The Value of a Business Degree in
Today‘s Challenging Economy
PURSUING AN EDUCATION THAT HELPS YOU GET WHERE YOU DESERVE TO BE
Two Degrees of Separation
SIZING UP THE BACHELOR‘S AND MASTER‘S
DEGREE IN BUSINESS IN THE MARKETPLACE
In the competitive arena that is the job search
process, college graduates have traditionally
had an edge. But when some 1.7 million
bachelor’s degrees are awarded each year,
how do you separate yourself at hiring time?
Ample evidence points to an advantage that
comes with getting your degree in business,
whether it‘s a bachelor‘s or master‘s degree.
In its most recent Job Outlook Report, the National
Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE) pointed
out the premium that employers place upon business
school graduates. For instance, even when opportunities
were tightest during the recessionary period of 2009 to
2010, recent business graduates experienced a 92.6
percent hiring rate. Recent graduates who also brought
work experience to the market did even better, at 94.6
percent, and those with a Master of Business
Administration (MBA) registered 95.6 percent success
rate in their job search.
Source: Data contained in the NACE Salary Survey are produced through a
compilation of data derived from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Census
Bureau, and a master data set developed by Job Search
Intelligence, www.naceweb.org.
The edge becomes even more pronounced in the paycheck.
In the latest annual NACE Salary Survey, employers
reported that average starting salaries for business
majors grew 4.2 percent in 2012 to $53,900 – the highest
average salary among all broad categories of college majors.
Even better, consider the step up you can take by earning
not just a bachelor‘s degree in business but also an MBA.
The median starting salary for MBAs in 2012 was $90,000.
Job opportunities for MBAs increased 24 percent from 2011
to 2012, and 79 percent of employers polled in a 2012
survey said they wanted to hire MBA graduates.
Source: Data contained in the NACE Salary Survey are produced through a
compilation of data derived from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Census Bureau,
and a master data set developed by Job Search Intelligence, www.naceweb.org.
Recent data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
reinforces this report. In a survey based on 2012
statistics, the BLS found that Americans with a bachelor‘s
degree experienced only 4.5 percent unemployment. By
comparison, those with a high school diploma alone
experienced a jobless rate of 8.3 percent. A master‘s
degree registered even higher on the BLS report, with
only 3.5 percent unemployment.
Source: National Association of Colleges and Employers, www.naceweb.org. These
are national historical statistics and not representative or indicative statistics for AIU
graduates.
22%
of all bachelor’s degrees
earned in 2009-2010 were in
business
26% of all master’s degrees earned in
2009-2010 were in business
44% of business graduates landed their first
job within six months of graduation
Additional
Facts
Source: National Association of Colleges and Employers, www.naceweb.org. These
are national historical statistics and not representative or indicative statistics for AIU
graduates.
―We know unemployment and how high it is.
There is competition out there. It‘s things like a
business degree that can really highlight your
skills and put you above the rest of the crowd.‖
Eric Hellige | Manager, Career Services,
The Advantage of a
Business Degree
ACCELERATING YOUR CAREER WITH A
BACHELOR‘S DEGREE IN BUSINESS
As you consider your position on your career path, it may be
the ideal time to turn your experience into advancement.
But how do you rise above the rest? How do you land that
interview? How do you make yourself more marketable?
Define yourself with a business degree. For hiring
managers, it means you have aspirations for your
career, you have a hunger for education, you have
networking connections, you have teamwork skills, you
have a commitment to personal growth, and you have the
discipline to finish what you‘ve started.
Earning a business degree is an opportunity to stamp your
brand on your resume and open doors into the marketplace
in today‘s challenging economy. Why? Because business
degrees represent possibly the most versatile of
academic backgrounds for job seekers today.
As the graphic on the next slide shows (―Earnings by and
unemployment rates by educational attainment‖), education
can make a difference in your earning power. From banks
to sales to healthcare to nonprofit agencies to government
agencies, the skills resonate far and wide.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Current Population Survey
THE ROI OF AN EDUCATION
How Education Levels Influence Employment and Earnings:
Earning and unemployment rates by educational attainment
These are national historical statistics and not representative or indicative of
the earning potential of AIU graduates. www.bls.gov/emp/ep_chart_001.htm
―Healthcare, science, and business majors
have both low unemployment and the highest
earnings boost from experience and graduate
education.‖
“Hard Times: Not All College Degrees Are Created Equal,” Georgetown University Center on
Education and the Workforce, 2012. http:bit.ly/14Mp8jC
You have a bachelor‘s degree. You have a
job. But you sense you‘ve stalled as others
around you are getting bigger
projects, taking on leadership roles, and
landing promotions. An MBA may be what it
takes to reignite your career.
―We talk to a lot of job seekers about ‗What is
your brand? Who are you as a professional?‘
Having an MBA is a tool for job seekers to use to
establish a brand, to showcase who they are to
an employer.‖
Eric Hellige | Manager, Career Services,
In the eyes of employers, an MBA can help you in three
important ways: indicating you have a passion for your field of
interest, pointing to a deeper knowledge of management
theory and business trends, and reinforcing your experience.
Earning an MBA also shows employers that you‘ve
successfully completed the hands-on, business-focused
projects that graduate studies require and likely have built a
professional network that you can leverage to help get things
done.
Furthermore, in certain high-growth industries such as
healthcare, MBAs are a must- have among many employers
for management positions. And as economic uncertainty
continues to linger, BLS data (see page 4, ―Earnings and
unemployment rates by educational attainment‖) survey
reflects the strength and reliability of an MBA in today‘s job
market.
Eric Hellige | Manager, Career Services,
―We talk to a lot of job seekers about ‗What is your
brand? Who are you as a professional?‘ Having an
MBA is a tool for job seekers to use to establish a
brand, to showcase who they are to an employer.‖
The Evolution of
Business Studies
HOW BUSINESS DEGREES HAVE CHANGED
THROUGH HISTORY
Considering the ancient legacy of academia, business
education at the post-secondary level is a relatively modern
concept. The Ecole Supérieure de Commerce (ESCP)
Europe, which opened in Paris in 1819, is widely credited as
the world‘s first business school. In North America, Joseph
Wharton first introduced a business college to the University
of Pennsylvania in 1881, and the Wharton School of Business
is renowned still today.
As market forces have compelled ever more employers
to demand business skills and savvy from their
workers, the field of business studies has adapted not
only in magnitude — an estimated 2,400 institutions of
higher learning offer business degrees in the United
States alone — but also in the method of instruction.
Source: Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs,
www.acbsp.org/members/?id=18776063
Once exclusive to classrooms and lecture halls, the delivery
of business education has come to reflect the dynamic
nature of the modern economy: agile, mobile, and
accessible wherever and whenever a student can log on to
the Internet.
The idea of distance learning dates back to the late 19th
century, when instruction was delivered through the mail.
So-called correspondence courses set the stage for lectures
via satellite broadcasts and eventually the establishment of
degree-granting universities without a campus. Virtual
education was born.
The Advantages of Online Learning
Accessibility: Access course materials through one log in and
in one centralized location
Flexibility: Not having to come to class at a specific time and
location means online students can more easily fit in school with
work and family
Keep working: Continue your career and balance family life
while completing coursework at times that work for you, day or
night
Convenience: Review course materials on demand
Support: Get 24/7 support by phone, email, or live chat whenever
you need it
Today, technology not only makes it possible for advanced
education to connect with you where you live, it means you
can combine class schedules and coursework with real life:
your job, your family, your hobbies, and your budget.
Increasingly, accredited universities are providing bachelor‘s
and master‘s degrees online. These programs are attracting
industry-specialist faculty and providing around-the-clock
support that was previously unprecedented in the university
setting.
―It was great having the freedom to work online.
Especially when you have a family and children
at home, the online process definitely makes it
easier.‖
―(The online program) helped quite a bit. I‘m
working and I have a family. When I had
assignments to do, if I had to sit in a classroom,
it would have been a real issue.‖
Mark McClintock | Channel Account Manager, AirWatch | MBA, AIU Online Class of 2012
The AIU Difference
THE CURRICULUM
The powerful, specialized degree programs at American
InterContinental University (AIU) set it apart from other
business programs. At AIU, students can take more courses
devoted to their field of interest, on average, than at similar
schools, with more than 10 specializations ranging from
finance to marketing to operations management.
THE CURRICULUM
Furthermore, AIU can help you get to where you want to be
in a way that respects your time and money. You can
receive credit for work and military experience, and there
are no hidden costs — AIU‘s tuition price includes all
required books, materials, and fees, and there are multiple
discounts available.
THE WAY YOU LEARN
AIU‘s personalized learning platform — called intellipathTM
— provides each student a customized learning map that
lets you skip over what you already know and focus on
what you need to learn, with professor support when you
need it. You can complete coursework at times that are
convenient for you and learn via customized content you
can read, listen to, or watch.
THE FACULTY
It‘s never enough to go strictly by the book. In AIU‘s business
programs, the classes are taught by faculty who are industry
specialists and bring a real-world perspective into the
classroom. By learning from those who have put theory into
practice, AIU graduates can be ready to take their classroom
learning directly into the workplace.
―You are learning from someone who has been
there, done that. I know as a learner I like to hear real-
life examples, to see how those situations play
through, how they came about, and what was done to
resolve them.‖
Eric Hellige | Manager, Career Services,
―The intellipath tool not only diagnoses exactly what the individual needs
and provides a learning map exclusive to that individual but also, throughout
the course, the student is able to to go back and forth between the [course
topic] nodes and choose to spend the time he or she feels like is needed for
each node, and that is mastery learning and independent learning at its
best.‖
Dr. David Taylor | English Professor | AIU
―In traditional models … you can easily get by as long as you participate and
complete assignments. The faculty member or instructor doesn‘t get a good
pulse of where you are with learning the curriculum. With adaptive
learning, every student gets the attention they need to be successful.‖
Kristy McArthur | Career Services Manager | AIU
Getting Ahead
A college degree can play a crucial role in advancing your
career, but the quest for success is a daily exercise that
rewards discipline and the application of the skills you learn on
your degree path.
Below, some of AIU‘s leaders, graduates, and contributors
share advice on how to best manage daily responsibilities and
what practices they recommend to help get ahead
professionally.
―I recommend the four basic functions of management:
planning, organizing, leadership, and evaluating. That is what I tell any student. I tell
them to arrange their resume that way, and to actually develop their lifestyle and their
work style that way. On the job. In the classroom. Even in their family life.‖
Dr. Robert Rodriguez | Ph.D., M.P.H., M.B.A., M.Sc. | AIU Instructor | Healthcare
Management
―Always look for opportunities to develop yourself professionally, whether it‘s pursuing
a degree, or pursuing an additional project at work, or communicating with your direct
manager on other projects you could work on. The more you invest in yourself and
take your professional goals seriously, the more opportunity for advancement and
promotion there will be as well.‖
Kristy McArthur | Career Services | AIU
―A good rule of thumb, whether you‘re going to school or are out of school, is time
management. Being in school, you‘ll have a lot of projects and assignments. You‘re
maybe working on top of that, or maybe you have family. Everyone has different time
management skills. It‘s about figuring out what your time management skills are, and
really living those time management skills.‖
Eric Hellige | Manager, Career Services,
―Written communication skill is something that‘s overlooked and something a lot of
students think they won‘t need. I see many students who are really strong in verbal
communication, but they often struggle to write in a very professional way. No matter
what field you get into after you earn a business degree, those types of written skills
are always very valuable.‖
Alex Rot | Senior Career Services Advisor | AIU
―It‘s definitely good to plan ahead, especially if you have a family and children at home
… It‘s important to plan, to put it on the calendar, and stick to it. That‘s the best
process.‖
Mark McClintock | Channel Account Manager, AirWatch | MBA, AIU Online Class of 2012
About AIU
American InterContinental University (AIU) was created to deliver education without the restraints of traditional academic
institutions. Since AIU was founded in 1970, it has been preparing graduates to compete in the industries that are
relevant today and tomorrow. AIU serves students at physical campuses in Atlanta and Houston as well as through AIU
Online.
AIU‘s business degree programs include an Associate of Arts in Business Administration (AABA), Bachelor of Business
Administration (BBA), Bachelor of Accounting (BAcc) , Master of Accounting (MAcc), and Master of Business
Administration (MBA). The Associate of Arts in Business Administration (AABA), Bachelor of Business Administration
(BBA), and Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree programs at AIU are accredited by the Accreditation
Council for Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP). (The BAcc and MAcc programs are not yet eligible to pursue
academic accreditation.)
To learn more aboutAIU and its business degree programs or to apply for admission, contact us at www.aiuniv.edu.

The Value of a Business Degree in Today's Challenging Economy

  • 1.
    The Value ofa Business Degree in Today‘s Challenging Economy PURSUING AN EDUCATION THAT HELPS YOU GET WHERE YOU DESERVE TO BE
  • 2.
    Two Degrees ofSeparation SIZING UP THE BACHELOR‘S AND MASTER‘S DEGREE IN BUSINESS IN THE MARKETPLACE
  • 3.
    In the competitivearena that is the job search process, college graduates have traditionally had an edge. But when some 1.7 million bachelor’s degrees are awarded each year, how do you separate yourself at hiring time? Ample evidence points to an advantage that comes with getting your degree in business, whether it‘s a bachelor‘s or master‘s degree.
  • 4.
    In its mostrecent Job Outlook Report, the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE) pointed out the premium that employers place upon business school graduates. For instance, even when opportunities were tightest during the recessionary period of 2009 to 2010, recent business graduates experienced a 92.6 percent hiring rate. Recent graduates who also brought work experience to the market did even better, at 94.6 percent, and those with a Master of Business Administration (MBA) registered 95.6 percent success rate in their job search. Source: Data contained in the NACE Salary Survey are produced through a compilation of data derived from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Census Bureau, and a master data set developed by Job Search Intelligence, www.naceweb.org.
  • 5.
    The edge becomeseven more pronounced in the paycheck. In the latest annual NACE Salary Survey, employers reported that average starting salaries for business majors grew 4.2 percent in 2012 to $53,900 – the highest average salary among all broad categories of college majors. Even better, consider the step up you can take by earning not just a bachelor‘s degree in business but also an MBA. The median starting salary for MBAs in 2012 was $90,000. Job opportunities for MBAs increased 24 percent from 2011 to 2012, and 79 percent of employers polled in a 2012 survey said they wanted to hire MBA graduates. Source: Data contained in the NACE Salary Survey are produced through a compilation of data derived from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Census Bureau, and a master data set developed by Job Search Intelligence, www.naceweb.org.
  • 6.
    Recent data fromthe U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reinforces this report. In a survey based on 2012 statistics, the BLS found that Americans with a bachelor‘s degree experienced only 4.5 percent unemployment. By comparison, those with a high school diploma alone experienced a jobless rate of 8.3 percent. A master‘s degree registered even higher on the BLS report, with only 3.5 percent unemployment. Source: National Association of Colleges and Employers, www.naceweb.org. These are national historical statistics and not representative or indicative statistics for AIU graduates.
  • 7.
    22% of all bachelor’sdegrees earned in 2009-2010 were in business 26% of all master’s degrees earned in 2009-2010 were in business 44% of business graduates landed their first job within six months of graduation Additional Facts Source: National Association of Colleges and Employers, www.naceweb.org. These are national historical statistics and not representative or indicative statistics for AIU graduates.
  • 8.
    ―We know unemploymentand how high it is. There is competition out there. It‘s things like a business degree that can really highlight your skills and put you above the rest of the crowd.‖ Eric Hellige | Manager, Career Services,
  • 9.
    The Advantage ofa Business Degree ACCELERATING YOUR CAREER WITH A BACHELOR‘S DEGREE IN BUSINESS
  • 10.
    As you consideryour position on your career path, it may be the ideal time to turn your experience into advancement. But how do you rise above the rest? How do you land that interview? How do you make yourself more marketable?
  • 11.
    Define yourself witha business degree. For hiring managers, it means you have aspirations for your career, you have a hunger for education, you have networking connections, you have teamwork skills, you have a commitment to personal growth, and you have the discipline to finish what you‘ve started.
  • 12.
    Earning a businessdegree is an opportunity to stamp your brand on your resume and open doors into the marketplace in today‘s challenging economy. Why? Because business degrees represent possibly the most versatile of academic backgrounds for job seekers today. As the graphic on the next slide shows (―Earnings by and unemployment rates by educational attainment‖), education can make a difference in your earning power. From banks to sales to healthcare to nonprofit agencies to government agencies, the skills resonate far and wide.
  • 13.
    Source: Bureau ofLabor Statistics, Current Population Survey THE ROI OF AN EDUCATION How Education Levels Influence Employment and Earnings: Earning and unemployment rates by educational attainment These are national historical statistics and not representative or indicative of the earning potential of AIU graduates. www.bls.gov/emp/ep_chart_001.htm
  • 14.
    ―Healthcare, science, andbusiness majors have both low unemployment and the highest earnings boost from experience and graduate education.‖ “Hard Times: Not All College Degrees Are Created Equal,” Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce, 2012. http:bit.ly/14Mp8jC
  • 15.
    You have abachelor‘s degree. You have a job. But you sense you‘ve stalled as others around you are getting bigger projects, taking on leadership roles, and landing promotions. An MBA may be what it takes to reignite your career.
  • 16.
    ―We talk toa lot of job seekers about ‗What is your brand? Who are you as a professional?‘ Having an MBA is a tool for job seekers to use to establish a brand, to showcase who they are to an employer.‖ Eric Hellige | Manager, Career Services,
  • 17.
    In the eyesof employers, an MBA can help you in three important ways: indicating you have a passion for your field of interest, pointing to a deeper knowledge of management theory and business trends, and reinforcing your experience. Earning an MBA also shows employers that you‘ve successfully completed the hands-on, business-focused projects that graduate studies require and likely have built a professional network that you can leverage to help get things done.
  • 18.
    Furthermore, in certainhigh-growth industries such as healthcare, MBAs are a must- have among many employers for management positions. And as economic uncertainty continues to linger, BLS data (see page 4, ―Earnings and unemployment rates by educational attainment‖) survey reflects the strength and reliability of an MBA in today‘s job market.
  • 19.
    Eric Hellige |Manager, Career Services, ―We talk to a lot of job seekers about ‗What is your brand? Who are you as a professional?‘ Having an MBA is a tool for job seekers to use to establish a brand, to showcase who they are to an employer.‖
  • 20.
    The Evolution of BusinessStudies HOW BUSINESS DEGREES HAVE CHANGED THROUGH HISTORY
  • 21.
    Considering the ancientlegacy of academia, business education at the post-secondary level is a relatively modern concept. The Ecole Supérieure de Commerce (ESCP) Europe, which opened in Paris in 1819, is widely credited as the world‘s first business school. In North America, Joseph Wharton first introduced a business college to the University of Pennsylvania in 1881, and the Wharton School of Business is renowned still today.
  • 22.
    As market forceshave compelled ever more employers to demand business skills and savvy from their workers, the field of business studies has adapted not only in magnitude — an estimated 2,400 institutions of higher learning offer business degrees in the United States alone — but also in the method of instruction. Source: Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs, www.acbsp.org/members/?id=18776063
  • 23.
    Once exclusive toclassrooms and lecture halls, the delivery of business education has come to reflect the dynamic nature of the modern economy: agile, mobile, and accessible wherever and whenever a student can log on to the Internet.
  • 24.
    The idea ofdistance learning dates back to the late 19th century, when instruction was delivered through the mail. So-called correspondence courses set the stage for lectures via satellite broadcasts and eventually the establishment of degree-granting universities without a campus. Virtual education was born.
  • 25.
    The Advantages ofOnline Learning Accessibility: Access course materials through one log in and in one centralized location Flexibility: Not having to come to class at a specific time and location means online students can more easily fit in school with work and family Keep working: Continue your career and balance family life while completing coursework at times that work for you, day or night Convenience: Review course materials on demand Support: Get 24/7 support by phone, email, or live chat whenever you need it
  • 26.
    Today, technology notonly makes it possible for advanced education to connect with you where you live, it means you can combine class schedules and coursework with real life: your job, your family, your hobbies, and your budget. Increasingly, accredited universities are providing bachelor‘s and master‘s degrees online. These programs are attracting industry-specialist faculty and providing around-the-clock support that was previously unprecedented in the university setting.
  • 27.
    ―It was greathaving the freedom to work online. Especially when you have a family and children at home, the online process definitely makes it easier.‖ ―(The online program) helped quite a bit. I‘m working and I have a family. When I had assignments to do, if I had to sit in a classroom, it would have been a real issue.‖ Mark McClintock | Channel Account Manager, AirWatch | MBA, AIU Online Class of 2012
  • 28.
  • 29.
    THE CURRICULUM The powerful,specialized degree programs at American InterContinental University (AIU) set it apart from other business programs. At AIU, students can take more courses devoted to their field of interest, on average, than at similar schools, with more than 10 specializations ranging from finance to marketing to operations management.
  • 30.
    THE CURRICULUM Furthermore, AIUcan help you get to where you want to be in a way that respects your time and money. You can receive credit for work and military experience, and there are no hidden costs — AIU‘s tuition price includes all required books, materials, and fees, and there are multiple discounts available.
  • 31.
    THE WAY YOULEARN AIU‘s personalized learning platform — called intellipathTM — provides each student a customized learning map that lets you skip over what you already know and focus on what you need to learn, with professor support when you need it. You can complete coursework at times that are convenient for you and learn via customized content you can read, listen to, or watch.
  • 32.
    THE FACULTY It‘s neverenough to go strictly by the book. In AIU‘s business programs, the classes are taught by faculty who are industry specialists and bring a real-world perspective into the classroom. By learning from those who have put theory into practice, AIU graduates can be ready to take their classroom learning directly into the workplace.
  • 33.
    ―You are learningfrom someone who has been there, done that. I know as a learner I like to hear real- life examples, to see how those situations play through, how they came about, and what was done to resolve them.‖ Eric Hellige | Manager, Career Services,
  • 34.
    ―The intellipath toolnot only diagnoses exactly what the individual needs and provides a learning map exclusive to that individual but also, throughout the course, the student is able to to go back and forth between the [course topic] nodes and choose to spend the time he or she feels like is needed for each node, and that is mastery learning and independent learning at its best.‖ Dr. David Taylor | English Professor | AIU ―In traditional models … you can easily get by as long as you participate and complete assignments. The faculty member or instructor doesn‘t get a good pulse of where you are with learning the curriculum. With adaptive learning, every student gets the attention they need to be successful.‖ Kristy McArthur | Career Services Manager | AIU
  • 35.
  • 36.
    A college degreecan play a crucial role in advancing your career, but the quest for success is a daily exercise that rewards discipline and the application of the skills you learn on your degree path. Below, some of AIU‘s leaders, graduates, and contributors share advice on how to best manage daily responsibilities and what practices they recommend to help get ahead professionally.
  • 37.
    ―I recommend thefour basic functions of management: planning, organizing, leadership, and evaluating. That is what I tell any student. I tell them to arrange their resume that way, and to actually develop their lifestyle and their work style that way. On the job. In the classroom. Even in their family life.‖ Dr. Robert Rodriguez | Ph.D., M.P.H., M.B.A., M.Sc. | AIU Instructor | Healthcare Management ―Always look for opportunities to develop yourself professionally, whether it‘s pursuing a degree, or pursuing an additional project at work, or communicating with your direct manager on other projects you could work on. The more you invest in yourself and take your professional goals seriously, the more opportunity for advancement and promotion there will be as well.‖ Kristy McArthur | Career Services | AIU
  • 38.
    ―A good ruleof thumb, whether you‘re going to school or are out of school, is time management. Being in school, you‘ll have a lot of projects and assignments. You‘re maybe working on top of that, or maybe you have family. Everyone has different time management skills. It‘s about figuring out what your time management skills are, and really living those time management skills.‖ Eric Hellige | Manager, Career Services, ―Written communication skill is something that‘s overlooked and something a lot of students think they won‘t need. I see many students who are really strong in verbal communication, but they often struggle to write in a very professional way. No matter what field you get into after you earn a business degree, those types of written skills are always very valuable.‖ Alex Rot | Senior Career Services Advisor | AIU
  • 39.
    ―It‘s definitely goodto plan ahead, especially if you have a family and children at home … It‘s important to plan, to put it on the calendar, and stick to it. That‘s the best process.‖ Mark McClintock | Channel Account Manager, AirWatch | MBA, AIU Online Class of 2012
  • 40.
    About AIU American InterContinentalUniversity (AIU) was created to deliver education without the restraints of traditional academic institutions. Since AIU was founded in 1970, it has been preparing graduates to compete in the industries that are relevant today and tomorrow. AIU serves students at physical campuses in Atlanta and Houston as well as through AIU Online. AIU‘s business degree programs include an Associate of Arts in Business Administration (AABA), Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA), Bachelor of Accounting (BAcc) , Master of Accounting (MAcc), and Master of Business Administration (MBA). The Associate of Arts in Business Administration (AABA), Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA), and Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree programs at AIU are accredited by the Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP). (The BAcc and MAcc programs are not yet eligible to pursue academic accreditation.) To learn more aboutAIU and its business degree programs or to apply for admission, contact us at www.aiuniv.edu.