ESCP Business School
ESCP Business School is a French business school and grande école founded in Paris and based across Europe with campuses in Paris, Berlin, London, Madrid, Turin, and Warsaw. Established in 1819, it is considered the world's oldest business school. ESCP Business School runs BSc, MBA, Executive MBA, master's degree programs in finance and management, executive education programs, and PhD programs.
It is, along with HEC and ESSEC, a member of the Parisiennes, an informal term designating the three most prestigious business schools in France.
History
The school was established in Paris on 1 December 1819 by two former Napoleonic soldiers, Germain Legret and Amédée Brodart. Germain Legret had founded two business schools in Paris in 1815 and 1818, but both closed their doors rapidly. ESCP offered entrepreneurship education in the 1820s. It was modelled on the first grande école, the École Polytechnique, founded by Lazare Carnot and Gaspard Monge, but was initially more modest, in large part because it had not been supported by the state. The school had gained international exposure since the 1820s, but it was not the only business school open to international students. Its stature and importance ascended during the 19th century and it moved to its current Parisian location on the Avenue de la République in 1898.In 1828, the project to put the school under the authority of the French Ministry of Commerce and Industry failed. The school remained independent by the intervention of Jérôme-Adolphe Blanqui, who took it over. Several times during the first half of the 19th century, French political developments resulted in plans to group ESCP with elite French engineering schools such as the École Polytechnique or the École Centrale Paris, but this ultimately did not happen. At the time, engineering schools in France and in Europe taught future businessmen. From 1838, the French state began to fund scholarships meant for ESCP's students.
In 1869, the Paris Chamber of Commerce took over the school, aiming to train future business leaders in modern methods in commerce and industry. In 1892, ESCP set up selective admissions processes, which continued to be retained and, today, take the form of competitive exams.
On 5 April 1973, the concept of a multi-campus business school was created, with consecutive inaugurations of campuses taking place in the United Kingdom and in Germany. In 1974 the ESCP developed courses in entrepreneurship in response to internal and external forces. Since then, the school has deepened its European presence to become an integrated pan-European business school. In 2018, ESCP became an École consulaire, largely financed by the public Chambers of Commerce in Paris, Berlin, and Turin.
- In 1985, the School's campus in Germany moved from Düsseldorf to Berlin at the invitation of the Government of Berlin.
- In 1988, a fourth campus was opened in Madrid.
- In 1999, ESCP merged with its sister school EAP.
- In 2001, the Master in Management programme taught at ESCP became validated by City St George's, University of London.
- In 2004, a fifth campus in Turin was founded, whose courses became validated by the University of Turin; Master in Management students can obtain the Italian degree of Laurea Magistrale.
- In 2005, ESCP inaugurated its London campus, having moved from Oxford.
- In 2007, the Master in Management programme was recognised by the Charles III University of Madrid; students can obtain the Spanish degree of Master Europeo en Administración y Dirección de Empresas.
- In 2015, ESCP established its sixth European campus with its partner Kozminski University in Poland.
- In 2016, the School decides to strengthen its footprint in Paris by adding a second campus located in the Montparnasse area after buying back Novancia Business School's building. The campus is dedicated to executive programs.
- In 2019, the School removed "Europe" from its name, reverting to its original name.
''Grande école'' degrees
The degrees are accredited by the Conférence des Grandes Écoles and awarded by the French Ministry of National Education. Higher education business degrees in France are organized into three levels thus facilitating international mobility: the Licence, or Bachelor's degrees, and the Master's and Doctoral degrees. The Bachelors and the Masters are organized in semesters: 6 for the Bachelors and 4 for the Masters. Those levels of study include various "parcours" or paths based on UE, each worth a defined number of European credits. A student accumulates those credits, which are generally transferable between paths. A Bachelors is awarded once 180 ECTS have been obtained ; a Masters is awarded once 120 additional credits have been obtained. The highly coveted PGE ends with the degree of Master in Management.
Rankings
Campus
ESCP students can study on campuses in France, the UK, Spain, Germany, Italy, and Poland. They can spend either 6 months or 1 year on each campus according to their study choices. Each campus has its own specifics and develops programs with local academic institutions. For instance, in Spain, ESCP provides a Master in Business Project Management co-delivered with the Technical University of Madrid and in Italy, a double-degree program is available for engineers together with the Polytechnic University of Turin.Since 2017, ESCP has had two campuses in Paris, one near the Place de la République and another one near the Montparnasse Tower. Each campus is dedicated to a specific range of programs. The campus in the 11th arrondissement hosts all the graduate programs whereas the campus in the 15th arrondissement hosts the undergraduate education, the executive education and the school's start-up Incubator, the Blue Factory. This organization is unique to Paris; on every other campus, undergraduate, graduate and executive programmes are dispensed in the same campus.
| Paris - Republique | Paris - Montparnasse |
Partnerships
ESCP has over 100 partner grandes écoles and universities worldwide, several offering dual degrees.Exchange
- University of Vienna, Austria
- Solvay Brussels School of Economics and Management, Belgium
- Aarhus School of Business, Denmark
- Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
- Aalto University School of Business, Finland
- Hertie School, Germany
- WHU – Otto Beisheim School of Management, Germany
- Reykjavík University, Iceland
- Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
- BI Norwegian Business School, Norway
- University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
- University of Navarra, Spain
- University of Gothenburg, Sweden
- University of St. Gallen, Switzerland
- Sabancı University, Turkey
- London Business School, the UK
- Imperial College London, the UK
- Singapore Management University, Singapore
- New York University, USA
- Universidad de San Andrés, Argentina
- Instituto Tecnológico de Buenos Aires, Argentina
- HEC Montréal, Canada
- Universidad de Chile, Chile
- Tongji University, China
- Renmin University of China, School of Business, China
- Chinese University of Hong Kong, China
- École Centrale Paris, France
- ENSAE ParisTech, France
- Mines ParisTech, France
- École Grégoire-Ferrandi, France
- Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University, France
- Indian Institutes of Management, India
- Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy
- Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, Italy
- Waseda University, Japan
- Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education, Mexico
- Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University, Netherlands
- Kozminski University, Poland
- Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Portugal
- Higher School of Economics, Russia
- Korea University Business School, South Korea
- National Chengchi University, Taiwan
- Aston University, UK
- Cornell University, USA
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
- Sotheby's Institute of Art, USA
- University of South Carolina, USA
- University of Texas at Austin, USA
- China Europe International Business School, China
- Centre Franco-Vietnamien de Formation à la Gestion, Vietnam
Notable alumni
- Christophe de Margerie
- Sébastien de Montessus. CEO of Endeavour Mining from 2016 to 2024.
- Arnaud de Puyfontaine
- Victor Herrero
- Pierre-Yves Roussel
- Olaf Swantee
- Federico J. González Tejera
- Tristan Nitot
- Alexandre Ricard
- François Pauly
- Patrick Cohen
- Véronique Morali
- Edouard de Royere
- Patricia Barbizet
- Renaud de Lesquen
- André Lacroix
- Patrick Thomas
- Arnaud Nourry
- Antoine Riboud
- Thierry de La Tour d'Artaise
- Laurent-Éric Le Lay
- Philippe Heim
- Patrice Louvet
- Christian Latouche
- Cyrille Vigneron
- Bertrand Dumazy
- Jean-Pierre Raffarin
- Michel Barnier
- Frédéric Salat-Baroux
- François Zocchetto
- Roxana Maracineanu
- Claude Nougein
- Stéphane Valeri
- Olivier Blanchard
- Agnès Bénassy-Quéré
- Ahmad Bennani
- Christine Musselin
- Asma Mhalla
- Michel Wieviorka
- Andreas Kaplan
- Leïla Slimani
- Christophe Barbier
- Irma
- Hervé Hubert
- Aude Lancelin
- Jean-Marc Lofficier
- Gilles Martin-Chauffier
- Hélène Gateau
Associations