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Ranks by Emerging schools
Rank
|
Name |
Total Score |
Credentials of Promoters (40%)
|
Quality of Faculty (35%)
|
Growth Potential (25%)
|
1 |
Loyola Institute Of Business Administration (LIBA), Chennai |
720 |
225 |
252 |
243 |
2 |
Wigan & Leigh College, New Delhi |
637 |
209 |
214 |
214 |
3 |
DY Patil institute of Management, Navi Mumbai |
633 |
197 |
217 |
219 |
4 |
KC College of Management Studies, Mumbai |
598 |
199 |
190 |
209 |
5 |
Indian Institute of Management, Ranchi |
596 |
194 |
194 |
207 |
6 |
ICFAI Business School, Pune (IBS-Pune) |
579 |
194 |
194 |
191 |
7 |
Institute of Management Technology, Jaipur |
577 |
201 |
181 |
194 |
7 |
K. J. Somaiya Institute of Management Studies & Research, Mumbai |
577 |
194 |
201 |
181 |
9 |
Amity Business School, Jaipur |
559 |
180 |
194 |
185 |
10 |
Chetana's College of management, Mumbai |
539 |
181 |
179 |
179 |
11 |
Globsyes institute of management, Kolkata (Salt Lake City) |
536 |
177 |
181 |
177 |
12 |
United World College, Mumbai |
519 |
169 |
181 |
169 |
13 |
Aurora Business School Hyderabad |
517 |
178 |
178 |
161 |
14 |
Shri Vaishnav Institute of Management, Indore |
500 |
161 |
172 |
167 |
15 |
The Indian Institute of Planning and Management (IIPM), Delhi |
473 |
149 |
162 |
162 |
16 |
Manipal Institute of Technology, Manipal |
461 |
156 |
150 |
156 |
17 |
Prestige Institute of Management, Dewas |
411 |
122 |
144 |
144 |
18 |
Fortune Institute of International Business (FIIB), Delhi |
389 |
117 |
117 |
156 |
* How to read our parameter-wise tables:
Overall score is the weighted sum of scores obtained in Factual as well as Perceptual surveys.
A factual survey entails data that is submitted by B-schools on a variety of questions. The questions are split up across five primary parameters - learning experience, living experience, brand value, return on investment and future orientation. A score of zero indicates that data was not submitted by the college for that particular parameter.
A perceptual survey is done on the B-schools that have participated in our factual survey. There is a separate questionnaire for this which is administered to a group of more than 1,200 stakeholders of the B-school ecosystem, including teachers, students, young executives and HR recruiters.
The scores obtained in both factual and perceptual survey are added up to get a composite, "overall" score. The B-schools are ranked based on this score.
In the perception survey, 'Base' refers to the number of respondents that have rated a particular B-school. A maximum of 120 respondents can rate each school. A B-school that is less known is rated by fewer people. But if those fewer people give it very high scores, it creates a skew in the ranking.
So, Business Today has used an awareness deflator to bring fairness to the rankings. B-schools that were rated by 40 or more respondents (one-third the sample) were assigned a weight of 1, which means their overall scores were multiplied by 1. B-schools that were rated by 30-39 respondents were given a weight of 0.9, so their overall scores were multiplied by 0.9, deflating their total score by a small margin. For 20-29 respondents, the weight was 0.8; and for B-schools that were rated by fewer than 20 respondents, the weight was 0.7.
Read full methodology here
*Fore School of Management, Delhi; Indian Institute of Management - Lucknow; Indian School of Business - Hyderabad; Mudra Institute of Communications, Ahmedabad (MICA); Tata Institute of Social Sciences - Mumbai; and University Business School - Chandigarh declined to participate in the survey.
**Vinod Gupta School of Management - IIT Kharagpur could not be ranked because of incomplete data and non-submission of mandatory documents
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