Corporate Residency Pathway - MBA
Halifax Regional Municipality, Canada
MBA
DURATION
22 months
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
EARLIEST START DATE
TUITION FEES
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
Key Summary
A Pathway to Launch your Career
The 22-month Corporate Residency MBA Pathway is designed for highly motivated, socially conscious individuals who want to pivot from their previous career or are interested in blending their undergraduate degree with a set of universally recognized business skills. Regardless of pivoting or blending, our program’s highly customizable curriculum ensures that our graduates are equipped to tackle society's complex business problems and make a meaningful impact.
The program consits of core, foundation and elective courses; considerable professional development and career coaching; networking opportunities; a well as an 8 month paid work term that is referred to as the Corporate Residency.
Why Dalhousie's Corporate Residency MBA?
- Enter our program directly from any undergrad degree - no work experience required.
- Exceptional, paid work experience: You’ll be immersed quickly and intensely into the real business world with an eight-month paid corporate residency (work term).
- Employer Partners across Canada: Our deep relationships with Employer Partners across the country give you the opportunity to start your career in Halifax, Toronto, Calgary and beyond.
- Accelerate your leadership skills with Professional Development courses combined with career coaching from our Management Career Services team.
- Study with a small cohort of bright students: Our rigorous application process ensures you will be motivated, encouraged, inspired and challenged by others like you.
This pathway is intended for individuals who have recently completed an undergraduate degree (direct entry) or early career professionals. Applicants must have less than 5 years' work experience and are typically highly motivated, high achieving individuals.
Return on Investment
By enrolling in the Corporate Residency Pathway in the MBA program, you are investing in a lifetime of opportunities and rewards. Our MBA Class of 2023 graduates boast an impressive average post-grad salary of $71,320. But that's not all. During the 8-month corporate residency, our students earn an average of $34,000, which offsets the tuition they pay to a great extent. To also know about the class profile and where our graduates land, see Employment Statistics for the Class of 2023.
Corporate Residency Pathway Scholarships
The MBA – Corporate Residency Pathway Scholarship Application can be submitted by email
Douglas C. Mackay Scholarships ($5,000–$10,000)
To be awarded to our top incoming MBA – Corporate Residency Pathway students. Preference will be given to students who demonstrate an interest in the area of Finance.
Requirements:
- Online program application
- Application fee paid
- Submission of required program application documents
- Completed MBA – Corporate Residency Pathway Scholarship application form
Dalhousie CRMBA Promise Scholars Program (2 @ $20,000)
$20,000 awarded to two Indigenous or African Canadian students ($10,000 per year) with preference given to Mi’kmaq or African Nova Scotian applicants. This award aligns with Dalhousie’s promise to admit, engage, support, and graduate a diverse student body, with attention to enhancing access and success of historically underrepresented students. This studentship will provide financial resources, work and internship experiences, and dedicated academic and career mentoring.
Requirements:
- Have attained an undergraduate degree in last 5 years
- Online program application
- Application fee paid
- Submission of required program application documents
- Completed MBA – Corporate Residency Pathway Scholarship application form
Read more about Dalhousie's Diversity & Inclusiveness Strategy.
More information
- For information about the scholarships, reach out through the school email.
- For information on additional scholarships, bursaries, and Canadian and U.S. student loans, visit Dalhousie’s Money Matters website.
Financial Assistance
Scotiabank is a key Employer Partner of the Corporate Residency Pathway, hiring more residency students than any other employer to date. The bank also partners with our team to provide financial assistance to students. Scotiabank has developed an attractive package of banking benefits to help you finance your education, manage your cash flow, and ensure that repaying your student loan is not a burden during your transition from student to working professional. While in school, loan interest payments are deferred provided you are within your credit limit. After your studies have ended, you can start making principal payments as your income increases.
More information
Scotiabank, Coburg & Robie Branch
6005 Coburg Road, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 1Y8
Tel: 902-420-4929
A Pathway to Launch your Career
The 22-month Corporate Residency MBA Pathway is designed for highly motivated, socially conscious individuals who want to pivot from their previous career or are interested in blending their undergraduate degree with a set of universally recognized business skills. Regardless of pivoting or blending, our program’s highly customizable curriculum ensures that our graduates are equipped to tackle society's complex business problems and make a meaningful impact.
Pathway at a Glance
Before You Start:
Recognizing that 70–80% of our students come from non-business undergraduate degrees, we offer a set of pre-program courses. Completing these self-paced courses will prepare you to get the most from your MBA by ensuring you have an established set of base-level quantitative business skills.
Year 1 Summer:
Following MBA Orientation in the second week of June, the balance of the summer is spent completing four core courses. These provide students with a new appreciation for the world of business and give them the fundamental competencies essential for success in today’s business world. As well, students benefit from personal and professional effectiveness sessions designed to help prepare them for their corporate residencies.
Quantitative Decision Making for Managers
This course will introduce students to some basic quantitative techniques used to solve business problems. The course is designed to provide an understanding of techniques that are based on statistical concepts and decision analysis. Topics include descriptive statistics, statistical sampling, statistical inference, regression modelling, linear programming, risk analysis, and decision-making with probabilities. In addition, students will learn and practice how to use Microsoft Excel to employ these techniques. Group case studies and class discussions prepare students to be real problem-solvers.
Business Microeconomics
Domestic and international markets, government policy, and central bank decisions present opportunities, challenges, and threats to the operating and competitive decisions of business owners, managers, and investors. The main objective of this course is to provide a concise treatment of the fundamentals of economics, as the study of how economic agents allocate scarce resources to satisfy their unlimited wants in a modern market economy such as Canada.
Marketing Management
Marketing Management goes beyond an Introductory marketing course and focuses on the fundamental marketing strategy concepts and frameworks. Current and relevant strategic issues in marketing will be covered. In many instances, students are asked to assume the role of a marketing manager, critically examine marketing scenarios, and suggest appropriate marketing strategies. Marketing Management provides the student with an introduction to the practical application of marketing theory and practice. Topics covered include, but are not limited to, identifying target markets, building customer relationships, building strong brands, and designing and building communication and promotion strategies.
Accounting for Managers
This course introduces the principles and practices used to process and communicate financial information about an organization to various stakeholders. To be a competent manager, you must have some degree of accounting literacy and a critical appreciation of the subject. A portion of this course examines the challenges of financial accounting and is focused on understanding and interpreting financial statements. The course also explores the use of accounting information to help managers with internal decision-making. This is a user-oriented course that emphasizes hands-on exploration, analysis, and evaluation of accounting concepts. We will use Microsoft Excel, cases, and real financial statements during this class.
Year 1 Fall:
The Fall of year one consists of two more core courses and five foundation courses which allow students to develop a strong understanding of key organizational concepts regardless of industry sector. The term ends with a competitive, immersive, team-based integrative weekend session that challenges students to fully integrate all learning to date. Specifically, students build on their skills surrounding sales, negotiation, and teamwork. Faculty members and Employer Partners work together on these sessions to ensure the highest level of learning and job preparation.
Financial Management
This course is designed to provide students with a broad overview of the analysis, techniques, and knowledge needed to perform the central tasks and make the main decisions required of a corporate financial manager. The core topics covered are Capital Analysis (what something is worth), Capital Budgeting (what investments to make), Capital Structure (how to raise the money for investment), Working Capital Management (management of day-to-day cash flows), and Financial Risk Management (managing uncertainty). To support and supplement the discussion of these central themes, the course will also cover Corporate Governance, Triple Bottom Line, Structure of Financial Markets, Financial Statement Analysis, Fixed Income Mathematics, Monte Carlo Simulation, and International Finance.
Management Information Systems
In today's environment, it is essential that business managers and executives understand the basic concepts of contemporary information systems (IS), how they are managed as well as their potential effects on organizations. To this end, this course is designed to provide MBA students with a fundamental understanding of key IT issues with the belief that these individuals will be the primary decision-makers in major IT initiatives and investments. Therefore, it is necessary to provide future managers with the basic knowledge required for effective IT-related decision-making.
Environment, Social & Governance
Businesses are deeply intertwined with social, environmental, and governance (ESG) concerns. The E in ESG, environmental criteria, include the energy your company takes in and the waste it discharges, the resources it needs, and the consequences (e.g., carbon emissions and climate change). S, social criteria, addresses the relationships a business has with people and local communities (e.g., labour relations, diversity and inclusion). G, governance, is the internal systems of practices, controls, and procedures a business adopts to govern itself, make effective decisions, comply with the law, and meet the needs of external stakeholders. ESG thinking involves being clear about the company’s purpose and taking into consideration the needs of all the company’s stakeholders — shareholders, customers, employees, directors, business partners, competitors, governments, members of the press, local communities, and the public.
EDIAD Lens in the Workplace
This course serves as an introduction to the topics of equity, diversity, inclusion, accessibility, and decolonization in the workplace. Organizations are made up of people and with that comes processes, systems, and interactions that are subject to human perceptual biases, social power, and intergroup processes. We will work to recognize and unpack our own perceptual biases as well as learn how organizations can create systems to reduce discrimination and inequities. Organizations that tackle hard issues to establish fairness, justice, and the well-being of employees will be rewarded with a diverse and empowered workforce.
Introduction to Innovation and Entrepreneurship
This course explores the fundamentals of entrepreneurship and innovation and their relationship. Entrepreneurship involves recognizing, crafting, and exploiting opportunities, leading to the creation of new ventures. Innovation, on the other hand, involves managing uncertainty to a point where opportunities can be assessed. Students will be exposed to the issues, problems, and challenges with the integration of innovation management into the entrepreneurial process.
People, Teams, and Organizations
This course offers an exploration of the theory and practice involved in working with people in organizations, from both formal and informal leadership perspectives. The emphasis is on understanding individual (micro) and organizational (macro) factors and the processes through which they influence behaviour, with a view to improving managerial effectiveness. Students have the opportunity to develop and apply this understanding through experiential exercises and case studies situated in real organizations.
Social Innovation Lab
This course places management in its broadest context and helps students from diverse disciplines explore the complex social, economic, ecological, political, and technological forces shaping 21st century leadership in the public, private, and non-profit sectors. The course is characterized by a strong emphasis on teamwork and effective problem-solving in interprofessional environments. The major focus of the course is the SIL group project. Interdisciplinary teams of 4–6 students will spend the semester working on live projects hosted by organizations from across Nova Scotia.
Corporate residency:
Year one continues in January with8-monthpaid corporate residencies—extended work terms with leading employers—refining the concepts and skills acquired in the classroom and putting them into practice in a corporate setting. Year One ends with an intensive debriefing of the corporate residencies to harvest the important learnings and celebrate student successes.
Year 2 Fall/Winter:
In addition to completing the final four core courses, our curriculum allows students to customize their degree by completing 9–15 credit hours of specialized electives that best suit their personal and professional goals. Designed to take your knowledge to the next level, the Dalhousie MBA program currently offers electives in six specialized areas. Students may choose electives from any of the specialized areas or combine MBA electives with graduate offerings from programs within and outside the Faculty of Management. The official completion of the MBA occurs at the June convocation.
International Business
This course provides a survey treatment of international businesses that will benefit all MBA students and build a foundation for those proposing future study in this area. For students not going on in the field, it provides the tools needed to manage the interdependence between domestic and international markets.
Operations Management
All managers should be familiar with the key concepts and techniques related to the production function of an organization regardless of their areas of responsibility. Operations Management can broadly be defined as the design, operations, and improvement of the systems that create and deliver the firm’s primary products and services. It is therefore a discipline that is critical to the sustainability of all organizations focusing on managerial issues of the operations. The course covers the key concepts and the latest developments in the field.
Strategic Management
This course focuses on the formulation and implementation of strategy. Specific topics include: the management of strategy and organization structure, leadership, organizational culture, and large-scale organizational change. Students are exposed to a wide variety of organizations through case discussions, a case assignment, and a final case examination. In addition, students will have the opportunity to conduct a detailed study of a partner organization through the Make a Difference (MAD) group project.
Management Skill Development
Focused primarily on skill set development, this course provides students with an introduction to the practical application of theory in managing people for success, all within the context of the external and organizational forces that impact management. We will address specific organizational behaviour and general management knowledge requirements for today’s managers and focus on enhancing students' capacity for creative application of that knowledge to achieve success. In particular, the course builds qualitative managerial skills and the ability to reason from both qualitative and quantitative information as a means of integrating knowledge with other MBA courses.
Areas of Specialized Electives
- Finance
- Leadership
- Marketing
- Strategy
- Entrepreneurship and Innovation
- Enterprise Analytics
Rated number #275 in the world, learn more about Dalhousie University's QS Ranking.
You can view Dalhousie's Graduate Academic Calendar for 2024-2025 which offers more course information below.
Unlimited Potential
The opportunities available to our students upon graduation and our program exemplifies an excellent return on investment. For more informatoion, please view our CRMBA Class of 2023 Graduate Employment Statistics.
Our students go onto work in a number of diverse industries roles and experience exponential career advancement and growth in as little as 3-4 years post-grad.
Why Dalhousie's Corporate Residency MBA?
- Enter our program directly from any undergrad degree - no work experience required.
- Exceptional, paid work experience: You’ll be immersed quickly and intensely into the real business world with an eight-month paid corporate residency (work term).
- Employer Partners across Canada: Our deep relationships with Employer Partners across the country give you the opportunity to start your career in Halifax, Toronto, Calgary and beyond.
- Accelerate your leadership skills with Professional Development courses combined with career coaching from our Management Career Services team.
- Study with a small cohort of bright students: Our rigorous application process ensures you will be motivated, encouraged, inspired and challenged by others like you.
The Corporate Residency
Your career begins just a few short months into the program. By the time you enter your corporate residency, you will have been coached and prepared for this deep immersion into the business world. Over eight months you will accomplish and learn more than is possible in any traditional four-month co-op because a Dalhousie corporate residency isn’t just another summer job, it’s a glimpse into your career. As one employer aptly said, “In four months you are considered a co-op student. In eight months, we treat you like an employee with all the responsibility that goes with it.”
Our students secure their eight-month paid residencies with employers in the private, not-for-profit, and public service sectors. Most are located in Ontario and Atlantic Canada; however, CRMBA students have completed their residencies in locations across Canada and beyond. In addition to the opportunities generated by Management Career Services employer partners, students have the option to pursue self-developed and entrepreneurial corporate residencies.
Common sectors for the corporate residency include:
- Financial Services / Banking
- Consulting
- Marketing
- Healthcare and Public Sector
- Entrepreneurship / Innovation
You’ll come back to the classroom for your second year with solid business experience, ready to leverage what you’ve learned during your residency.
Internationalize Your Degree
Want to take your MBA experience international? The Corporate Residency Pathway provides students the opportunity to complete their first semester of second year abroad at the Toulouse Business School (TBS) in the south of France or Copenhagen Business School (CBS). Applications for this opportunity take place during the first year of the program.
Management Career Services
Management Career Services (MCS) works closely with the Corporate Residency Pathway to integrate career development into the curriculum. Our team works with you one-on-one to hone your interview and job search skills and connect you with employer partners across Canada for your corporate residency and beyond.
MCS services include:
- Résumé and cover letter feedback
- Interview preparation
- Job search strategy development
- Support and coaching throughout the eight-month corporate residency
- Corporate tours
- Employer information sessions and on-campus recruiting
- Networking events
Explore the MCS site and discover the many ways you can benefit from the Management Career Services staff and resources.
The Corporate Residency MBA Pathway is a fulltime program delivered in person, on campus in Halifax Nova Scotia. There are no part time or online options available.
To offer additional flexibility, some electives available in a studnet's second year will be available online
Demonstrate your commitment and readiness to succeed in business school by taking the GMAT exam – the most widely used exam for admissions that measures your critical thinking and reasoning skills.
Download the GMAT mini quiz to get a flavour of the questions you’ll find in the exam.


