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The Managerial Analytics Certificate prepares you for corporate roles in management consulting, strategy or planning, as well as doctoral/professional programs in law or business.

Building on Northwestern’s liberal arts framework, the certificate teaches you the business analytical models that guide strategic and tactical decision-making in business.

Graduates of the certificate will be prepared for business roles that include:

  • Analyzing corporate spreadsheets
  • Preparing analyses to support merger or acquisition decisions
  • Helping companies make investment decisions in a supply chain network
  • Analyzing and optimizing supply chain networks
  • Creating analyses to support pricing decisions
  • Studying industries to assess current trends in business practices, products and industry competition
  • Using spreadsheets and statistical software packages to analyze sales and operational data, spot trends and develop forecasts
  • Facilitating and preparing for client meetings

Course schedule

Course
Quarter
Instructor
Time and location

KELLG_MA 324-0: Operations & Supply Chain Strategy

Operations management is the management of business processes — that is, the management of the recurring activities of a firm. This course aims to familiarize you with the problems and issues confronting operations managers, and to provide the language, concepts, insights and tools to deal with these issues to gain competitive advantage through operations and supply chains. We examine how different business strategies require different business processes and supply chain structures and how different operational capabilities allow and support different strategies to gain competitive advantage.

Course prerequisites: FE 310

Spring '24
Martin Lariviere
Lecture:
T/Th 9:30–10:50 a.m.
Room B01

No discussion section

KELLG_MA 326-0: Topics in Managerial Analytics:
Analytics for Strategy

This course is an advanced analytics elective that uses data to inform strategic decisions. Should a fast food chain enter the highly profitable breakfast market segment? Not if the incumbents will respond by competing aggressively. Can a bank raise profits by attracting more customers through generous loan terms? Not if it inadvertently attracts risky customers. Data-driven analyses of such issues require going beyond statistically significant relationships (profitability in current market conditions, overall demand for generous loans) to assess underlying cause and effect. The course tackles a broad range of topics in competitive strategy, such as product portfolios (is it profitable to enter a rival’s niche?), personnel (do workplace perks reduce absenteeism?), and cost reduction (is it profitable to adopt a new technology?). You will learn through hands-on experience with performing advanced regression analyses and interpreting their results.

Course prerequisites: FE 310

Winter '24
Shengmao Cao
Lecture:
T/Th 9:30 – 10:50 a.m.
Room B01 
No discussion section

KELLG_MA 328-0: Competitive Strategy & Industrial Structure

The course studies competitive strategy in a variety of industrial structures. We consider how the structure of a firm's industry affects its strategic choices and performance, how to evaluate and respond to competitors’ strategic moves, and how to formulate strategies that take into account objective structural issues as well as competitors’ responses and biases in decision making. Topics include product positioning decisions, price discrimination, dynamic aspects of pricing, entry and predation in concentrated industries, and various strategies such as proliferation, consolidation, innovation and platform building.

Course prerequisites: FE 310 AND ECON 381-1, MATH 386-1, IEMS 304-0, or STAT 350-0 or equivalent.

Fall '23
Yuval Salant
Lecture:
T/Th 9:30 – 10:50 a.m.
Room B01

No discussion section

KELLG_FE 310-0: Principles of Finance, Section 21

This foundation course, taken by all MA students during spring quarter, provides an overview of financial principles. In this course, you will learn about the impact of time and uncertainty on value; discounted cash flows; equity and debt valuation; the term structure of interest rates; portfolio theory; asset pricing; and efficient market theory. The course also explores firms’ financing decisions, including capital budgeting, capital structure and payout policy. (This course is also featured in the Financial Economics Certificate program.)

Course prerequisites: Experience with linear regressions is required. If possible, you should complete ECON 381-1, MATH 386-1, IEMS 304-0, STAT 350-0, or an equivalent course that covers linear regressions prior to FE 310. If you are not familiar with linear regressions you will be provided with a free online course that you should complete prior to FE 310 (over spring break).

Spring '24
Robert McDonald
Lecture:
T/Th 11 a.m. – 12:20 p.m.
Room B03

No discussion section

KELLG_MA 322-0: Pricing

Comparison of the three main ways to set prices-haggling/negotiation, posted price, and auctions. How to choose the best method in a given situation. Customizing the price of the same product or service to different segments, using optimization models to set prices when volume is uncertain, pricing multiple products. Introduction to techniques for gathering information about buyer valuations and demands, including regression, conjoint analysis, and enterprise value creation.

Course prerequisites: FE 310

Don Dale

Lecture:
TBD

 

Please Note: The CPU course schedule can change from year to year, including quarter offered, day, and time.

 

Contact us about the Certificate Program for undergraduate students

Certificate Program for Undergraduates
Kellogg School of Management
KelloggUndergrad@kellogg.northwestern.edu
847.467.4600
Amanda Stasinski
Program Director, Certificate Program for Undergraduates
Kellogg School of Management
[email protected]
847.467.1602
Kellogg School of Management
555 Clark Street, Lower Level
Evanston, IL 60208-2800
847.467.4600