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The following programme is subject to final approval by the Hellenic Authority for Higher Education. They are expected to commence in October 2026.
The University of York Europe Campus, CITY jointly with the Faculty of Economics and Management of The University of Strasbourg, offers a unique educational opportunity for today's executives and business professionals: the Pan-European Executive MBA programme across South East and Eastern Europe, as well as the Caucasus region. Graduates are awarded two MBA degrees by two leading universities from Europe: a top British university, the University of York and a prestigious French university, the University of Strasbourg.
The Pan-European Executive MBA is a truly international, innovative programme designed for today’s managers and business professionals who need to improve their skills and knowledge for professional, career and personal development. The programme leverages local and international perspectives while at the same time balances theory and practice taking a holistic approach to business management education. Prepare to lead in today’s dynamic global marketplace!
*subject to confirmation due to change of legal status
Graduates additionally obtain:
2 years
(18 months of taught classes + Dissertation)
Face-to-face or Online synchronous (plus 3 study trips)
Flexible weekend delivery mode
(Friday, Saturday, Sunday), one weekend a month




The Programme consists of three stages, lasting eighteen months, and the postgraduate dissertation.
The Programme consists of three stages of lectures, lasting eighteen months, and the postgraduate dissertation.
Under the direct supervision of a member of staff, students will undertake either an Academic Dissertation which gives emphasis on developing new theory or testing existing one or a Final Business Project at a company or industry level of analysis chosen. Utilising cutting edge knowledge, this project will integrate the learning that has occurred through the Program and apply it directly to current issues faced by business. Students will create recommendations and solutions based on the key issues identified.
Selecting candidates for admission is a very critical decision for the Executive MBA programme (EMBA). We believe that there is more to selecting a candidate than just considering scores, GPAs and other merely numerical performance indicators. For this reason admission decisions for the EMBA take into account three primary areas of evaluation:
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If you'd like to know more about this programme, contact us or our local offices abroad.
At the University of York Europe Campus, we believe that access to quality education should be within everyone΄s reach. That’s why we offer a range of scholarships and funding opportunities to help you pursue your academic goals.
Our scholarships are awarded based on academic merit, financial need, social factors, and other criteria, and are designed to empower talented individuals and make higher education more accessible.
Important: Please note that you must apply separately for a scholarship or funding opportunity. Submitting an application for admission does not automatically consider you for financial support.
Annual Tuition Fees (in Euros)
Below you can find the tuition fees for your programme of interest. A registration fee of €390 is submitted along with your application and is paid once at the beginning of your course.
Important Notes:
– Tuition fees are typically payable in installments, as outlined in each student’s offer letter.
– The tuition fee structure for undergraduate, postgraduate, and research studies applies to one academic year.
Learn More about Scholarships and Funding Opportunities
Find detailed information on how to apply, eligibility criteria, application deadlines, and other important guidelines for each scholarship and funding opportunity.
If you need further assistance, please contact our local offices abroad or reach out to our Admissions Team. We will be happy to support you.
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The Executive MBA programme offered by the University of York Europe Campus, CITY, is accredited by the Association of MBAs (AMBA), the most prestigious international accreditation body in evaluating MBA programmes. AMBA accreditation represents the highest standard of achievement in postgraduate business education.
"The Executive MBA has excellent links with employing organisations throughout the region of South Eastern Europe which enhances the programme. It is committed to research, consultancy and quality provision. The rigorous admissions process results in elitist students representing a top management cadre." - AMBA Report

Our students completing the Executive MBA programme may additionally receive the prestigious prestigious L7 Diploma in Strategic Management and Leadership Practice of the Chartered Management Institute (CMI) without having to undertake any extra classes or examinations.The Executive MBA programme delivered by CITY has been approved by the CMI, UK, as it satisfies the aims and learning outcomes of CMI’S most senior qualification.
*subject to confirmation due to change of legal status
The module introduces the concepts of organisational behaviour and their role in an organisation. Students become familiar with the main ideas and principles underlying the everyday functioning of organisations. This is achieved both through the theoretical part of the module, as well as with case studies, training videos and interactive games.
In an increasingly complex business environment managers are faced with problems and issues ranging from the relatively trivial to the strategic. In addition to using their judgment and experience, managers are asked to justify the decisions they reach on the basis of logic and hard analysis. In such an environment, the topics covered in this module have an important role. ![]()
The main aim of this module is to introduce the basic concepts of marketing, their interrelationships and their role in the organisational context. Students will become familiar with the main ideas and marketing concepts, including market research, product development, pricing, promotion and distribution strategies. Marketing activities have not changed. The environment, however, where marketing is practised has changed considerably in the past two decades. Fierce competition, very short product life cycles, global markets, the internet and its applications create a very challenging environment for today's enterprises, where marketing has become indispensable.
The module focuses on each of the two main areas of accounting, i.e. financial accounting, and management accounting within financial reporting and analysis. It also seeks to link these areas together so that they can be seen as part of a unified system. Students learn the different accounting and financial techniques which are to be utilised in effective decision-making, planning and controlling. Students learn how to analyse the accounting and financial information available and, thus, will become able to make sound accounting and financial decisions.
Operations and Supply Chain Management approaches the topic from a managerial perspective. Each session introduces basic operations management concepts in a format that is useful for management decision-making. The basic terms, concepts and principles are covered, but they are examined in light of how they interrelate and interface with other functions of the firm. Each session includes examples and case studies to illustrate how logistics activities can be managed to properly implement the marketing concept.
Unlike other business modules that concentrate narrowly on a particular function of business – accounting, finance, marketing, production, human resources, or information systems - strategic management is a big picture course. It cuts across the whole spectrum of business and management. The centre of attention is the total enterprise – the industry and competitive environment in which it operates, its long-term direction and strategy, its resources and competitive capabilities and its prospects for success. Throughout the module, the question addressed is "What must managers do, and do well, to make the company a winner in the game of business?". The answer that emerges, and which becomes the theme of the course, is that good strategy-making and good strategy execution are the key ingredients of company success and the most reliable signs of good management. The mission of the module is to explore why good strategic management leads to good business performance, to present the basic concepts and tools of strategic analysis, and to drill in the methods of crafting a well conceived strategy and executing it competently.
This module is concerned with encouraging the application of accounting fundamentals learning gained in year 1 of the Exec MBA to practical situations. The aim is therefore to reinforce existing learning, but the opportunity will also be taken to introduce new topics that will be found both interesting and useful in the area of corporate financial management.
Managers learn from experience how to cope with routine problems, but the best managers are also able to respond to change. To do this they need more than time-honoured rules of thumb; they understand why companies and financial markets behave the way they do. In other words, is needed a theory of finance with practical applications.
In the aftermath of many societal, political and economic changes induced by recent events, organizations need to adapt their strategies and behaviours. One key word might be collaboration, by opening up business toward others including other businesses, individuals, institutions and/or society at large. The unit will explore collaboration techniques including open innovation, open strategy, and crowdsourcing as well as analysing collaboration possibilities with competitors, suppliers, customers, universities and institutions at different geographic levels including in respect of the intellectual property (IP) of each actor.
The focus on human resources and their capabilities has never been more critical. Managing and leading people has become a critical success factor for organisations looking to become more effective. Since the mid-1990s, organisations have been going through rapid, fundamental and continuous changes in the way they do business. These changes have increased the level of complexity within both organisational and business environments. Whether one reviews these changes in terms of globalisation, reengineering, downsizing, etc., there is more and more evidence to suggest that focusing on how to lead and manage people can provide one of the keys to success. In this respect, this unit highlights the main ideas, principles and practices underlying day-to-day leadership and change management within today's organisational systems. Special emphasis is given on the way that scientific insights from complexity science, behavioural science and neuroscience affect leadership behaviour to create a competitive advantage.
Information plays a crucial part in most successful organisations. Information Systems (IS) and Information Technology (IT) are used to help improve administrative efficiency, to improve managerial effectiveness, and to provide competitive advantage. This situation has been brought about by the integration of computer and telecommunications technologies into information technologies (IT) and the subsequent mass availability of both cheap IT and the systems to exploit it in order to deliver the right information to the right people in the right format at the right time and at the right cost.
However in many organisations the gap between the theoretically possible and the reality is a wide one, because of ignorance, misconceptions, fears, prejudice or historical accident. Accordingly, an understanding of managerial information systems (MIS) concepts, applications & disciplines is essential to all managers if today's organisations are to bridge that gap successfully through rational rather than piecemeal behaviour. On the other hand, methodology underpins all substantive aspects of managerial change, including Information Systems instigated change. It reflects the reasoning processes and preferences of management professionals and, to an extent of the users with whom they interact. It also dictates, to a large extent, the kinds of systems that are produced and with which organisations have to work.
The issue of methodology has, therefore, serious implications for management professionals and for organisations generally. This methodology enables the identification of ‘systemically desirable’ change, and how information (i) serves organisational processes, (ii) serves the monitoring of organisational processes, (iii) serves the change process itself.
The course covers the following topics: formulating the research question, choosing an appropriate design, quantitative and qualitative approaches to research, designing interviews, using questionnaires, case studies and focus groups, and designing a research proposal and guidelines with regard to writing an MBA dissertation. In addition, students will take part in SPSS labs and learn how to use a selection of descriptive and inferential statistics.
Under the direct supervision of a member of staff, students will undertake either an Academic Dissertation which gives emphasis on developing new theory or testing existing one or a Final Business Project at a company or industry level of analysis chosen. Utilizing cutting edge knowledge, this project will integrate the learning that has occurred through the programme and apply it directly to current issues faced by business. Students will create recommendations and solutions based on the key issues identified.
This course aims at providing advanced, research based knowledge in the area of entrepreneurial management and to assist in developing the innovativity and creativity today's organisations require. It starts by focusing on the topics of entrepreneurship and intrapreneurship, covering the ways through which organisations can create entrepreneurial organisational systems, structures and cultures. Time is also be dedicated towards understanding knowledge-based organisational systems as laying the foundations for both business and individual creativity. Financing sources for new ventures and ideas are also discussed.
In a rapidly changing environment, strategy development and implementation become critical. Globalisation, technological breakthroughs, shorter product life cycles, changing demographics, and changing consumer tastes are all contributing to a very competitive market. An organisation cannot survive any more by being reactive. It should start to systematically develop long-term plans and become proactive or risks being outraced by competitors. Increasing competition and high environmental uncertainty lead an increasing percentage of companies to the realisation that only a few competencies can be developed successfully and sustained. The model of internal development that was encountered excessively during the previous decades is not any more viable. Outsourcing is growing fast; companies are seeking alliances and defend their position through mergers and acquisitions. They very often try to attain higher flexibility through changing their organisational structures, towards team and network structures while a number of companies claim they have become "virtual" companies. The challenges of the digital economy are numerous and only the companies that respond successfully will have a chance to attain long-term prosperity.
IThis module gives particular emphasis to two main marketing areas which raise much debate among academics and marketing practitioners because they are considered fundamental to any marketing strategy in any type of organisation. In every organisation there are people charged with getting new products and services to the market place. Those people view the total task: strategy, concept generation, testing, marketing and all other aspects of introducing new products.
This course provides the management approach to acquaint students with the managerial steps and processes involved in the perilous world of product development. The steps and processes apply to services as well as to consumer or industrial products. This module focuses also on integrated marketing communications. It provides the student with command of the terminology, concepts, theory, recent developments and innovations, and management implications of the communication element of the marketing mix with particular focus on the elements of Advertising and Public Relations. Examples and cases will be drawn from the international advertising industry as well as from the Greek advertising industry.
This unit addresses issues that relate to the importance of brands, what they represent to consumers, and alternative strategies that can be implemented by companies to manage them properly. Although brands may represent invaluable intangible assets, creating and nurturing a strong brand poses considerable challenges. The concept of brand equity can provide students a valuable perspective and a common denominator to interpret the potential effects and tradeoffs of various strategies and tactics for their brands. Strategic brand management involves the design and implementation of marketing programs and activities to build measure and manage brand equity. The three major questions addressed in this unit are: How can brand equity be created? How can brand equity be measured? How can brand equity be used to expand business opportunities?
This module examines the international financial environment within which international businesses and multinational corporations operate. Students are provided with an overview of the movement of funds internationally, the structure and function of international financial markets, and exchange rate determination. This module also examines the theories of exchange rate equilibrium, the types of exchange rate risk, and its measurement and management. It concludes with currency and stock market crises and country risk analysis as a factor influencing foreign direct investment and the alternatives available to finance international trade.
Multinational enterprises around the globe face complexities that arise from the different financial and political systems. Market participants and financial managers are called to select the optimal combination among the financial instruments in order to achieve the best portfolio performance. Therefore, the selection of the right financial policy is closely related to the selection of the appropriate set of financial instruments.
This course aims at providing advanced, research based knowledge in the area of finance and to assist in developing finance professionals that are aware, understand and can apply new cutting edge finance theory on their jobs. It starts by focusing on the topics of:
and continues with:
Research methods for Finance, where students are provided with the ability to practically understand the methodologies used in quantitative time series analysis by introducing them to all the tools that are necessary in contemporary financial econometrics. At the end of the unit students should be able to critically evaluate the existing literature on the field and to conduct modern research design and execution. The ultimate goal of the unit is to enable students to produce a well thought out dissertation proposal and research project.
The trend toward globalisation continues a pace. The global market place has changed drastically; China's entry into the World Trade Organisation, the expansion of the European Union, India’s and Russia’s increased importance to world trade, and the bi-lateral and multi-lateral trade associations are all putting pressure on yesterday's business models. With products designed in one country, raw materials and parts sourced in another, manufacturing in a third and then sold globally through global marketing networks, logistics is taking on a greater significance.
This module provides an introduction to international channels of distribution, cargo flows, multi-modal transport operations, regulations and policy, regional trade regulations and issues before exploring the specific logistics issues evident in different trading regions. It takes into account various issues of volatile and fragile supply chains and transport systems, infrastructure and culture.
The rising affluence of consumers has led to an increase national and international markets for goods and in services. Thousands of new products, services and technologies have been introduced in the last decade and are sold and distributed in every corner of the world. Businesses have increased in size and complexity to meet the challenges of expanded markets and the proliferation of new products and services. For Logistics practitioners and managers, change comes in many forms: 3PLogistics, environmental concerns, IT and materials-handling technologies etc. One consequence of change is the need for more dynamic responsive logistics systems, which can readily adapt and respond to new and different requirements. This course focuses attention on trends and issues of the late 1990s and early 2000s associated with Business Logistics.
The unit provides students with advanced level knowledge of the social, economic and political currents that shape health policies in different international contests, and an assessment of the performance and sustainability of the health systems developed to deliver these policies.
The unit focuses also on the application of economic theory to the real world of health care. Topics include the theory of the firm as it applies to physicians, hospitals, and systems; the market for labor in health care; the role of health insurance; asymmetric information and the role of agency; the pharmaceutical market; government as payer and regulator; and equity/ethical considerations.
This unit aims to consider the nature, principals and practice of Operation Processes within the health service organisation and to provide an appreciation of the main functions involved.
The unit will examine the evolution and development of managed care approaches to delivering health services.
The purpose of this unit is to arm students with the skills to debate, define and defend current issues in health care management. The unit will explore, in depth, several current health management issues, like total quality and safety in health care management, legal and ethical aspects of Health Care management, managing human resource in health care context, change management and health care financing. The unit will take an analytic case approach, identifying policy options and tools, then gathering information and applying data to evaluate outcomes.
Dynamic factors and pressures (e.g., changes in the international sociological and economic context/climate, the regulatory framework, implementation of employment policy, etc.) can seriously affect business and corporate strategy. These, subsequently have an impact on the way that human resource management (HRM) is deployed including HRM and corporate strategy, cross-cultural management, and comparative business systems. With references to particular HRM practices students will thoroughly understand the balance between meeting the needs for organisational integration and local adaptation to political, cultural, and economic contexts. This unit aims to integrate these dynamic factors and pressures into the context of strategic HRM with a focus on the management of talent and their importance in achieving organisational growth.
This unit aims to explore the contemporary perspectives of HR policies and practices and performance management. Emphasis will be placed on the strategic issues of HRM, the ‘best fit’ or ‘bundles’ approach of policies and practices and their potential impact on organisational performance and effectiveness. Focus is specifically placed on HR planning and job design, recruitment, selection, retention remuneration and reward systems with a focus on the integration of performance management within these. Furthermore, the unit will critically analyse the dynamics, context and conceptual framework of employee voice, involvement and participation in the workplace as well as evaluate and assess the contemporary developments in industrial and employment relations.





Having access to an elite network of high‐calibre business leaders from all over Europe and the world is one of the most valuable aspects of our MBA programme.





