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Indiana Kelley School of Business

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Indiana Kelley School of Business
NameKelley School of Business
Established1920
TypePublic business school
ParentIndiana University Bloomington
CityBloomington
StateIndiana
CountryUnited States
DeanTBA
WebsiteOfficial site

Indiana Kelley School of Business

The Kelley School of Business at Indiana University Bloomington is a prominent public business school known for undergraduate, graduate, and executive programs and for deep ties to corporate and civic institutions. It operates within Indiana University Bloomington and collaborates with corporations such as General Motors, Eli Lilly and Company, Cummins, and Lincoln Financial Group. The school attracts students from across the United States and internationally, drawing applicants who have competed in programs or events linked to Fortune 500, NCAA Division I, Peace Corps, and major consulting firms like McKinsey & Company.

History

Kelley's roots trace to commerce instruction at Indiana University in the early 20th century, expanding through the Roaring Twenties into the post-World War II era alongside institutions such as Harvard Business School, Wharton School, and Stanford Graduate School of Business. The school adopted the Kelley name following philanthropy from the Kelley family and has undergone curriculum reforms influenced by corporate partners including Procter & Gamble, IBM, and Deloitte. During the late 20th century, Kelley participated in national initiatives alongside National Science Foundation-funded programs and exchanges with international business schools like INSEAD and London Business School. In the 21st century, Kelley expanded online offerings and experiential programs that mirror shifts seen at University of Phoenix and Massachusetts Institute of Technology in management education.

Academics

Kelley offers bachelor's degrees in majors such as finance, marketing, management, and information systems, paralleling curricula at Columbia Business School, Kellogg School of Management, and NYU Stern School of Business. Graduate programs include a full-time MBA, online MBA, and specialized master's degrees comparable to programs at Booth School of Business and Fuqua School of Business. Kelley emphasizes experiential learning via consulting clinics, internships with companies like Amazon (company), Google, and Microsoft, and study-abroad partnerships with institutions such as University of Oxford, ESADE, and National University of Singapore. Certificate offerings and executive education attract leaders from General Electric, 3M, and ExxonMobil for short courses and corporate training.

Admissions and Rankings

Admissions at Kelley are competitive, drawing applications similar to peer schools Ross School of Business, Tepper School of Business, and Carnegie Mellon University. Graduate admissions incorporate GMAT or GRE scores, professional experience, and recommendations from employers like Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Ernst & Young. Rankings from outlets analogous to U.S. News & World Report, Financial Times, and The Economist have placed Kelley among notable national business faculties, reflecting outcomes comparable to graduates entering PwC, KPMG, and Bain & Company.

Research and Centers

Kelley's research spans finance, analytics, entrepreneurship, and supply chain management, with faculty publishing in journals frequented by scholars at University of Chicago, MIT, and Stanford University. Research centers and institutes host collaborations with entities such as Bloomberg L.P., S&P Global, and Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Centers focus on entrepreneurship models similar to those at Babson College, and analytics hubs parallel initiatives at Columbia University and Carnegie Mellon. Grant-funded projects have partnered with agencies like the National Institutes of Health and multinational firms including Siemens on applied research.

Campus and Facilities

Kelley occupies facilities on the Bloomington campus that include modern classrooms, collaboration spaces, and technology labs reflecting investments similar to those at University of Michigan and University of California, Berkeley. Key buildings house trading labs equipped with terminals from Bloomberg L.P. and simulation suites used by students interning at Morgan Stanley and Bank of America. The school’s proximity to cultural venues like Indiana University Jacobs School of Music and athletic facilities tied to Indiana Hoosiers supports interdisciplinary engagement and student recruitment from arts and sports organizations such as NCAA Division I programs.

Student Life and Organizations

Student life includes professional clubs, honor societies, and competitive teams that collaborate with corporate partners such as Amazon (company), McKinsey & Company, and Boston Consulting Group. Organizations include finance and investment clubs that compete in challenges resembling those hosted by CFA Institute and marketing groups that participate in case competitions alongside Procter & Gamble and Unilever. Student government, community service chapters like Habitat for Humanity, and international student associations foster ties with alumni networks employed at Facebook, Apple Inc., and Intel.

Notable Alumni and Faculty

Alumni occupy leadership roles across industries, joining boards and executive suites at firms such as Eli Lilly and Company, Cummins, E. & J. Gallo Winery, Salesforce, and McKinsey & Company. Faculty have included scholars with prior affiliations to Harvard Business School, Columbia Business School, and Northwestern University, contributing to scholarship recognized by awards from organizations like the Academy of Management and journals such as Journal of Finance and Management Science. The school’s network includes entrepreneurs and public figures connected to Forbes 30 Under 30 alumni, corporate executives at General Motors, and policymakers who have worked with institutions like the U.S. Department of Labor.

Category:Indiana University Bloomington Category:Business schools in the United States