If you come from a business undergrad program, you’ll find most of the content repetitive here; if you come from North America, you’ll find the course regulation and professor’s teaching attitude too loose here. But if you want to relocate to Europe, as the best business school in Europe, HEC gives you incomparable networking resources to guarantee you the best job.
View moreThe school is very international indeed, we have courses with international students and share things with them within the extra academic life (in the social clubs especially). We have great career prospects if we prepare ourselves well – however, the global curriculum is still very finance-oriented, which is a pity for other interesting domains of the company world, which does not rely on finance only. The social clubs are good practice for the management and for now, are quite independent.
View moreHEC Paris is really a nice place to do a master’s in business. Many classes are useful and interesting (corporate finance, financial accounting, contract law…), some are less – but the curriculum is to be reviewed in the year to come. Regarding the student life, it is incredible, with about 130 clubs, lots of great parties with even greater people. The Jouy campus offers a lot of opportunities to do sports, and you can breathe fresh air every day. HEC also helps a great deal to find an internship or a job.
View moreThere are so many opportunities that lots of students just get lost choosing what to do. That in itself is not bad, but there could be more counselling to help you decide.
One concerning point, however, is the lack of difficulty of the lessons. You’d think that after such a gruesome entry exam, the level of the courses would be super high… Far from it. I just aced my last exam with five hours of preparation and a bunch of middle-school level mathematics. Not stimulating enough.
About my programme I would say it is very international and flexible: we have the opportunity to choose exactly the courses we want. But at the same time, the frame of the campus is crucial in students’ life and enable us to create friendships.
View moreI came into HEC with a lot of expectations. Unfortunately, it did not live up to the word. I completed my masters in 2020. During the course of the Masters, you can go on exchange with other universities which was probably the only positive
View moreA prestigious business school. Languages are important. It is better to have a scientific baccalaureate with excellent grades in high school and good assessments.
The courses are well designed as per the latest trends and practicality of learning in stressed upon. Overall, a very good experience.
HEC being a business school, most courses are management related (ie., accounting, finance, marketing, company law, business strategy…). These are somewhat dry but are useful to help one understand how a business is run. It is a shame, however, that students seldom have the opportunity to explore non-business-related electives, as the few available are very interesting. Furthermore, this would broaden the horizons of an academically brilliant student body.
The quality of teaching varies significantly. Much of the infrastructure is starting to feel antiquated, though some if is due to be renewed over the years to come.
Before applying, I would suggest one carefully looks at the curriculum to see whether the classes are of interest to the applicant. If one does not enjoy business-related subjects, one’s experience at HEC can be frankly unenjoyable, especially given that the campus is quite isolated.
Regarding internationality, value and career prospects, the statistics speak for themselves.
View more