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MBA in Applied Sport Management
Program Course Descriptions
The MBA degree requires 39 credit hours of graduate study to be
completed in 24 months. Certain prerequisite accounting and math
knowledge and skills are necessary for successful completion of the
program. Competency may be demonstrated through completion of overview
courses or documented work experience.
Required course of study for the MBA in Applied Sport
Management:
- BM575 -
Organizational Behavior
- BM543 - Marketing
Management
- BM540 - Management
Accounting
- BM545 - Finance for
Managers
- BM530 - Leadership in
Times of Change
- BM576 - Human
Resource Management in Sport
- BM565 - Communication
Management in Sport
- BM546 - Sport Law and
Risk Management
- BM655 - Sport
Business in the International and Global Economy
- BM580 - Operations
Management
- BM605 - Governance
and Administration of Sport Facilities and Events
- BM680 - Strategic
Management
- BM695 - Capstone
Research Project
COURSE 1: BM575 - APPLIED TECHNIQUES
IN ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
This course surveys the major theories in organizational behavior,
including theory of learning organizations, and theories of
organizational change, decision making, and advanced concepts in team
development. The course also provides techniques for management
activities such as negotiating agreements, turning confrontation into
cooperation, and conflict resolution. Students will act as a consultant
to a real company and make meaningful recommendations to senior
management as the final project for the course.
COURSE 2: BM543 - MARKETING MANAGEMENT
This course focuses on a wide variety of marketing concepts,
including building on and managing profitable customer relationships and
creating a competitive advantage. In addition to the classical “Four
P’s” (product, price, positioning, promotion), this course also covers
managing marketing information, building strong brands and brand equity,
consumer and business buying behavior, segmentation, product life-cycle
strategies, advertising and promotion, and socially responsible
marketing around the globe. During the course, students will consult for
a real company. Through lectures, case studies, practical exercises, and
research, students will have the skills and information needed to make
meaningful recommendations that solve critical marketing problems.
COURSE 3: BM540 - MANAGEMENT
ACCOUNTING
This course helps you understand the importance of internal
accounting data in making sound business decisions from the perspectives
of the manager and the accountant. You will examine both roles; how the
accountant prepares reports and how the effective manager uses these
reports in decision-making, evaluating, planning and product costing as
well as strategic implications. It incorporates the use of spreadsheet
and/or accounting software. Analysis and evaluation of balance sheets, P
& L income statements, cash flow statements and ratios are emphasized.
Case methodology will be applied.
COURSE 4: BM545 - FINANCE FOR MANAGERS
Terminology, theory, and analytical techniques of corporate
financial management are discussed in this course. Specifically, the
course will address the valuation principles such as time-value of
money, investment-value and required rates of return, and the valuation
of securities. Topics covered under the long-term investment decisions
will include capital expenditure decisions, risk, and control in capital
budgeting. The course will also include topics of short-term financial
management such as working capital policy, short-term financing
decisions, contribution accounting, and management of accounts
receivable and inventory. Cases discussed in management accounting will
be revisited to show how finance managers make decisions.
COURSE 5: BM530 - LEADERSHIP IN TIMES
OF CHANGE
The various theoretical frameworks that contribute to the study
and practice of leadership in contemporary organizational environments
are explored. Emphasis will be placed on the ability to effect positive
and sustainable change in a pluralistic and fast moving society.
Students will explore four types of vision essential for a leader:
organization, future, personal, and strategic. Emerging research and
perspectives on leading strategic development, teams, change, corporate
responsibility, and organizational design will be explored. The
importance of effective communications in times of change will be
included.
COURSE 6: BM576 - HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN
SPORT
This unit builds directly on the Organizational Behavior unit,
and takes a look at the increased growth, interest, and complexity in
human resource management in sport in recent years. This unit puts
significant emphasis on managerial competencies, the strategic
importance of human resource management, and the implications of
legislative, governance and ethical issues in terms of volunteers,
employees and customers of sport organizations. This emphasis will be
accomplished by understanding individual differences in abilities,
personalities, values and motivations inherent in each group in terms of
organizational justice, job design, staffing, leadership, performance
appraisal, reward systems, and internal marketing. Each of these areas
will be evaluated in terms of the two most important outcomes of human
resource management – satisfaction and commitment.
COURSE 7: BM565 - COMMUNICATION
MANAGEMENT IN SPORT
This unit will build on many of the marketing concepts covered
in the sport marketing management unit, with a specific focus on
communication relations. It is designed to introduce the postgraduate
student to the various modes of communications within an organizational
structure and develop an understanding of their influence on the
decision-making processes. This will be accomplished on two levels.
First, from sport promotions where an investigation of the elements of
the promotional mix will focus on public relations (media relations,
sports information, and sport journalism) and personal contact
(community relations, socialization, word-of-mouth), but will also
include elements from advertising, sponsorship, licensing, incentives,
and atmospherics. The second focus will include a comprehensive
investigation of the need and current applications of information
technology and database management in sport organizations of all levels.
The operating structures, procedures, regulatory environment, rules, and
contemporary issues of information technology will be examined as
related to these organizational environments. Students will analyze the
mediums and application of information and communication technology in
meeting the demands for the real time delivery of goods and services to
a selective set of customers, fans, and/or members.
COURSE 8: BM546 - SPORT LAW AND RISK
MANAGEMENT
This unit provides an in-depth examination of areas of law and
risk management that are particularly relevant to sport. From a sport
law viewpoint, developments in negligence law, contract law and
constitutional law as they apply to sport are considered, and recent
developments and trends are studied. In the area of risk management,
this unit identifies current issues confronting the sport industry, and
also provides a framework for developing risk management strategies that
will assist sport managers in setting guidelines, policies, plans and
procedures - making the sport industry safer and less litigious.
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COURSE 9: BM655 - |
SPORT BUSINESS IN THE INTERNATIONAL AND
GLOBAL ECONOMY |
This unit will cover sport from an
international and global perspective, providing students with a basic
understanding of the role of governance structures in professional and
amateur sport, as well as taking a look at the business of sport outside
of the domestic marketplace. Sport management is part of a continuously
evolving international and global business environment, where nations,
governments, economic systems, and business cultures interact, compete
and sometimes cooperate in the promotion of sport. Although approaches
vary, each sport organization seeks to provide income, status, and
success for those it represents.
COURSE 10: BM580 - OPERATIONS
MANAGEMENT
The focus of this course is on how operations can provide a
competitive advantage for the firm, and how operation strategies connect
with marketing and other functional strategies. You will develop a
foundation in the concepts of process analysis and improvement, and
explore ways that outstanding quality can provide a strategic advantage
and improved profitability. The fundamentals of project planning,
capacity analysis, and supply chain management are examined, along with
information technology’s impact on today’s business operations. Skills
learned in the forecasting and demand analysis course will be an
integral part of operations management. As a class project, you will
reengineer a process that cuts across functional areas of your company,
resulting in a significant improvement. Computer applications include
acceptance sampling and reliability, linear programming and
transportation analysis, control charts, and scheduling.
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COURSE 11: BM605 - |
GOVERNANCE AND ADMINISTRATION OF
SPORT FACILITIES AND EVENTS |
This unit will build on the operations
management unit and focus on the relationship between sport facility
management, sport event management, and project management. The content
of the unit is designed to apply project management systems to sport
facility and event management. The unit deals with planning, scheduling,
organizing, and controlling sport facilities and events, including event
development, construction, systems, new business, production layout, and
special events. A foundation on how to properly build sports events into
successful and financially viable ventures for any level–from the
community to the global stage will be covered. Included will be
connecting facility and venue management to event management, event
operations and logistics, facility and event programming and scheduling,
and facility and event marketing. Specific topics will include the
development of strategic sport facility and event management plans,
preparing and controlling facility and event logistics, negotiations and
contracts, securing participants, spectators, and media coverage, risk
and crisis management issues, promotions, and funding.
COURSE 12: BM680 - STRATEGIC
MANAGEMENT
The course focuses on how to build value-creating business
strategies and how those strategies must be adapted to changing markets
and technologies. You will practice your skills – and utilize the
knowledge gained from previous courses – by participating in a computer
simulation project. Your team will develop and implement a business
strategy (applying the concepts learned in the accounting, finance,
demand analysis and forecasting) in a state-of-the-art computer
simulation.
COURSE 13: BM695 - CAPSTONE RESEARCH
PROJECT
Students will act as a consultant to a real business and
analyze a problem or opportunity at that business. Drawing on the skills
developed over the course of the program and their business acumen,
students will construct research problems, generate and test hypotheses
and make recommendations based on their findings. Each student will
produce a consultant's report and recommend an action plan based on at
least three of the four major content areas: Organizational Behavior,
Accounting and Finance, Operations Management, or Marketing.
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