Lauder Business School


Lauder Business School is an English-language business school in Vienna, Austria, operating as a "University of Applied Sciences" in the Austrian education system. Lauder Business School was founded in 2003 as a University of Applied Sciences with financial help from Ronald S. Lauder. There are currently app. 350 students enrolled in one undergraduate and two graduate programs.
Lauder Business School is a fully recognized and government-funded University of Applied Sciences. LBS degree programs are in line with the Bologna requirements, accredited by the Agency for Quality Assurance and Accreditation Austria and listed with the Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy.

History and development

In 2003 the Ronald Lauder Foundation established the Lauder Business School, under its President Ronald S. Lauder. Vienna as a location was chosen as a bridge between western and eastern traditions and to form an international University. The university combines American and European educational methods and is connected to the Harvard MOC Network, which includes more than 100 major business schools from 65 different countries. Building on the key concepts of Professor Michael Porter the network provides scholarship, research and capacity building.
During the first years of its existence, Lauder Business School offered an 8-semester Magister degree in International Marketing and Management, but since 2007 students have been accepted to two new programmes: a 6-semester Bachelor and a 4-semester Master's. At the moment the university offers one Bachelor in International Business Administration, a master's degree in International Management and Leadership and one in Strategic Finance and Business Analytics.

Campus

Lauder Business School has one campus, which includes a main building with classrooms, library, an administration building, auditoriums, a dining building and a student residence. The main part which is located in the north has a size of 1.200 m² that provides enough space for lecture- and seminar rooms. Another 750 m² are used as office space. At the southern end of the park the student residence is located. They are all located in the Döbling district of Vienna, between Pyrkergasse and Hofzeile.
These buildings comprise a former palace of Maria Theresa, given to her by Charles IV and built by Nicolò Pacassi.
Later the building was owned by members of the Rothschild family and served as a hospital.
The Bank Austria Creditanstalt Auditorium was built in 2003 and is dedicated to Gerhard Randa, former chairman of BA-CA.
The conversion and extension of the baroque ensemble of Lauder Business School was done by Kuhn Malvezzi, a Berlin-based architecture bureau.

Educational programs

The university offers the following studies:
The university offers within their own language department classes in German, Hebrew, Chinese, Russian and Spanish. The students are required to choose at least one of those languages to develop intercultural competences.

International collaborations and research

Lauder Business School is a member of the Harvard MOC Network. Within this network it has established an Institute of Competitiveness, which focuses on urban competitiveness and on diversity challenges in international management. The IoC is the first of its kind in Austria.
The LBS has diverse international partnerships with institutions or companies such as the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Bar-Ilan University, Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iași in Romania, the University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, the RHI AG, the Bank Austria Unicredit Group and the Vienna Insurance Group.

Integration of Judaism

The university itself is secular and there is no influence of religion on the business studies curriculum. But LBS is adjusted to Jews and people interested in Judaism. There are no classes on the major Jewish holidays, nor on Austrian bank holidays.