalty in between. Thus, companies are attracted
by the experiences that fans/costumer are willing lived.
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This course aims to analyze the sports industry and especially research this
continuous innovation in regards of fans/costumer demands, we establish in
consideration from how the fans “watch” their favorite sport to “live” the
unforgettable experiences.
Moreover, companies and organizations are willing to take advantage of these
demands in order to merge and consolidate new markets. Companies are
dedicating time and money in order to invest their budgets through sports-
entertainment building new relationships with the fans/costumers using the
sport events as a strategic tool. #sportainment
A professional and effective analysis of the needs and demands of the fans, in
accordance withdifferent variables of innovation, will allow us to create events
and experiences at the height of the expectations of our final consumers, with
the clear objective of maximizing profitabilityfor our business
We are ready to deliver a professional and efficient analysis, according with the
fans/costumer demands and needs, in order to fill up their expectations. These
professional inputs will support us to design and build up events and
experiences, “out of the charts” for the fans/costumer, looking at the max
profitability for our business.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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SESSION 1 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
G1 - To understand and analyze fan profiles and needs
- Back to 90s
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SESSION 11 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
G4 - To design a strategic plan of the venues and sport events.
- Timeline & Masterplan
EVALUATION CRITERIA
40 % - Final exam
30 % - Team workshop
30 % - Class collaboration
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Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls(ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both callsand
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
ADDITIONAL MATERIALS
- Based on UEFA Clubs competitions - UCLF & UELF - Business cases
- MKT research
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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N/A
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
N/A
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
N/A
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STARTUP ECOSYSTEMS : CREATING VALUE IN
EMERGIING MARKETS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 SEC-
NBA.1C.e.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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Academic Experience
- Professor of Entrepreneurship and Strategy, IE Business School 2003 to present
- Associate Dean of Research, IE Business School, 2003 to 2008
- Chair, Strategy Department, 2006 to 2008
- Chair, Entrepreneurship Department, 2011 -
- The Lewis Family distinguished professor of Entrepreneurship, Babson College. 2008-2011
- Member of the Board of Governors, Academy of Management, 2003 to 2006
- President, Iberoamerican Academy of Management 2008-
- Associate Professor of Strategy and Organisation Management, University of Colorado at
Boulder, USA, 1997 to 2003
- Assistant Professor of Strategy and Organisation Management, University of Colorado at
Boulder, USA, 1989 to 1997
- Visiting Professor, Instituto de Empresa, 2001
- Visiting Professor, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, 1999
- Visiting Professor, Universidad Católica Madre y Maestra, Dominican Republic, 1993, 1995
[email protected]
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
This course focuses on approaches and opportunities for starting and growing
entrepreneurial businesses in Latin America. We will study characteristics
influencing entrepreneurship in a diversity of countries, ranging from Brazil to
Chile to Peru. We will examine countries utilizing a unique framework, and
draw some conclusions about the similarities and differences across categories
and countries. We will then do a feasibility study of a venture opportunity for a
Latin American market. Upon completing this course, you will have a better
understanding about the unique elements associated with starting a new
venture in a Latin American country market. Latin America is widely assumed
to present limitless entrepreneurial opportunities, but the viability and nature of
these opportunities are not all the same across the various countries that make
up Latin America. While many aspects of entrepreneurship can be generalized
across ventures started anywhere in the world, we cannot assume the same
opportunities can be approached similarly in different Latin America contexts.
This course provides an overview of the mindsets, methods, and managerial
activities necessary to understand the entrepreneurial process in Latin
America, in particular the process of detecting and understanding
entrepreneurial opportunities in Latin American countries. This is not a culture
class. Our role is not to delve into the culture of these countries, rather it is to
understand the drivers of entrepreneurial opportunities in those countries and
how we can better utilize them to create sustainable business ventures. The
main objective of this course is to expose you to the many dimensions of new
venture creation in the context of Latin America and to give the tools needed to
launch a new venture.
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Even though traditionally people have discussed Latin America as a block,
what makes a course like this interesting and unique is the diversity within and
across the countries, and what it means for entrepreneurial opportunities. One
of our first aspects of this class will be to develop and discuss a framework to
assess and understand the presence of opportunities in these markets,
including income (gdp) size of the middle class, presence and size of informal
markets, and its implications for entrepreneurial opportunities, and within
country and across country differences in the different segments. One of the
key insights of this class is that entrepreneurial opportunities are varied and
exist in different segments and countries of Latin America, and we provide
evidence that some of the most creative new ventures in the world (Kola real,
Lummi, La Martina) have emerged from an understanding of those drivers.
We base that framework on a combination of sources and so the materials for
this class will come from a variety of places. Moreover, not one book captures
the phenomena we are trying to convey, so we will rely on multiple sources.
From traditional entrepreneurship theory and research, from international
business theory, and from new thinkers such as Hernando de Soto, CK
Prahalad and Amartya Sen, plus a number of groundbreaking materials, such
as the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), the most comprehensive and
up-to-date study of entrepreneurial activity around the world, co-sponsored by
Babson College. I have selected relevant and contemporary books, readings,
and cases illustrating numerous dimensions around starting a business in Latin
America. Thus we will not have one textbook for the class, but a variety of
readings, lectures, books, notes and cases, which will be supplemented by
materials that all of us are tasked to find and to bring to the class and to the
discussion.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
This class is not your traditional lecture. It is seminar for Juniors and Seniors
and will be treated as such. It involves a significant amount of work, but I
believe that it will be extremely rewarding and enriching. Each student will take
responsibility for his/her learning, and for contributing to the knowledge
developed by the class. My role is to guide and assess your learning I also
welcome your comments and directions throughout the class and we will
change and adjust accordingly. Again, my main objective is for this class to be
a conversation about the nature of entrepreneurial opportunities in Latin
America.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
Participation and case discussion 20%
ENT Opportunity write ups (Individual) (2 at 5% ea.) 10%
Class country framework analysis (group) 15%
Feasibility plan document (group) 20%
Feasibility plan presentation (group) 10%
Exam 25%
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27th June 2023
Learning Activity Weighting Estimated time a
student should
dedicate to prepare for
and participate in
Lectures 40.0 % 30.0 hours
Discussions 13.33 % 10.0 hours
Exercises in class, 13.33 % 10.0 hours
Asynchronous sessions,
Field Work
Group work 13.33 % 10.0 hours
Individual studying 20.0 % 15.0 hours
TOTAL 100.0 % 75.0 hours
PROGRAM
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Applying the framework: searching and understanding entrepreneurial opportunities: the case of
Argentina. Can Latin American ventures compete at the top of the market globally
Country analysis: Argentina
Practical Case: La Martina (A): "Pasion Argentina" (HBS IMD374-PDF-ENG)
Practical Case: La Martina (B): Selling the Passion? (HBS IMD376-PDF-ENG)
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Practical Case: Powerven: When It Is Imperative to Change (HBS IE0003-PDF-ENG)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Although this course provides a number of opportunities to learn about the entrepreneurial process,
class discussion and activities are the primary ways for students to learn. More importantly, learning
in this course is not limited to simply acquiring facts and knowledge, but extends into actively
applying them, as you will do in developing your feasibility plan. Your accomplishments during the
course will be evaluated as follows:
Participation and case discussion 20%
ENT Opportunity write ups (Individual) (2 at 5% ea.) 10%
Class country framework analysis (group) 15%
Feasibility plan document (group) 20%
Feasibility plan presentation (group) 10%
Exam 25%
TOTAL 100%
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27th June 2023
Workgroups 20 % Feasibility plan
document (group)
Other 15 % Class country
framework
analysis (group)
Group 10 % Feasibility plan
Presentation presentation
(group)
Class Participation 20 %
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27th June 2023
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- De Soto, Hernando. (1989). The Other Path. 1rs. Basic Books. ISBN
9780060160203 (Printed)
- Prahalad, CK. (2006). The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid: Eradicating
poverty through profits. Pearson. ISBN 9780131467507 (Printed)
- Sen, Amartya. (2020). Development as freedom. Anchor books. ISBN
9780385720274 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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27th June 2023
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT OF INNOVATION
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 SMOI-
NBA.1C.s.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
[email protected]
Office is at IE Tower: Floor 22 - Room 22
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PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The purpose of this course is to develop participants’ ability to think strategically about their
technology / technological assets and to provide knowledge to understand how companies can
elaborate effective appropriability and commercialization technology strategies.
The course will make use of interactive teaching methods, aimed at transferring highly specialized
knowledge related to the individual topics, and to develop attitudes and abilities to listening,
strategic thinking, group-working, participation and leadership.
The course is designed to address different topics such as:
- learn how a firm appropriates value throughout its technology;
- learn how a firm creates value throughout its technology;
- learn different models of innovation (closed vs open);
- learn how to implement effective technology strategies by recognizing valuable projects,
organizing teams, and product development;
- learn technical aspects of patents and trademarks and their value and how they can add value
to the firm.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
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IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
The methodology is based on lectures, discussions, group work, and individual studying.
PROGRAM
SESSION 4 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
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13th July 2023
Sustainability Topics:
- Social Challenge
- Economic Development
What’s the Big Idea?
Practical Case: What’s the Big Idea? (HBS 602105-PDF-ENG)
1. How proprietary or defensible is BIG’s system? Could one of the major toy companies
replicate it? Why or why not?
2. Why does BIG seem better able to identify and bring to market innovative toy concepts,
whereas the major toy companies feel they are in a period of a “lack of innovation” (p.3)?
3. Can BIG replicate its system in other industries?
SESSION 8 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
The case of LEGO
Practical Case: LEGO® Products: Building Customer Communities Through Technology (HBS
W93C26-PDF-ENG)
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Innovation and Experimentation via Users
Article: The Discipline of Business Experimentation (HBS R1412D-PDF-ENG) (p. 70-79)
Article: Connect and Develop: Inside Proctor & Gamble’s New Model for Innovation (HBS R0603C-
PDF-ENG) (pgs 58-67)
SESSION 12 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Lead User Assignment
Ad hoc material will be distributed before the session
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13th July 2023
(Research Policy, 48(1), 2019: 11-21) (CED)
Article: All the great things you can do with trademark data: Taking stock and looking ahead
(Strategic Organization, 18(3), 472-484; 2020) (SAGE)
Article: Evaluating the financial impact of branding using trademarks: A framework and empirical
evidence (Journal of Marketing, 73(6), 2009; 154-166) (Researchgate)
Other / Complementary Documentation: Social norms and intellectual property (TEDxHECParis;
Youtube)
SESSION 18 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
A practical analysis of Patents & Trademarks
Material will be distributed before the class
SESSION 21 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Conceptual Mapping
Material will be distributed before class
SESSION 23 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
IP Portfolio Management
Practical Case: Le Petit Chef (HBS 602080-PDF-ENG)
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Ecosystems & Platforms
Book Chapters: Shapiro, Carl and Hal Varian, Information Rules, Chapter 7, pgs 173-218 (See
Bibliography)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Please notice that from the beginning of the course, you will be assigned to a workgroup. Your final
grade in the course will be based on both individual and group work and will be weighted according
to the overview below.
The evaluation of the class complies with the following rules:
- A necessary requirement to pass the course is to achieve a minimum grade of 4.5 on the
Final Exam. If a student completes the Midterm Quiz, an average of 4.5 in the Midterm Quiz
and Final Exam is sufficient to pass the course. If the minimum threshold of 4.5 is not reached,
the course is to be evaluated as FAILED. Students will have to retake the exam in the
extraordinary call in June/July and will lose their grades for the asynchronous assignments,
case study competition, and participation.
- Examinations cannot be rescheduled for any reason. This applies to the Midterm Quiz, the
Final Exam, and the Case Study Competition. Students who do not show up to an examination
will receive an evaluation equal to ‘zero’ for the respective examination. [The only exception for
the Final Exam and every in-class evaluation is a dispensa or a justification from the BBA office
provided upon the presentation of official (medical) documentation. If a justification is provided
to skip the Final Exam, the student will take the exam in the extraordinary call of June/July.]
- In case of severe IT problems during an examination, the course coordination together with
the strategy department chair can consider an ad hoc alternative evaluation or exam. This
includes the possibility of an oral exam.
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13th July 2023
The examination of the course will include the following elements that will be weighted according to
the provided overview:
A. FINAL EXAM (50%): The Final Exam will test the content from Sessions 1 to 30 and includes
the discussed content from the indicated readings (incl. textbooks), slides, case studies, and notes.
B. MIDTERM QUIZ (10%): The Midterm Quiz is an individual examination that will test the content
of the class (Sessions 1 to 12). This test aims to allow students to receive an indication of how they
are keeping up with the class content and “training” for the Final Exam. The Midterm Quiz is
voluntary and an opportunity to improve a student’s grade in the final exam: the Midterm
Quiz will only be included in the overall evaluation of the class if its outcome improves a
student’s overall grade of the course. That is, the Midterm Quiz will only be included in the
overall evaluation of the course if the grade of the Midterm Quiz exceeds a student’s grade in the
Final Exam. Otherwise, the Final Exam will count 60% toward the overall course evaluation.
This will also be the case if a student misses the Midterm Quiz.
C. ASYNCRONOUS ASSIGNMENTS (15%): Asynchronous assignments are group-based. They
consist of self-study material and exercises that need to be completed in Workgroups and
submitted according to the provided deadlines and instructions. Asynchronous assignments test
students’ ability to apply course content from the preceding sessions.
D. CASE STUDY COMPETITION (15%): The case study competition will take place in sessions
27- 28 and is a Group task. Students will be assigned a short business case with questions and are
asked to provide well-grounded recommendations to solve the case in form of a presentation. The
presentation has to include slides submitted via Blackboard. Grades will be ranked on a competitive
basis.
E. PARTICIPATION (10%): Successful individual participation in class requires attendance and
compliance with IE’s and the class code of conduct. Participation is an individual grade and will be
evaluated based on the following criteria:
1. Depth and Quality of a student’s contribution to the class: High-quality comments distinguish
by their depth of insight, rigorous use of case evidence, consistency of argument, and realism.
2. Moving Your Peers’ Understanding: Great ideas can be lost through a poor presentation. A
high-quality presentation of ideas is concise and clear and considers the relevance and timing
of comments and the flow of the ensuing class discussion.
3. Frequency: Frequency refers to the attainment of a threshold quantity of contributions that is
sufficient for making a reliable assessment of comment quality. Once a sufficient threshold
quantity is met, increased “airtime" does not automatically improve your evaluation and
evaluation depends on the comments’ quality. Students are expected to make active attempts
to contribute to the class debate regularly and not only wait for the instructor's invitation to
contribute.
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 50 % Please see
description A)
above
Intermediate tests 10 % Please see
description B)
above
Individual work 0%
Individual 0%
presentation
Group Work 15 % Please see
description C)
above
Other 0%
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13th July 2023
Group 15 % Please see
Presentation description D)
above
Class Participation 10 % Please see
description E)
above
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13th July 2023
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Compulsory
- Melissa Schilling. (2022). Strategic management of Technological innovation. 7th
edition. McGraw-Hill Education. ISBN 9781265073350 (Printed)
Recommended
- Carl Shapiro and Hal R Varian. (1999). Information rules: a strategic guide to the
network economy. Harvard Business School Press. ISBN 087584863X (Digital)
- FT Rothaermel. (2020). Strategic Management. McGraw-Hill College. ISBN
1264103794 (Digital)
- Richard N Foster. (1986). Innovation : the attacker's advantage. Summit Books.
ISBN 0671622501 (Digital)
- Clayton M Christensen. (2011). The innovator's dilemma. Harperbusiness. ISBN
9780062060242 (Digital)
- Steven C Wheelwright and Kim B Clark. (1992). Revolutionizing product
development. Free Press. ISBN 0029055156 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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13th July 2023
STRATEGIC MARKETING AND BRANDING
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 SMB-
NBA.1C.m.OPT.M.B
Area Marketing and Communication
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Brand Strategist and expert in Marketing, Branding, Innovation & Consumers, with more than 19
years in both top FMCG companies (Unilever & Kraft) and also Consulting companies. Professor at
IE since 2010.
Proffessional experience:
- From 2017: Brand strategist and Marketing & Branding Consultant. Independent
consultant.
- From 2012: BMC Strategic Innovation Company (Branding, Consumer and Innovation
Agency, working with top global companies, such as Coca Cola, Heineken, Unilever,
Nespresso, BBVA,…)
- Regional Manager for Europe and Africa (from Sept’14)
- Contents Director Europe BMC Strategic Innovation Company (managing mainly the
account of Coca-Cola)
- From 2012: Marketing Professor, Marketing electives coordinator at IE University
- 2003-2012: Different Marketing roles in Mondelez/Kraft. Marketing Director Tassimo &
Saimaza, Marketing Manager Oreo, Chips Ahoy!, Brand Manager Milka & Philadelphia...
- 2000-2003: Brand Dove. Unilever
Educational background:
- 2017-2019: Master in Humanistic Psychology by Universidad de Alcalá
- 2006 - 2012: Marketing Academy inn Kraft Foods, completing different course in branding,
strategy, consumer, insights...
- 1996-2000: B.Sc. (Hons.) Economics, majored in Marketing. Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.
[email protected]
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PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
The past decade has seen the triumph of brand and branding: everyone are
now encouraged to think themselves of as a brand. Indeed, the term brand is
probably overused nowadays. Everything is about brand, branded content,
branded environments, branded experience...
Branding is a crucial and exciting topic, which is rapidly evolving in order to
connect products with consumers in a more relevant and resonating way. Great
brands succeed in creating value for consumers with a clear product role and
therefore driving business results. That's why main companies are becoming
more and more consumer-centric and brands and products are evolving their
relationship with consumer.
A winning brand strategy should start with a in-depth consumer understanding,
which together with market situation analysis and evaluation of your current
marketing mix will allow to build relevant, resonating, differentiating brands,
which can really make a difference in context of hyper-segmented consumers a
increasingly competitive market.
This course will provide the students with a practical understanding of the
brand strategy and identity, working with many real examples of companies
and brands and being able to create their own brand plan and design one
brand identity.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
This course will provide the student with the following knowledges and skills following a highly
practical methodology:
1. Brands today. How to be different & relevant with your brand in a crowded and competitive
markets.
2. Customer centricty in branding today. Motivational map and Censydeam model
3. Brands & Branding: Defining a winning brand strategy
- Positioning, Benefit ladder, Brand Essence
- Point of Difference and Frame of Reference
- Brand Territory
4. Brand Equity: The brand value in consumer mind (Awareness, Associations,
Perceived Quality and Loyalty) and how to measure it.
5. Brand Dilemmas: Brand stretch, Brand repositioning or revitalizing and
Brand deletion.
6. Portfolio Management
7. Iconic brands and brand purpose
8. Brand Design and identity
9. Many brand examples and benchmarks!
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TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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21th June 2023
OVERVIEW 4 GROWTH STRATEGIES & FOCUS IN PENETRATION
- Overview of growth strategies: Penetration, Frequency, Retention, Premimization
- Focus in Penetration
Activity: Discussion of best cases and learnings
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- Laddering up vs. laddering down strategy
- Links with consumer insights
- Brand territory
- Brand essence
Activity:
- Video Brand Essence Volkswagen. Discuss their brand territory and essence
SESSION 9 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
DOVE, A LADDERING-UP CASE
Business Case: Dove, evolution of a brand (HBS 508047-PDF-ENG):
Description: Examines the evolution of Dove from functional brand to a brand with a point of view
after Unilever designated it as a Masterbrand, and expanded its portfolio to cover entries into a
number of sectors beyond the original bath soap category. The development causes the brand
team to take a fresh look at the clichés of the beauty industry. The result is the controversial Real
Beauty campaign. As the campaign unfolds, Unilever learns to use the Internet, and particularly
social network media like YouTube, to manage controversy.
Activity:
Read the case and asnwer the following questions:
- Write the 3 levels of consumer unndertanding: Human Insight, Category insight and brand
insight
- Develop the full DOVE benefit ladder
- What you would recommend to this brand today?
Max. 150 words
Practical Case: Dove: Evolution of a Brand (HBS 508047-PDF-ENG)
Multimedia Material: Dove: Video Advertising Distributed by Harvard Business School (HBS 6558-
AVO-ENG)
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SESSION 12 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
BRAND EQUITY IN ACTION
Activity:
- Choose one brand (pairs)
- Interview 10 people to understand its equity in depth (5 each)
- Discuss with your pair to analyse and undertand
- Analyse its current brand equity and share your reco for the brand today.
- Share in forum your conclusions (maximum 100 words)
SESSION 15 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
STARBUCKS CASE
Description: After going public in 1992, Starbucks' strong balance sheet and double-digit growth
made it a hot growth stock. The Starbucks vision was coffee culture as community, the Third Place
between work and home, where friends shared the experience and exotic language of gourmet
coffee. Its growth was fuelled by rapid expansion in the number of stores both in the United States
and in foreign markets, the addition of drive-through service, its own music label that promoted and
sold CDs in stores and other add-on sales, including pastries and sandwiches. In an amazingly
short time, Starbucks became a wildly successful global brand. But in 2007, Starbucks'
performance slipped; the company reported its first-ever decline in customer visits to U.S. stores,
which led to a 50 per cent drop in its share price. In January 2008, the board ousted CEO Jim
Donald and brought back Howard Schultz - Starbucks' visionary leader and CEO from 1987 to 2000
and current chairman and chief global strategist - to re-take the helm. Starbucks' growth strategies
have been widely reported and analysed, but rarely with an eye to their impact on the brand. This
case offers a compelling example of how "non-brand" managerial decisions - such as store
locations, licensing arrangements and drive-through service - can make sense on financial criteria
at one point in time, yet erode brand positioning and equity in the longer term. Examining the
growth decisions made in the United States provides a rich context in which to examine both the
promise and drawback of further foreign expansion.
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21th June 2023
Read the case and asnwer the following questions:
- How did startbuck build their brand equity?
- What were the main reasons for the company downturn?
- What would you recommend them today to drive growth'
Max. 150 words
Practical Case: Trouble Brews at Starbucks (HBS 909A02-PDF-ENG)
SESSION 19 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
BRAND DILEMMAS IN ACTIONS
Activity:
- Sharing one good and bad examples of each dilemma in the forum, explaining briefly your
reasons to choose thes examples.
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BRANDS & PORTOLIO MANAGEMENT
- The four levels of strategy: Corporate, portfolio management, Positioning & Marketing Mix
- Portfolio Management: Minimizing overlapping & maximizing reach
- Brands vs. corporate strategies: House of brands vs. branded house
- Brand hierarchy & types of brand
SESSION 21 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
CORPORATE & BRANDS ANALYSIS
- Choose one company with different brands (pairs)
- Analyse if it's a house of brands, branded house or hybrid
- Explain how you think that this company manages its brands and product portfolio today
SESSION 25 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
SHARE YOUR NEW BRAND DESIGN
Activity:
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- Design and share your final design (one page) in forum
- Voting for the best new brand
EVALUATION CRITERIA
It’s required to work outside the class, doing the exercises, participating in forum, doing
presentations and a final project. Both individual and group work will be taken into account in the
final grade.
It is important to be respectful and proactive during in-class sessions as well as in the group
projects, For the group project, students will choose who they will work with.
During the entire course, the students will receive feedback on the activities they are presenting, so
they can keep track of their grade and be in control of it. Attendance will also be taken into account
daily for the very same reason.
Evaluation criteria details:
- In-Class participation(15%): Attendance is mandatory and will, therefore, have an impact on
the final grade. Discussions and debates will count towards participation (including the one in
forum). this grade (participation, engaged listening, self-involvement in class...).Participation will
be evaluated according to attention paid, participation in discussions and debates and general
involvement within the course.
- Individual work in forums (25%): Each students will have to write and share their analysis in
forums, showing his/her concepts knowledge and understanding, as well as his/her point of
view
- Final Team Project (30%): Each student will be part of a group project that will have to be
presented by the end of the term. You will have to create a new brand. Specific briefing and
details will be presented in class prior to the due date and uploaded to Campus. Teams will
have supervised working sessions with the professor.
- Final Exam 30%): 3 open-ended questions to apply theory to real cases and defend it.
criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Final Exam 30 %
Individual Work 25 %
Forums
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Group 30 %
Presentation
Class Participation 15 %
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
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21th June 2023
- Kevin Lane Keller. Strategic Brand Management. ISBN 9780133255423 (Printed)
- Alice M.Tybout & Tim Calkins. Kellogg on Branding. ISBN 9780471690160
(Printed)
- Byron Sharp. How Brands Grow. ISBN 9780195573565 (Printed)
- Alina Wheeler. Designing Brand Identity. ISBN 9781118099209 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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21th June 2023
SUSTAINABLE FINANCE
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 SF-
NBA.1C.f.OPT.M.A
Area Finance
Number of sessions: 25
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 5.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Emma Navarro belongs to the High Corps of Spanish State Economists and
Trade Experts. She is a Law Graduate from the Universidad San Pablo CEU,
with diplomas in EU legal and economic Studies from the same university, the
Sorbonne-Paris I University and the Complutense University of Madrid.
Emma Navarro is currently Executive Director for Climate Finance at the
European Climate Foundation. She is also a Board member of Iberdrola
España, one of the world’s largest energy companies and a leader in
renewables that is spearheading the energy transition towards a low carbon
economy.
Prior to that, she was Vice-President of the European Investment Bank, the
world’s largest multilateral Bank by assets and largest financier of climate
projects. She led its Climate Action Strategy at a time when the institution
positioned itself as the EU’s Climate Bank and launched its renewed climate
ambition.
Emma has also held the position of Chairperson of ICO, the Spanish National
Promotional Bank and the State's Financial Agency.
During her extensive career public administration, she served as Spain’s
Secretary General for the Treasury and Financial Policy, responsible for
banking and financial policy regulation and the funding and debt management.
She has also been a member of the Board of Bank of Spain, of the National
Securities Market Commission (CNMV), of the FROB (the Spanish Executive
Resolution Authority) and the Vice-Chairperson of Governing Committee of the
Deposit Guarantee Fund.
She has represented Spain in European and international financial bodies, as a
member of the EU’s Economic and Financial Committee (EFC) and the
Eurogroup Working Group (EGW), as an alternate member of the Eurogroup
and ECOFIN, and as alternate representative to the G20-Finance track
meetings. She has also served as a Board Member of the European Stability
Mechanism (ESM) and a member of the Financial Stability Board (FSB).
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While at the International Monetary Fund, Emma worked as an adviser to the
Executive Board Director for Colombia, Mexico and Spain.
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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21th June 2023
SESSION 2 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
AN INTRODUCTION TO SUSTAINABLE FINANCE
1. Context and trends. Understanding the evolution and growth of Sustainable Finance. Impact
of the Covid-19 pandemic.
2. Challenges and Opportunities for Sustainable Finance.
3. The EU Sustainable Finance Agenda
Pre-class reading:
Article: What is sustainable finance? (The Economist) (CED) (Optional)
Article: Sustainability as BlackRock’s New Standard for Investing (BlackRock web) (Optional)
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Article: Key aspects of the Paris Agreement (Reference) (United Nations)
SESSION 6 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
UNDERSTANDING THE IMPORTANCE OF CORPORATE GOVERNANCE. HBR CASE STUDY
DISCUSSION: THE VOLKSWAGEN EMISSIONS SCANDAL
Students will prepare this case study to engage in an on-line forum discussion to present their
views and thoughts, guided by some questions outlined by the professor. The case study highlights
the corporate governance issues and failures behind the diesel scandal that affected Volkswagen
some years ago.
Practical Case: The Volkswagen Emissions Scandal (HBS UV7245-PDF-ENG)
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21th June 2023
ESG REPORTING AND MEASUREMENT
- Why sustainability disclosures are important?
- ESG main metrics and reporting frameworks.
- Determining material factors.
- The Task Force for Climate Related Disclosures. (TCFD).
- Towards global sustainability and Climate reporting standards. The ISSB.
- The EU Non-Financial Reporting Directive. The proposal for a Corporate Sustainability
Reporting Directive. The double materiality principle.
- The US climate disclosure rules.
Article: ESG Metrics: Reshaping Capitalism? (HBS 116037-PDF-ENG)
Article: Recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related financial disclosures (TCFD)
Article: ESG Investing and Climate Transition: Market Practices, policies and challenges (OECD)
SESSION 13 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
SUSTAINABLE INVESTMENT INTEGRATION.
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Students will be presented with press articles that explore the topics covered in the session such as
climate disclosures or the advantages and disadvantages of different investment strategies or ESG
impact on financial performance. They will have a discussion on the articles, guided by questions
prepared by the professor.
SESSION 16 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
UNDERSTANDING CLIMATE RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR BANKS
In this session, students will engage on a discussion on the risks and opportunities climate change
present and the changes Banks are undertaking to address them.
The students will prepare the discussion with some reading materials that they will be given
beforehand.
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21th June 2023
4. Green Loans and Green Loan Principles.
5. Other Green Products.
6. PPAs as a product to support the energy transition.
Article: What is the point of green bonds? (The Economist) (CED)
SESSION 18 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
EXPLORING THE CHALLENGES OF THE ENERGY TRANSITION
Students will discuss the challenges of the energy transition for companies and the global
economy, based on the questions and articles and other materials provided by the teacher before
hand.
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Chapter 5 (Reference) (See Bibliography)(Optional)
Students could use as a reference Chapter 5 of Dirk Schoenmaker and Willem Schramade. (2019).
Principles of Sustainable Finance. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198826606 (Printed)
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Class Participation grade (35%) will depend on the quality of their contribution to the class
discussion and the ability to move the discussion forward and improve the learning experience of
the class.
Quizzes/Tests (30%): During the course, the professor will undertake a few quizzes to test the
understanding of the students from pre-reading materials and discussions held in class.
Group Presentation (35%). More guidance on the group presentation will be provided during the
course.
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21th June 2023
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Dirk Schoenmaker and Willem Schramade. (2019). Principles of Sustainable
Finance. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198826606 (Printed)
- Nuno Fernandes. (2023). Climate Finance. First. Finance for Executives. ISBN
9789899885431 (Printed)
https://www.amazon.com/Climate-Finance-Nuno-
Fernandes/dp/9899885436?asin=9899885436&revisionId=&format=4&depth=1
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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21th June 2023
SUSTAINABLE SUPPLY CHAINS
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 SSC-
NBA.1C.n.OPT.M.A
Area Others
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
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Phone & WhatsApp: +34 609 402 509
e-mail: [email protected]
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Sustainability is not only a new trend but it is also a "must" specially in a business environment
because customers are demanding sustainable solutions.
- According to several authors, Business sustainability, also known as corporate sustainability,
is the management and coordination of environmental, social and financial demands and
concerns to ensure responsible, ethical and ongoing success. Within the corporate world, they
are sometimes referred to as the triple bottom line: Economic, Social and environmental.
- Supply Chain Management is the management of the flow of goods and services and
includes all processes that transform raw materials into final products. It involves the active
streamlining of a business's supply-side activities to maximize customer value and gain a
competitive advantage in the marketplace. This function involves not only internal activities
related with Operations management and coordination with the rest of the areas of the
company, but also upstream to suppliers and downstrem to customers, including logistics and
after sales activities.
In this 15 sessions elective course we shall discover together how we can
achieve sustainability through our Supply Chain Management, which is
responsible for more than the 60% of the value addition for customers.
Join me in this trending topic elective and let us discover together plenty of
frameworks, tools and best practices to be able to apply them during your
professional career.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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01th September 2023
At the end of the course, students should be able to:
- Understand how to compete through sustainability
- Understand the model of Circular Economy and the Supply Chain Contribution to Circular
Economy.
- The strategic role of sustainability in the supply chain
- How to build a sustainable and green supply chain
- How to interpret and ellaborate a "Sustainability Report"
- Implement a sustainable supply chain
- To analyse the sustainability strategy of any firm
- Learn from common mistakes and identify best practices in sustainability
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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01th September 2023
SESSION 2 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
INTRODUCTION. THE TRIPLE BOTTOM LINE. COMPETING THROUGH SUSTAINABILITY:
Sustainability Challenges, Competencies and Opportunities. The 5 stages model for competing
through sustainability.
- Stage 1: Viewing Compliance as opportunity
- Stage 2: Making Value Chain Sustainable
- Stage 3: Designing Sustainable products and services
- Stage 4: Developing new business models
- Stage 5: Creating next-practice platforms
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01th September 2023
CIRCULAR ECONOMY AND GREEN SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
- Green Supply Chain Management
- Circular Supply Chain
- Recovery and Recycling
- Building product to last
- Sharing Platform
- PaaS business model (Product-as-a-service)
SESSIONS 9 - 10 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Sustanability through Supply Chain Management AT IKEA:
Activity to be done in groups representing 12.5% of the evaluation criteria of the course.
Practical Case: Unilever's New Global Strategy: Competing through Sustainability (HBS 916414-
PDF-ENG)
Article: The HBR Interview: Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz (HBS R1007K-PDF-ENG)
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01th September 2023
SESSION 15 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
FINAL REPORT PRESENTATIONS
Every student will present a final report on a free selection topic related with the course. Professor
will give all the indications for this activity and the possible formats of the deliverable with time
enought.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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01th September 2023
- During session 7: Professor will make available a midterm mock before this session, with the
structure of the midterm and questions similar in difficulty so you can practice, and a document
with the answer to self-check your answers to be prepared.
Final Report (25%):
- Each student will elaborate an individual final report about a chosen topic related with the
subject for Session 15. The more important aspects for the evaluation of this individual report
are: Relationship with the learning topics of the subject, multimedia material to illustrate your
topic, application of the tools and frameworks studied, creativity and strucure of the
presentation. Professor will provide students with all the indications to prepare this final
individual activity.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Nancy Bocken, Paavo Ritala, Laura Albareda, Robert Verburg. (2019).
Innovation for Sustainability: Business Transformations Towards a Better World.
Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9783319973852 (Printed)
- Balkan Cetinkaya, Christoph Tyssen, Graham Ewer, Richard Cuthbertson, and
Thorsten Klaas-Wissing. (2011). Sustainable Supply Chain Management: Practical
Ideas for Moving Towards Best Practice. Springer. ISBN 9783642120220 (Printed)
- Joëlle Morana. (2013). Sustainable Supply Chain Management. Wiley. ISBN
9781848215269 (Printed)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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01th September 2023
TECHNOLOGY NEW VENTURES
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 TNV-
NBA.1C.e.OPT.M.A
Area Entrepreneurship
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
PREREQUISITES
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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Technology Entrepreneurship is one of the most praised and discussed yet
vaguely defined topics in today’s turbulent economic environment. What is a
technology entrepreneurship? Who can be defined as a technology
entrepreneur? How can technological innovations be transformed into viable
business opportunities? Sheltered by its polyhedral nature a wide array of
different schools of thought for technology entrepreneurship have blossomed,
each of them focusing on a particular side of this elusive topic. In this course
we will examine the established knowledge base for technology
entrepreneurship identifying the entrepreneurial mindset and process trying to
distinguish art from science. We will be examining technological
entrepreneurship as a process of innovation and value creation, rather than the
single event of opening a business or writing a business plan. In our course we
will navigate through the entrepreneurial journey from the initial opportunity
recognition and assessment to the final business scaling reflecting on important
aspects like innovation management, disruptive technologies or web and app
development processes. We will focus our attention in the development of web
and mobile app and startups and the challenges faced by entrepreneurs in
these areas from the initial conception to the implementation of its idea.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills.
Professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the learning objectives of the course.
This is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
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10th July 2023
PROGRAM
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10th July 2023
In these sessions you will work with your group on the customer interview questionnaire and your
landing page for the MVP of your idea.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Your final grade in the course will be based on both group deliverables and the final presentation
that will be weighted in the following way:
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10th July 2023
Workgroups 30 % Deliverables for
each group during
course
Group 50 % Final group
Presentation presentation
Class Participation 20 %
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10th July 2023
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
- Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
- In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
6
10th July 2023
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
7
10th July 2023
THE ART OF SELLING
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 TAOS-
NBA.1C.m.OPT.M.A
Area Marketing and Communication
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Marina Tirado is a global thought leader – professor, speaker, chief curiosity officer, ceramist,
business strategy specialist – whose career is forged in the frontier between business strategy,
sales, leadership, creativity, and education.
She is passionate about helping individuals and organizations reach their full potential by focusing
on their innate capabilities. Marina is an advocate for purpose-driven leadership and enthusiastic
about how individuals display and expand their innate talents and potential.
She assists both individuals and organizations who wish to gain a different perspective in this era of
unusual business. It is an era that calls for virtuous and courageous individuals to lead human
enterprises forward, generating a positive impact in our world, our workplace, and our communities.
She teaches this course with a waste experience in sales, having managed sales forces of over
100 people in more than 30 different countries.
Marina is also an avid pottery and art instructor.
Academic credentials:
- Executive Master in Positive Leadership and Strategy. IE Business School, Spain.
- Master in e-Business. IE Business School, Spain.
- Bachelor of Science Degree in Business Administration. Fordham University, New York City.
- Certified Coach and NLP Specialist
Office hours will be on request. Please contact me at [email protected]
PREREQUISITES
To sell is human. If you are human, you have innate sales capacities. The only pre-requesite for
this program is to be human.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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"Human beings have an innate inner drive to be autonomous, self-determined, and connected to
one another. And when that drive is liberated, people achieve more and live richer lives." -Daniel
Pink
One out of every nine workers worldwide works in sales. Each day people earn their living by
helping someone make a purchase. They are real estate brokers, consultants, retailers, executives,
bartenders, industrial sales representatives, among many others. They sell trains to governments,
digital transformation projects to organizations, food to wholesalers, and cars to prospective drivers
at dealerships across the world.
Sales remains the second-largest occupational category in the world and even with the explosion of
the Internet, broadband, smartphones, and e-commerce, the number of sales professionals has,
against all odds, increased steadily over the past years.
As all other talents and skills honed over time, selling is a true art form that takes mastery to
conquer and creativity to shape. It is also a life skill and a lot of fun.
In the corporate world, the sales departments within organizations are crucial for continues success
and growth. The commercial function of an organization is where the execution of the marketing
strategy is materialized. Its effectiveness has a direct and profound impact on the competitiveness
of organizations, rendering the commercial department as the “voice of the customers”.
Sales and Business Development executive are also the first ones to identify change in disruption
in the industry, pushing their organizations to innovate constantly.
An honest and direct dialogue between an organization and its customers sets a flourishing ground
for innovation, new products and services, and business opportunities.
The purpose of this journey we take together in this course is to dive into the importance of sales
and business development departments within an organization and at the same time develop your
own efficient and effective art of selling skills.
What you will gain from our time together is a deep dive into this fascinating discipline that will
provide you with a wider strategical business perspective and self-awareness about your own
selling skills. By far, the best way to influence people is to understand the true nature of our human
experience.
“100% of employees are human. 100% of customers are human. You either know about human, or
you do not know about business.”
Simon Sinek.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
In this program, we will focus on both your own selling skills, how to manage a sales department,
as well as the overall strategical role of the sales and commercial departments within
organizations. The program objectives include:
- A deep look into your own mastery of selling.
- A deep understanding of the human experience.
- Comprehend the role of the sales and business development departments.
- Grasp the different structures of sales forces within organizations.
- View the change drivers that are disrupting different infustries.
- Build bridges between customers, distribution channels, products, and services.
- Become aware of the challenges of creating, managing, and motivating a sales force.
- Gain deep knowledge about how to build strong customer relationships through and open and
honest dialogue.
- Design effective and smart channel and customer strategies.
- Understand customer strategies and needs.
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TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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What makes a great sales person?
What can we learn for great sales executive?
How do we establish a good human connection?
What are the interferences in the sales process?
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- Sales Force?Generated Marketing Intelligence
- Management of a Contracted Sales Force
- Incentive Systems
- Sizing the Sales Force and Designing Sales Territories for Results
- Training and Motivation of Sales Force
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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Three main criteria will be used in reaching judgment about your class participation:
Depth and Quality of Contribution: The most important dimension of participation concerns what it is
that you are saying. A high-quality comment reveals depth of insight, rigorous use of case
evidence, consistency of argument, and realism.
Moving Your Peers’ Understanding Forward: Great ideas can be lost through poor presentation. A
high-quality presentation of ideas must consider the relevance and timing of comments, and the
flow and content of the ensuing class discussion. It demands comments that are concise and clear,
and that are conveyed with a spirit of involvement in the discussion at hand.
Frequency: Frequency refers to the attainment of a threshold quantity of contributions that is
sufficient for making a reliable assessment of comment quality. The logic is simple: if contributions
are too few, one cannot reliably assess the quality of your remarks. However, once threshold
quantity has been achieved, simply increasing the number of times you talk does not automatically
improve your evaluation. Beyond the threshold, it is the quality of your comments that must
improve. In particular, one must be especially careful that in claiming more than a fair share of
“airtime”, quality is not sacrificed for quantity. Finally, your attempts at participation should not be
such that the instructor has to “go looking for you”. You should be attempting to get into the debate
on a regular basis.
INDIVIDUAL WORK
We will view the content of the individual projects in the first session of class.
GROUP FIELD WORK
You will be visiting retail stores and observe the different elements of their shopper propositions
and strategy. You will give a report and a presentation to the class. This work will teach you to use
objective indicators and public sources of information to better understand your customers, their
objectives and needs. You will be asked to think about possible strategies that fit best with that
particular customer.
FINAL GROUP PRESENTATION
You will have to prepare a final work where you will apply your learnings from the course. Two
possibilities are given: taking a company / product of your choice, you will propose a channel
strategy and the corresponding design of the sales organization to serve it, or you will propose a
strategic customer segmentation.
FINAL EXAM
All students will make a final exam to check they have taken the basic concepts and learnings
covered throughout the course.
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Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit evaluation for
the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the attendance rule, and
therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and must directly re-enroll in
the course during the next Academic Year).
It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or deadlines
under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in advance and
must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships, trips, holidays, etc.)
The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade for
the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade components
over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call. Students will have
to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be capped at 8.0 (out of
10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-enrolled
as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as well as
contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as re-takers in
the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The maximum grade that
may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is 10.0 (out of 10.0).
After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- To Sell is Human. Daniel Pink. Penguin. ISBN 1594631905 (Digital)
- Jamie Smart. Clarity: Clear Mind, Better Performance, Bigger Results. Capstone.
ISBN 0857089366 (Digital)
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
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Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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UNPLUGGED THE MARKETING WORKSHOP
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 UTM-
NBA.1C.m.OPT.M.A
Area Marketing and Communication
Number of sessions: 15
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 3.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Academic Background
- ICADE E-3 – Universidad Pontificia de Comillas
- Degree in Law and Business Administration- Oct 1996/June 2002
- IE Business School – Senior Management Program 2014
Corporate Experience
- 22 years of professional experience. Balanced multifunctional experience in Marketing, Trade
Marketing and Sales. Member of Iberia Leadership team. Knowledge of diverse Food
categories, Home and Personal Care categories, Tobacco Industry and Pharma; as well as
different Retail Channels (Hyper, Super) and exclusive Spanish Tobacco/Pharma channels
- Director General UTECA Since Oct 2019
- Freelance Since Oct 2017
- IE Professor and Advisor since 2011
- Unit Head OTC Spain Sandoz– April 2014- Sept 2017
- Head of Business Development Iberia and Gibraltar Country Manager. British American
Tobacco – February 2011- Nov 2013
- Category Manager Cheese Iberia (Philadelphia, El Caserio). Kraft Foods Spain – Oct 2006 –
February 2011
- Brand Manager Spain (Timotei, Sunsilk). Unilever Spain - August 2002 – September 2006
- Research Executive (Sony Professionals). Sony Spain – Nov 2001 – March 2002
E-mail: [email protected]
Mobile: 600 535 407 (whatsapp)
PREREQUISITES
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Students must take a minimum of 3 more subjects of the Marketing track during the Semester/Year,
to be able to study this Course.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Marketing is into our daily life, is part of current society’s DNA. From a learning perspective the
theoretical part of marketing is relatively easy to understand, the beauty of marketing is to make the
complete journey until you have your proposal in the consumers´ hands. In marketing there is no
right or wrong, is the consumer who decides which strategy was successful and which was an
absolute failure. Analysis, consumer understanding, patience, common sense and coherence are
the base to have a strong marketing strategy.
Unplugged the Marketing Workshop is the space to put in practice your marketing knowledge, to
develop a strong business plan covering all the marketing elements (5P: Product, Price, Place,
Promotion and People), to share and learn from others perspectives.
You will experience the challenges marketers face in the day to day of a multinational company,
you will feel the real life of a marketing team (innovation, analysis, doubts, decision making…)
In a nutshell, put in practice your marketing knowledge by learning by doing.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
This course will provide the student the following knowledge and skills:
- Experience daily real live of a marketing department in a multinational company.
- Put in practice your marketing knowledge.
- Marketing Mix understanding: analysis on needs and proposal of plans.
- Global vision of a marketing plan: Strategic plan development.
- Team work benefits and challenges.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
PROGRAM
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Welcome & introductions. Discussion of the program, expectations and evaluation system
Real time Session
Introduction: Marketing Mix
Team groups definition
Objective: Set the scene of the workshop, understand the needs
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Objective: Share and clarify doubts; Learn from others experience
SESSION 8 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Group work session: Live Session; Brand Key Build up
Objective: Generate the space for Team discussion and Professor Assessment/Guidance
Elevator Pitch
SESSION 10 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Group work session: Live Session. Marketing Plan Build up
Objective: Generate the space for Team discussion and Professor Assessment/Guidance
SESSION 12 (ASYNCHRONOUS)
Group work session: Live Session. Marketing Plan Build up
Objective: Generate the space for Team discussion and Professor Assessment/Guidance
EVALUATION CRITERIA
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criteria percentage Learning Comments
Objectives
Case Studies 30 %
Individual 20 %
Contribution to GP
Final Group 40 %
Presentation
(Client)
Class Participation 10 %
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C. FINAL GROUP PRESENTATION AND REPORT – Marketing Jury-
You are expected to complete a final project with your group and present it in written form. Each
Group must present two documents: Final Report (deep written explanation of the decision taken,
strategy and marketing plans. Max 25 pages); Strategic Presentation (Oral presentation of max.
25minutes including Q&A- that will depend on the final number of groups)
You also have to send a soft copy of the case write-up to the professor via email one hour before
presenting.
This evaluation will be done by a marketing external jury based on these criteria: Strategy, Plan
Consistency, innovation, execution, Presentation and plan viability. The average between the
individual marks of the jury will be the one reflected in this section
Peer evaluation: no free riders will be accepted. Peer evaluation must be completed, is
compulsory. In case an alumni does not complete the peer evaluation form this part will be graded
as 0.
D. FINAL PRESENTATION AND REPORT INDIVIDUAL – Professor-
Individual contribution to team development, group work, individual presentation skills and final
presentation and report.
You are expected to complete a final project with your group and work as a team, building ideas
together, being constructive and a real team player. Individual presentation skills and clarity during
Presentation and Q&A will be taken into account.
RE-SIT / RE-TAKE POLICY
Each student has four (4) chances to pass any given course distributed over two (2) consecutive
academic years. Each academic year consists of two calls: one (1) ordinary call (during the
semester when the course is taking place); and one (1) extraordinary call (or “re-sit”) in June/July.
Students who do not comply with the 70% attendance requirement in each subject during the
semester will automatically fail both calls (ordinary and extraordinary) for that Academic Year and
have to re-take the course (i.e., re-enroll) during the next Academic Year.
The Extraordinary Call Evaluation criteria will be subject to the following rules:
- Students failing the course in the ordinary call (during the semester) will have to re-sit
evaluation for the course in June / July (except those students who do not comply with the
attendance rule, and therefore will not have that opportunity, since they will fail both calls and
must directly re-enroll in the course during the next Academic Year).
- It is not permitted to change the format nor the date of the extraordinary call exams or
deadlines under any circumstance. All extraordinary call evaluation dates will be announced in
advance and must be taken into consideration before planning the summer (e.g. internships,
trips, holidays, etc.)
- The June/July re-sit will consist of a comprehensive evaluation of the course. Your final grade
for the course will depend on the performance in this exam or evaluation only. I.e., continuous
evaluation over the semester (e.g. participation, quizzes, projects and/or other grade
components over the semester) will not be taken into consideration on the extraordinary call.
Students will have to achieve the minimum passing grade of 5 and the maximum grade will be
capped at 8.0 (out of 10.0) – i.e., “notable” in the extraordinary call.
- Re-takers: Students who failed the subject on a previous Academic Year and are now re-
enrolled as re-takers in a course will need to check the syllabus of the assigned professor, as
well as contact the professor individually, regarding the specific evaluation criteria for them as
re-takers in the course during that semester (ordinary call of that Academic Year). The
maximum grade that may be obtained as a retaker during the ordinary call (i.e., the 3rd call) is
10.0 (out of 10.0).
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After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
! Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to
leave the Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass
your failed subjects.
! In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the
June/July extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic
Year as a re-taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total
of four (4) allowed calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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VENTURE CREATION AND PLANNING 2.0
Grado en Administración de Empresas / Bachelor in
Business Administration BBA SEP-2023 VECP-
NBA.1C.e.OPT.M.A
Area Entrepreneurship
Number of sessions: 30
Academic year: 23-24
Degree course:
Number of credits: 6.0
Semester: 1º
Category: OPTIONAL
Language: English
Senior digital business executive & entrepreneur. Investor, advisor and director.
Innovation | Transformation | Digital | Optimist.
Marcos has worked in the digital arena since 1999, in the Internet, telco, mobile
devices, apps, software, Internet of Things, media and broadcast, videogames,
esports, social media and content, gamification, elearning, crisis
communication, education, events and consulting verticals, among others.
He has played international leading roles in innovation, digital transformation,
product/services design, development and standardisation. He has also got
leading responsibilities in corporate and business development and project
management.
He is a serial entrepreneur, investor, mentor, advisor and director in multiple
ventures. He is a cofounder and head of revenue of vidiv, online platform for
mass events, and MAD Lions esports club (acquired by the Canadian
OverActive Media group). Also, a co-founder and president of Barbara IoT, a
deep tech company with a focus on IoT and cybersecurity. Further, founder of
the Innovation as a Service resultancy firm BinaryKnowledge_, and cofounder
of IdeaFoster, innovation agency acquired by the Peruvian company Canvia.
Marcos is a member of the Spanish Institute of Directors-Administrators (IC-A).
He has worked in international organizations, being a member of the board of
the Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) on behalf of the Telefónica Group, a member
of the Spanish Association of Telecommunications Engineers (COIT-AEIT) and
a representative member before the Spanish Engineering Institute (IIE). In
addition, he has been a member of the committee and vice-president of the
Spanish Red Cross in Madrid, a member of the advisory board of the IMAN
Foundation or a member of the Internet of Things Council.
He is an independent consultant and evaluator of FP7 and Horizon2020 calls of
the European Commission.
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As an educator and speaker, he is an adjunct professor at IE Business School,
Headspring (joint-venture with Financial Times that delivers in-company
programs) and other institutions. Furthermore, he has also extensively
collaborated in hackathons, incubation and acceleration programs of many
organizations.
He holds an MSc. in Telecommunication Engineering and an Executive MBA.
He is a candidate PhD and Project Management Professional certified. Marcos
received a Torres Quevedo grant as a researcher by the Ministry of Innovation
and Science of Spain from 2010 to 2012. And he was awarded with Telefónica
I+D Prize for Innovation in 1999 and recognized for excellence as professor
and mentor at IE Business School and University several times.
PREREQUISITES
You should have already acquired some basic knowledge about business, financial, marketing,
operations, innovation, management and talent practices.
In addition, you should have already been exposed to the basics of entrepreneurship (why, how
and what) and the concepts, methodologies and tools related to Lean Startup, Customer
Development and Design Thinking.
REQUIREMENTS
- Work and effort. Participation, commitment, passion, energy, curiosity, acceptance of failure
and perseverance.
- Self-criticism, push, open-mindedness, empathy and assertiveness.
Finally, the most essential requirement is to talk business.
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
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NOTE: This course is not a light one. It asks for a lot of work and commitment
from you. You will have to deliver assignments. You will have to engage with
(real) potential customers, providers and partners. You will have to present
your intermediate and final results to the group and get feedback. You will have
to challenge others’ ideas. And you will be challenged.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
The course's main objective is to allow you to apply the tools learnt in previous entrepreneurship
courses to a Business Opportunity that may eventually evolve into a real business.
This journey will also allow you to experience first-hand the uncertainty, pressure, excitement, and
related sensations typically surrounding creating a new business. You will meet the following
objectives, among others, throughout the journey:
- The formation of an entrepreneurial team.
- The creation of a business idea.
- The transformation of your idea into a Business Opportunity.
- The application of the Lean Startup and Customer Development methodologies (focusing on
the Customer Discovery and Customer Validation phases) to your own project.
- The creation and application of Non-Functional and Functional Minimum Viable Products to test
hypotheses and extract learning for decision-making, adjustment, iteration, improvement,
evolution and pivoting of your opportunity.
- The definition of a Go-to-Market Strategy for help you achieve the Product Market Fit phase.
- The preparation of a solid Executive Summary and investor-ready Pitch of your Business
Opportunity.
TEACHING METHODOLOGY
If the best way to learn is by doing, the best way to learn how to become an entrepreneur is by
entrepreneuring.
This is not intended to be a subject but a 100% hands-on course that uses the case method, where
the case is your project.
The theory is not part of the course; you should know it. And if it is not the case, it should be ok
anyway because one of the main characteristics of entrepreneurs is that they are self-taught and do
whatever to reach the objective.
Ideally, the end result of the process is to become an entrepreneur, creating value from all the
ideas, knowledge, skills, network and experience you have acquired throughout the process. It is a
mini-incubation period.
You will create a project in workgroups. And you will have to agree on what will be the idea you as
a team will develop.
You can change the idea or project along the course, but not the group. Being an entrepreneur
entails having co-founders and a team. It is one of the keys to success with a project, and therefore,
it should be part of the experience of the course.
The course is designed following the principles of Flipped Learning. Thus, you should prepare for
the sessions in advance; watch proposed videos or go through quick reads. You will also usually
need to deliver short assignments before some sessions. In addition, you should be ready to share
your progress with the rest of the participants at any moment as an excuse for discussion in the
group.
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Sessions will include reviewing the projects, finding answers, sharing tips about methodologies and
tools, co-creating ideas and solutions to problems or areas of improvement, debates, etc.
We will use commercially available tools (most or all of them free) to identify, measure, analyse,
conclude, develop and improve the projects.
Finally, there are no right or wrong answers, just different views and alternatives for a way forward.
Be brave to share them and get criticised while respecting and supporting others. Do so in a
constructive but brutally honest manner.
NOTE: All course participants implicitly agree that by participating, all the information related to their
projects can be used for academic and learning purposes. This should be fine to any entrepreneur,
as the differentiating factor is not the idea but the execution.
FEEDBACK: You can expect the professor’s feedback about your ideas, projects, assignments and
progress during sessions. If you have doubts, ask. Make it happen; it’s your responsibility.
IE University teaching method is defined by its collaborative, active, and applied nature. Students
actively participate in the whole process to build their knowledge and sharpen their skills. The
professor’s main role is to lead and guide students to achieve the course's learning objectives. This
is done by engaging in a diverse range of teaching techniques and different types of learning
activities such as the following:
PROGRAM
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- Introduce the course.
- Review the syllabus.
- Q&A and feedback.
After the sessions:
--
Assignments:
--
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After the sessions:
- Consider and integrate the feedback.
- Define a work plan to execute the project.
Assignments:
--
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- Customers, Stakeholders and Problems. Deliver it before the Customer and Problems
Validation Workshop. Not graded (it should be part of the Final Pitch).
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SESSIONS 15 - 16 (LIVE IN-PERSON)
SOLUTION AND BUSINESS MODEL VALIDATION WORKSHOP
Objectives:
- Start with the validation of the Solution and the Business Model.
Get ready for the sessions:
- Check and prepare the references from the assignments.
- Prepare your questions.
During the sessions:
- Work on validating the Solution and the Business Model of the teams.
- Work on the assignment.
- Q&A and feedback.
After the session:
- Work on the assignment.
Assignments:
- Functional MVP. Deliver it before the Final Pitch Competition session. Graded.
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- Check and prepare the references from the assignments.
- Prepare your questions.
During the sessions:
- Work on the phasing, beachhead market, funnelling, marketing and sales of the teams.
- Work on the assignment.
- Q&A and feedback.
After the sessions:
- Finish the assignment.
Assignments:
- Go-to-Market Strategy. Deliver it before the Executive Summary and Final Pitch Workshop
session. Not graded (it should be part of the Final Pitch).
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- Book a workroom for your team for the spare time you are not with the professor.
During the sessions:
- The professor will have individual private conversations with each team to know how they are
doing and the status of their projects, answer their questions, provide feedback and help move
forward.
- While not with the professor, all the teams should continue working on their projects in separate
working rooms they should book next to the class.
- Q&A and feedback.
After the sessions:
- Consider and integrate the feedback.
Assignments:
--
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their pitch.
- While not with the professor, all the teams should continue working on their projects and
rehearsing in separate working rooms they should book next to the class.
- Q&A and feedback.
After the sessions:
- Consider and integrate the feedback.
Assignments:
--
EVALUATION CRITERIA
You will be evaluated based on your results, the process you follow and your participation and
contribution to the learning process of the whole group.
All assignments will be available in advance on the Online Campus. They will include instructions
and additional references. It will be your exclusive responsibility to check if there are assignments
available or if assignments have been appropriately delivered, registered and graded.
All assignments issued will help you moving forward along the process of transforming your idea
into a Business Opportunity. We will also use them as basis for discussion during sessions. Late
deliveries will be strongly penalized.
When you get feedback from my side about your assignment, it is intended to help you improve and
move forward. You should not deliver it back again with modifications for my review. If you consider
that my comments make sense and help you creating an improved version, good for you.
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For educational reasons, all materials generated by you will be considered to be licensed under
Creative Commons BY-NC-SA (Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike). Refer to
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode for further information.
FINAL PITCH
Your Final Pitch will be graded. Template and instructions about the preparation and performance
of the Pitch will be provided with sufficient time.
FUNCTIONAL MVP
It is a limited working version of your product or service that is useful for validation purposes. You
will get specific requirements, instructions and references.
NON-FUNCTIONAL MVPs
They are non-working versions of your Value Proposition that are useful for validation purposes.
You will get specific requirements, instructions and references.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
It is a short but comprehensive document of the project that shares the basics of the Business
Opportunity behind the idea, and how it is made come true. You will get specific requirements,
instructions and references.
PROOF OF VALIDATION
It is a short but comprehensive document of the project that introduces all the relevant information
about the validation strategy, tactics, results, learning and decisions. You will get specific
requirements, instructions and references.
PARTICIPATION AND CONTRIBUTION
Participation during live sessions and on the Online Campus will be graded. Attending and not
participating does not give you any participation points.
You will be positively graded if you share your views, doubts, concerns, thoughts, findings,
conclusions, results, learning, and experiences. It is not a one-shot effort but a continuum of
involvement. We expect you to be reasonably open, talkative and proactive. You will get a poor
grade if you barely participate, speak or write just for the sake of participating, copy, or spam the
group.
Ask as much as needed; there are no ‘silly’ questions. If you have doubts about the course (e.g.,
dates, assignments, etc.) or administrative matters, please first check the syllabus, announcements
and other instructions provided during the introductory session. Please, submit your questions to
the corresponding threads on the Online Campus, so everyone can benefit from the answer. Do not
submit questions via email.
For written participation, I recommend that you go straight to the point, be reasonable and succinct.
If you refer to information or material available on the Internet, cite the source (share the link).
Please, do not copy the content.
Three main criteria will be used to evaluate your participation (both in class and on the Online
Campus): Frequency, Depth and Quality of contributions. Valuable comments are those that move
the class forward.
PEER EVALUATION
All participants inside every team will evaluate each other.
The criteria should be to reward those who have contributed the most to your learning process and
your team.
Instructions about the execution of the evaluation will be provided at the end of the course.
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Executive 10 % Responsibility:
Summary Team. Evaluated
by: Professor.
Non-functional 10 % Responsibility:
MVPs Team. Evaluated
by: Professor /
Class.
Proof of validation 10 % Responsibility:
Team. Evaluated
by: Professor.
Functional MVP 20 % Responsibility:
Team. Evaluated
by: Professor /
Class.
Final Pitch 20 % Responsibility:
Team. Evaluated
by: Professor /
Class
Participation and 10 % Responsibility:
contribution Team. Evaluated
by: Professor.
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After exams and other assessments are graded by the professor (on either the ordinary or
extraordinary call), students will have a possibility to attend a review session (whether it be a final
exam, a final project, or the final overall grade in a given course). Please be available to attend the
session in order to clarify any concerns you might have regarding your grade. Your professor will
inform you about the time and place of the review session.
Students failing more than 18 ECTS credits after the June/July re-sits will be asked to leave the
Program. Please, make sure to prepare yourself well for the exams in order to pass your failed
subjects.
In case you decide to skip the opportunity to re-sit for an exam or evaluation during the June/July
extraordinary call, you will need to enroll in that course again for the next Academic Year as a re-
taker, and pay the corresponding tuition fees. As you know, students have a total of four (4) allowed
calls to pass a given subject or course, in order to remain in the program.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Recommended
- Brant Cooper, Patrick Vlaskovits. The Entrepreneur’s guide to Customer
Development. A “cheat sheet” to The Four Steps to the Epiphany. Brant Cooper,
Patrick Vlaskovits. ISBN 97809827436 (Digital)
USE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
The course professor expects you to use AI extensively in a reasonable, responsible and ethical
manner to boost your reasoning, skills, process and results.
AI is usually a good starting point to break the blank page syndrome, but not a just-take-it-as-it-is
result. You should work hard to provide a good context and a reasonable prompt to kick off the
process and then go through a few refine-and-check loops for better outcomes.
You will be responsible for any of the outcomes of the AI tools you use.
You should comply with the following:
1. Identify when and how you use them.
2. Identify what part of the materials directly results from the AI tools and what does not.
3. Cite the tools and references you have used.
4. Share the prompts.
5. Add value on top of it; your own criteria, reflection, test, and learning.
6. You should be able to explain and defend any outcome of the AI tools you use.
Failing to comply with these requirements could be considered plagiarism and, therefore, subject to
failing the deliverable and an Ethics case.
BEHAVIOR RULES
Please, check the University's Code of Conduct here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
ATTENDANCE POLICY
Please, check the University's Attendance Policy here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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ETHICAL POLICY
Please, check the University's Ethics Code here. The Program Director may
provide further indications.
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