Academic and Employability Skills
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
Students will be introduced to theories of academic writing and presentation skills,
learning and reflective practice, contextualised within a management and leadership
business setting. The following key transferable skills –communication, problem
solving, working with others and improving own learning – will be introduced,
practiced and applied to work-based tasks, as will the range of activities
associated with information skills. Learners will be provided with the opportunities
to develop awareness of the workplace, identify different career and study options,
recognise and articulate their own experience, accomplishments and talents and plan
and implement career management strategies for the short and long term. Students
will audit their own skills, identify aspects that require enhancement and produce
action plans for self-development in those areas, enabling them to make informed
choices in preparing for work placement, academic progression and the transition to
employment or further study on graduation.
Global Business Environment
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
The module will provide an overview of the business environment providing a
theoretical and practical introduction to students regarding the nature and
characteristics of business behaviour under conditions of certainty and uncertainty.
Whilst providing an overview of contemporary issues in global economics and
business, the module will provide opportunities for students to examine both the
external and internal factors affecting businesses in an increasingly competitive
global environment.
Accounting Fundamentals
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
This module aims to give students a thorough grasp of the basics of financial
reporting (context, purposes, regulatory framework) and build towards a proficiency
in the recording of business transactions, and the preparation and interpretation of
the primary financial statements (income statement, balance sheet and cash flow
statement). It also aims to build proficiency in the use of accounting computer
software. This module, together with the level 5 module Financial Reporting, and the
level 6 module Advanced Financial Reporting, provides a strong basis for further
study and should equip students with up-to-date knowledge of use in employment.
Financial Management
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
This module introduces core concepts in finance. It is designed to give students
sufficient discipline-based knowledge to undertake more advanced finance modules.
This module will allow the students to use a range of financial mathematical methods
and appreciate their uses in both academic and applied contexts related to
accounting and finance. The concepts and techniques of compound interest and
discounting are fundamental to financial mathematics. As such topics covered will
include: Time value of money; Financial market instruments and their functions;
Discounted cash flow approaches to decision making; Evaluation of different sources
of finance; Cost of capital and elementary financial management; Impact of dividend
and capital structure policies.
Business Economics
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
The module will provide a theoretical and practical introduction to students
regarding the nature and characteristics of business behaviour under conditions of
economic certainty and uncertainty. Students will also explore how decisions
affecting prices, production constraints, and output, wages and market forces are
made, and will be introduced to fundamental elements of business and management. The
module will consider consumer and behaviour economics and provides some empirical
applications from a marketing perspective as well as economics of business strategy
and covers models to understand firm business decisions. The module provides the
opportunity for all to build and improve numerical, mathematical and statistical
skills, and apply these to practical problems in the context of business. It will
also provide empirical applications and introduce decision on different market
structures. Throughout, concepts and applications are made relevant to real world
examples.
Corporate and Business Law
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
The module will provide a general overview of law relevant to students working in
business and develop knowledge and skills in the understanding of the general legal
framework. It will also identify the essential elements of different legal systems
including the main source of law, and apply the appropriate legal rules relating to
the law of obligations. Students will gain an appreciation and understanding of the
workings of the legal system, the law of tort, contract law, the law of agency,
employment law and other areas of law that effect businesses.
People Management
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
Given the importance of people within organisations and the part they play in
organisational success this module breaks down the functions of good and effective
human resource management by exploring and examining the key features of each part
of the HR function. Starting with recruitment and selection, induction, training and
development, pay and reward, motivation the module moves through a range of
contemporary issues such as job design, corporate social responsibility,
organisational development, employee engagement, employee relations, managing change
and responding to conflict. The module will challenge students to think laterally
about the human resource in a contemporary global environment where labour is
transportable, as is business itself. It assesses the nature of the HRM function in
different types of organisation and how this role is best undertaken in public,
voluntary and private sector contexts. All of this will need to be underpinned by an
understanding of prevailing pieces of employment legislation.
Marketing Management
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
This module provides students with an introduction to the principles of marketing
management. The specific aims are to develop an understanding of the importance of
Marketing in businesses to improve competitive advantage and increase stakeholder
value. Marketing principles and techniques are used to analyse situations and solve
business problems in a changing business environment.
Operations and Services Management
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
The aim of this module is to enable students to appreciate the principles and
concepts that underpin the successful management of operations and service delivery
in offering products and services of high quality any organisational setting. This
aim is achieved through the design of products and/or services and the processes
that create them followed by the effective planning and control of those operations.
The module will provide an insight into the nature products and services and the
nature of service classifications, how operations management principles and
practices ensure the effective delivery of products and services. It will also
examine the concept of client as a co producer and how organisations can create a
distinctive service advantage. The learning process will be facilitated through
course readings, lectures, videos, worked exercises, contemporary case studies and
supporting module-specific resources.
Research Methods
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
This module will enable students to develop understanding, skills and knowledge to
aid progression into research at undergraduate dissertation level which will be
focused on their development of a specific topic within the Business and Management
discipline. Students will be introduced to the knowledge and understanding necessary
for the design of a written research proposal and further develop skills appropriate
for the development of a research proposal including proposal focus, aims and
objectives, literature evaluation, research planning and academic writing.
Innovation and Entrepreneurship
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
The process of innovation and entrepreneurship are interrelated. Innovation is the
process by which an idea about a new product, service or production method is
developed. Entrepreneurship is about pursuing opportunities beyond the immediate
control of the entrepreneur or innovator. This module covers the basic principles
and practices of these two aspects. In specific terms, this module provides students
with an understanding of enablers and barriers to entrepreneurship & innovation and
gives them grounding in the techniques and processes used by established companies
to create and commercialize innovation, including emerging techniques. The module
covers key aspects of the entrepreneurial and innovation process as it is practiced
in corporate businesses –how and why entrepreneurship happens, how innovation
contributes to the ongoing viability and success of companies and the threats from
failing to continue to innovate, the enablers and barriers to innovation in large
firms, how new patterns of innovation are being adopted by medium and large firms,
and how intellectual property is managed in an increasingly globalised world.
Work Related Learning
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
This year-long module offers you the opportunity to apply and explore knowledge
within a work-based context, through the mode of work place learning. The placement
supervisor in the work place will negotiate the focus for you with you. You will
complete 100 hours in the work setting. You will then reflect critically on
different dimensions of the work place setting. This module provides an opportunity
for students wishing to attain National Professional recognition with the Teaching
and Learning Academy (TLA) to complete an AMTLA project.
International Business
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
To succeed in the fiercely competitive global market of the 21st century, it is
necessary to develop managers and potential managers with an international outlook
and global orientation. This requires the knowledge, skills and cultural
sensitivities to be able to cope with the complexities and harsh realities of
international competitors. This module aims to prepare students for managing
business in a rapidly changing global environment. It is designed to enable students
to develop a critical understanding of the major contemporary, and recent
historical, factors which influence and determine the global business environment,
and also to appreciate the nature of issues arising in different national, regional,
international, and transnational business contexts. It discusses how to develop
cross-border corporate strategies and organizations, how to enter foreign markets,
how to engage in global marketing, international human resource management, and
transnational production and logistics, and how to innovatively create shared value
in cross-border business activities. In general, the module focuses on the ability
to critically apply theories to resolving problems in international business.
Leadership and Change Management
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
This module aims to provide learners with a rigorous framework of knowledge and
understanding of development and change management. Students will initially be
encouraged to philosophically debate and deconstruct the applicability of a range of
accepted leadership propositions, when applied to a range of diverse workplace
contexts in the ever-changing global business environment. This approach will then
be explored in more depth to encourage a more integral view and approach to
leadership, one that considers experiential, behavioural, cultural and social and
systemic phenomena, in order to manage professional complexity and uncertainty. The
module then introduces students to major theory and practice in the specific fields
of leadership, change management, and leadership development. The aim is to help
them become effective leaders, managing others fairly and effectively and increasing
levels of engagement, commitment, motivation and performance of employees. Finally,
the module requires students to reflect critically on theory and practice from an
ethical and professional standpoint and follow a developmental approach, reflecting
on a leadership practice in their working environment &/or in the wider world, and
be well placed to experiment with new concepts and practices as a result.
Strategic Management
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
Strategic management is central to the operation of a variety of businesses in
different sectors and environments. The creation of a strategy and the management of
its implementation are important in developing businesses that can create and
sustain a competitive advantage. The management of strategy involves coping with
uncertainty, change and complexity. This module looks at how strategy is currently
practiced in a wide variety of contexts from commercial and entrepreneurial to
social and not-for-profit. The module will provide students with the necessary
managerial tools and techniques required in order to undertake a strategic analysis
& review of their organisational environment and develop a suitable plan to lead the
organisation into the future. It also encourages exploration of and a critical
approach to the key concepts that underpin strategic management and the tools
managers use to analyse their environment, frame choices and put the resulting
strategies into action.
Corporate Social Responsibility and
Sustainability
20 Credits
(Compulsory)
This module introduces corporate social responsibility (CSR) as the umbrella concept
to provide students with a theoretical and practical understanding of the
relationship between business and society. The module focuses on three main aspects
of CSR: understanding, applying and managing, and explains CSR not only as a
strategic tool but as a global phenomenon. The module will introduce students to
triple bottom line reporting, sustainable development, corporate social
responsibility and ethical issues relevant to business. It will also help students
to understand the development of corporate policies to meet stakeholder needs within
a changing environment at the national and global context. The contents of the
module will be contemporary, interesting, stretching and relevant, and should build
on and integrate with other modules that students have taken and/or are taking.
Global Economic and Financial Systems
20 Credits
(Optional)
This module examines economic, financial and political policy making which have led
to current problems with the Euro and to the world banking crisis of 2011, which
caused a number of major banks to file for bankruptcy. These organisations which
form the mainstay of global trade and finance have been bailed out by governments
using taxpayers’ money which would otherwise have been spent on health, education
and preventing crime. These events have had severe repercussions upon levels of
unemployment in most western countries. They have left countries such as Greece,
Italy and Portugal on the verge of bankruptcy, threatening their people with
poverty.
Global Innovation Management
20 Credits
(Optional)
The module is structured in such a way to enable students develop an understanding
of different views which relate to the management of innovation and technology. It
investigates how innovations can impact upon organisations, their employees and
their customers. Through an examination trends, and the ways in which new and
emerging trends, products companies and technologies can transform business
processes, students will discuss and assess how best to manage innovations (both
strategically and operationally) in a global business context.
Digital Marketing
20 Credits
(Optional)
This module outlines how understanding and analysing the macro and
micro-environments can enable organisations to assess the impact of the disruptive
digital landscape in delivering objectives, to develop strategic recommendations and
how creating digital marketing mixes can enable organisations to respond with
agility to market needs. It examines how the management of digital channels and the
application of key digital measures help to achieve business objectives.
Strategic Marketing
20 Credits
(Optional)
This module outlines all of the steps of the marketing planning process, from
analysis to strategic decision making, to implementing the plans and effectively
managing the resources, concluding with providing students with the tools to monitor
strategies and measure their success against strategic marketing objectives. The
module is structured around four key topics. The first considers the importance of
the marketing function within a global organisation. The second investigates the
planning and implementing of appropriate marketing strategies. Thirdly relationships
with stakeholders, highlighting how the organisation is responding to the modern
environment. And finally, the internal composition of marketing within the
organisation will be reviewed. Students will be appraised on the changing nature of
marketing from a strategic management perspective, allowing them to efficiently use
Strategic Marketing to ensure the business achieves its overall organisational
strategy.