in industry, 9% in healthcare, 9% in public service, 5% energy and 5% in consumer goods sector. In addition, MBA graduates from business schools with AMBA accreditation are receiving the highest average salary in the UK since 2004 and the number of graduates who reported earnings above £70,000 increased by 11%, compared to those surveyed in AMBA’s previous Careers Surveys. Due to this, demand for MBA graduates remains high and the popularity of AMBAs’ Careers Fairs continues to grow and attract major multinational employers.
Infosys, a global leader in consulting, technology and outsourcing solutions, and the largest Indian MBA employer, continued their global MBA recruitment drive by participating in AMBA’s MBA Careers Fair. “Our global MBA hire goes a long way to complement the great technical skills that Infosys already boasts. In the long run, this MBA hiring drive will not only increase customer engagement, but will also increase high-end consulting which in turn will bring in more revenue. Hiring quality individuals will better the Infosys brand and offering,” Senior Vice President
About the Association of MBAs (AMBA):
AMBA is the international impartial authority on postgraduate business education and the only global MBA-specific Accrediting body. Established in 1967, it sets the global standard for accrediting MBA, DBA and MBM programmes. The Association currently accredits programmes in 213 schools in 70 countries worldwide. AMBA is also a professional membership association with thousands of MBA members in over 100 countries, connecting MBA students and graduates, accredited business schools and MBA employers worldwide.
and Group Head of Human Resource Development, Srikantan Moorthy, said.
Andrew Main Wilson, AMBA’s Chief Executive, said: “I am delighted that AMBA has been able to connect 400 high-calibre MBAs with 16 blue-chip global employers in just one afternoon in London. The quality and salary of job offers received on graduation are increasingly becoming key criteria in students’ selection of MBA business schools.”
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