Generated by GPT-5-mini| ASU W. P. Carey School of Business | |
|---|---|
| Name | W. P. Carey School of Business |
| Established | 1961 |
| Type | Public business school |
| Parent | Arizona State University |
| City | Tempe |
| State | Arizona |
| Country | United States |
ASU W. P. Carey School of Business is the business school of Arizona State University located in Tempe, Arizona, offering undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs. The school is named after William Polk Carey following a major gift, and it operates within the Arizona Board of Regents system alongside institutions such as University of Arizona and Northern Arizona University. Its programs interface with regional institutions like the Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport economy, national organizations such as the U.S. Small Business Administration, and international partners including INSEAD and London Business School.
Founded in 1961 as part of Arizona State College's expansion, the school evolved amid statewide initiatives by the Arizona Legislature and leadership from figures tied to Carl Hayden era infrastructure projects. During the 1970s and 1980s it expanded programs influenced by curricular trends at Harvard Business School, Wharton School, and Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, while forming partnerships with corporations like Intel, Honeywell, and General Dynamics. A transformative gift by W. P. Carey in the early 2000s led to naming recognition and accelerated facility development comparable to investments at Stanford Graduate School of Business and MIT Sloan School of Management; subsequent donor engagement mirrored philanthropic patterns seen with The Rockefeller Foundation and Ford Foundation. Throughout its history the school has navigated accreditation milestones paralleling institutions such as University of Michigan and Columbia Business School.
The school offers degrees from bachelor's programs to Ph.D. fields, with majors and concentrations connected to employers like Deloitte, PwC, Ernst & Young, and KPMG. Undergraduate curricula incorporate frameworks from Michael Porter and Peter Drucker while graduate programs emphasize analytics influenced by work at IBM, Google, and Amazon; executive education collaborates with entities such as General Electric and McKinsey & Company. Dual-degree pathways link to professional schools including Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law and Barrett, The Honors College, and international study options involve exchanges with National University of Singapore, University of Tokyo, and HEC Paris. Faculty appointments often intersect with scholars from University of California, Berkeley, Yale University, and University of Chicago.
Research activities are housed in centers and institutes comparable to Harvard Kennedy School centers, including initiatives focused on supply chain management akin to work at MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, finance research reflecting themes from Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and entrepreneurship comparable to Babson College programs. Notable centers collaborate with corporations such as FedEx, UPS, and Boeing, and pursue grants from agencies like the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health. Research outputs appear in journals including Journal of Finance, Management Science, and Academy of Management Journal and feature scholars who have published with presses like Oxford University Press and Cambridge University Press.
The school holds accreditation from AACSB International and has received rankings from organizations including U.S. News & World Report, Financial Times, and Bloomberg Businessweek, competing regionally with University of Arizona Eller College of Management and University of California, Los Angeles Anderson School of Management. Specialty program rankings have compared its supply chain programs to those at Michigan State University and its entrepreneurship programs to Babson College, with professional outcomes monitored by employers such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase.
Facilities include the main business building on the Tempe campus near Arizona State University Research Park, technology-enabled classrooms comparable to those at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and collaborative spaces used by student groups like chapters of Enactus and Beta Alpha Psi. The school maintains labs and computing resources aligned with partners such as Cisco Systems and Microsoft and provides career services coordinating with recruiters from Facebook, Salesforce, and Adobe. Off-campus programs operate in locations including Phoenix and international hubs comparable to centers at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
Student organizations encompass academic and professional groups such as student chapters of Beta Gamma Sigma, Phi Beta Lambda, and Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business-affiliated clubs, as well as interest organizations linked to industries represented by Intel Corporation and American Express. Competitive teams participate in case competitions sponsored by Harvard Business School and The Coca-Cola Company and in national events including DECA and National Model United Nations. Student governance interacts with university-wide bodies like the Arizona Students' Association and professional networking events attract alumni from firms such as Kaiser Permanente and Visa Inc..
Alumni and faculty include executives, entrepreneurs, and scholars who have held positions at Intel, PayPal, Banner Health, Freeport-McMoRan, and within public service roles in offices tied to Maricopa County and the State of Arizona. Faculty have published alongside researchers from Columbia University, Stanford University, and University of Pennsylvania and have received awards from organizations such as the Academy of Management and American Finance Association. Alumni networks connect with global business leaders including alumni at Procter & Gamble, Walmart, ExxonMobil, and Chevron.