Management BSc Hons
N210
About the BSc Management 2-year programme
The aim of the BSc Management is to equip students with the knowledge, understanding and skills required to deal with the complexities of management. Students study the main functional areas of management and then can develop a more specialised appreciation of selected topics through taking optional modules.
Key facts
Application to the 2-year BSc Management degree programme is primarily for students from institutions with an appropriate partnership agreement. Under these agreements, the equivalent to Year 1 will be studied at one of our partner universities. For other students who have completed the equivalent of Year 1 at university and wish to transfer their degree to Lancaster, candidate eligibility is assessed on a case-by-case basis.
We recommend you look at our guidance on transferring to Lancaster University.
How to apply
Application is made through UCAS. Students should select Year 2 entry.
Contact us
Please email us with any queries
Course structure
Term 1:
- Data Analysis for Management
- Skills for Entrepreneurship
- Spreadsheet Modelling
Term 2:
- Management Accounting for Business Decisions
Term 3:
- Revision sessions and exams
All year
- Employability and Careers II
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Data Analysis for Management
This module gives you an introduction to statistical techniques and their applications in the context of business and management problems. In addition, it is designed to develop your ability to make effective use of computer software for data analysis.
The following topics are covered:
- descriptive statistics
- probability
- probability distributions
- sampling
- estimation
- hypothesis testing
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Skills for Entrepreneurship
This is a practical module to help students understand how the key principles of entrepreneurship apply in different types of businesses and settings. It draws upon notions such as networking, entrepreneurial sales, and entrepreneurial teams. Through experimentation and experiential learning, students will build the skills needed for developing, testing, refining, and selling a product/service, and they will understand how to collect and combine necessary resources in ways that offer value to the customer.
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Spreadsheet Modelling for Management
Many organisational recruiters have identified a number of skills and knowledge they want to see from a prospective employee. Top in the priorities are spreadsheet modelling, problem structuring, statistics, and project management.
Students will be introduced to Microsoft Excel 2019 and the basics of dynamic model building, including skills such as data handling, filtering and analysis, using functions, charting, plus advanced techniques such as optimisation, simulation, and the use of Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) to automate models and construct decision support models.
The course will make extensive use of case-studies and workshop-orientated learning tasks.
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Management Accounting for Business Decisions
This module provides an introduction to the use of management accounting information for management purposes. This includes an examination of cost-volume profit analysis, the concepts of direct and indirect costs, and various costing methods. The importance of budgets to organisations and their impact on performance are also discussed.
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Employability and Careers II
In the second year of your Business Management degree, this module supports your journey towards securing a future graduate job role which you will enjoy and thrive in doing! We combine gaining career insights from employers, recent alumni and networking opportunities alongside a focus on building graduate labour market knowledge, preparation for the graduate recruitment selection process and gaining relevant work experience in the field you are interested in.
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Managing Knowledge, Data and Information Systems
This module examines several of the transformations that have arisen in contemporary organisations as a result of the introduction and use of information systems. In order to consider how information systems have been implicated in these transformations, this course will focus on three themes:
- Knowledge Management and Information Communication Technologies (ICTs)
- Informational devices and their mobilities
- The ethical dimensions of managing information and information systems
Each of these themes have been important in the study of the role of information systems within organisations. For each theme, one or more cases and/or readings will be introduced and discussed in detail over the course of ten two-hour interactive lectures. This will enable students to (1) familiarise themselves with key historical and contemporary developments, (2) to explore the challenges that the introduction of different forms of information systems may pose, and (3) to consider the scope for management action in response to these challenges. Students are required to produce an assessed group presentation and to sit an exam in the summer. The aim of both the lectures and these forms of assessment is to enable students to develop techniques, methods of analysis and research expertise relating to the place of information systems in contemporary organisations. By the end of the course, students should have enhanced their understanding of relevant theoretical and practical issues that arise, as well as having developed their critical and analytical skills.
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The Changing Role of Management
In this module we look at the changing role and position of management and managers in organisations and society. Much of modern analysis of management emphasises a change in forms of management control from traditional authority through vertical hierarchical forms to ones which are more horizontal and look to incorporate employees into the organisation and its goals in ever closer ways. This happens for example through attempts to align employees identities, emotions and interests with commitment to the organisation: the much discussed capturing of hearts and minds. Another aspect of this is the manipulation of meaning in order to facilitate this identification of employee and organisation, usually discussed as the corporate culture movement. Together these can be taken as two significant aspects of modern management the management of meaning and the management of identity - which feature little in traditional management texts that emphasise management as the co-ordination of tasks and the control and deployment of resources.
However, it is important to see management and managers within the light of organisation analysis. Managers are not the autonomous agents they are often portrayed, first because they are also employees themselves (albeit in the position of formally representing the interests of capital), and second, they are also subject to organisational structures, cultures and power relations. Perhaps especially in the light of managerial control designed around commitment, integration and identification with the organisation, managers are tied in by the very control strategies that they themselves are promoting. However, as we shall see, there are also important tensions between the changing context of management and these forms of control which can lead to unintended consequences such as impression management and various forms of resistance.
Thus this module focuses on how management is a social process, and what this means for the lived experience of doing management. In exploring this we look at topics which are relevant for the day-to-day experience of managers, although rarely are these addressed in conventional management textbooks: issues such as humour, diversity, impression management and emotional management.
Term 1
- Business and Management in the 21st Century
- Principles of Strategic Management
Term 2
- Rethinking Leadership
Term 3
- Revision and exams
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Business and Management in the 21st Century: central questions and evaluations
The underlying aim of this module is to show you that management and business are not merely a collection of techniques from several disciplines, but rather have a coherent cultural core which corresponds to a generalised, globalised system of values that have to be grasped and understood if management and business are to make sense at all. Therefore, we will seek to show how management and business are part of the broader cultural and historical nature of contemporary global society.
We hope you will understand that, as part of society and culture, both management and business carry within them the signs of all the major tensions, problems and crises that face us today in the world economy, in our relationship with the Earth and the natural environment, and in our relationships with each other as humanity. The module is designed to help you recognise management’s central place in this essential ‘system of crises’ and to understand that such crises are problems for managers with possibly far-reaching social and organisational implications, rather than incidental external matters that have no bearing on your future professional lives.
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Principles of Strategic Management
Strategic Management is about making distinctive choices concerning the direction and scope of the organization over the long term, in order to enhance its ability to create value and improve its prospects for organizational survival and growth. In a complex and turbulent environment, with rapid economic, regulatory and technological changes, strategising – the art of processing complex information thoughtfully and creatively and the ability to convince others of your analysis and recommendations – is a critical skill to acquire. The goal of this module is to provide you with an understanding of strategy that will enable you to discuss real-life business activities within a framework of contemporary strategic management thinking. This module is designed to encourage you to develop a personal and distinctive understanding and appreciation of strategising for different industries and in uncertain environments, through lectures, case analyses and class discussions.
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Rethinking Leadership
It is often argued that "effective leadership" is a key factor in improving organisational performance. Yet, it is also increasingly evident that traditional understandings of what constitutes leadership - especially charismatic and transformational models - have not always lived up to their promise. Against this background, and building on what you have learned about leadership previously in ‘Introduction to Management and Leadership’, this module seeks to re-think leadership relationships and leadership dynamics by introducing students to a number of perspectives on leadership, and by exploring their respective strengths and weaknesses. In particular, the course addresses leader-centred, follower-centred, cultural, and critical approaches and explores important issues such as distributed leadership and proactive followership, power and resistance, employee wellbeing, emotions and emotional labour, authentic leadership, and the context of crises for leadership.
The course is designed to rethink leadership relationships and dynamics in ways that critically examine the facilitators and challenges to effective leadership that frequently exist in contemporary organisations and societies.
Entry requirements
Students studying at one of our partner institutions
If you are studying on an approved curriculum at one of our partner institutions, we will advise you separately of the entry requirements specific to your particular programme. In each case, we have benchmarked these to be the equivalent to 2:1 in Year 1 at Lancaster.
Other students
We will consider other students on a case-by-case basis. We will require the following:
- Information on your pre-degree or high school qualifications. We would typically expect you to have achieved grades ABB at A level, or an equivalent qualification, and GCSE English Language grade B/5, or an equivalent qualification.
- For non-native speakers of English, we require an IELTS score of 6.5 overall with at least 5.5 in each component. For other English language qualifications we accept, please see English language requirements.
- Information on your current or previous undergraduate study, including a list of all the modules you have completed and are yet to complete. We will need to check if you have covered sufficient academic material equivalent to the content of Year 1 of the degree at Lancaster University. We expect applicants to pass the current year of their undergraduate study (or equivalent) with the equivalent of 2:1 (upper second-class honours marks).
- We require a reference from someone who has taught you as part of your undergraduate studies.
Further guidance on admission to the University, including other qualifications that we accept, frequently asked questions and information on applying, can be found on our general admissions webpages.
Contact Admissions Team + 44 (0) 1524 592028 or via ugadmissions@lancaster.ac.uk
Fees and funding
Our annual tuition fee is set for a 12-month session, starting in the October of your year of study.
Our undergraduate tuition fees for 2024/25 are:
UK | International |
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£9,250 | £24,475 |