Corporate university

A corporate university (CU) is any educational entity that is a strategic tool[1] designed to assist its parent organization in achieving its mission by conducting activities that cultivate individual and organizational learning, knowledge, and wisdom.[2] Perhaps the best-known corporate university is Hamburger University operated by McDonald's Corporation in Chicago. CUs are a growing trend in corporations. In 1993, corporate universities existed in only 400 companies. By 2001, this number had increased to 2,000, including Walt Disney, Boeing, and Motorola.[3]

In most cases, corporate universities are not universities in the strict sense of the word.[4] The traditional university is an educational institution which grants both undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in a variety of subjects, as well as conducting original scientific research. In contrast, a corporate university typically limits scope to providing job-specific, indeed company-specific, training for the managerial personnel of the parent corporation. The scope of the CU depends on the corporate strategy, consequently maintaining a strategic alignment between the CU and the parent organisation belong to the key success factors of a CU implementation.[1] Corporate universities are most commonly found in the United States, a nation which has no official legal definition of the term "university".

The term "corporate university" may also refer to public universities which have developed, or have been forced by states to develop, corporate style behaviour.[5]

  1. ^ a b "A strategic alignment to leverage the role of corporate universities: A longitudinal case study of Chinese high-tech company ZTE". Gestion 2000. 37: 39–65. 2020. doi:10.3917/g2000.373.0039.
  2. ^ Allen, Mark (2002). The Corporate University Handbook. AMACOM Div American Mgmt Assn. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-8144-0711-0.
  3. ^ Hearn, Denise R. (2002-05-10). "Education in the Workplace: An Examination of Corporate University Models". Retrieved 2009-01-27.
  4. ^ Kaplan, Andreas (2021). Higher Education at the crossroads of disruption, the University of the 21st century. Emerald Publishers. ISBN 9781800715042.
  5. ^ Simon Marginson, Mark Considine, 2000, The Enterprise University: Power, Governance and Reinvention in Australia