
Blockchain Technologies: Business Innovation and Application
MIT Sloan School of Management
The MIT Sloan School of Management, the business school of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was formally established in 1952, though its roots trace back to a 1914 engineering administration curriculum — reflecting MIT's conviction that management is, at its core, a rigorous discipline. Located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, it is a university-affiliated school embedded within one of the world's foremost research universities, and that proximity is not incidental — it defines Sloan's entire academic identity. The school operates on the principle that management education should be grounded in analytical frameworks and empirical evidence rather than anecdote, a philosophy that shapes everything from how courses are designed to how faculty are hired. Today, MIT Sloan remains one of a small number of schools where you will find economists, computer scientists, and organizational psychologists contributing directly to the same executive programs. ## Accreditations and Rankings **Accreditations:** - AACSB accredited - EQUIS accredited - AMBA accredited - *(Triple Crown accredited)* **Rankings:** - **Financial Times Global MBA Ranking:** #5 (2024) - **QS World University Rankings — Business & Management Studies:** #4 globally (2024) - **Bloomberg Businessweek MBA Ranking:** #6 (2023) - **Financial Times Executive Education Open Programs:** Consistently ranked in the global top 10 ## Executive Education at a Glance MIT Sloan Executive Education is one of the most programmatically diverse offerings in the world, running more than 90 open enrollment programs annually alongside a substantial custom programs portfolio serving organisations ranging from sovereign wealth funds to global technology companies. The school is particularly known for executive education in areas where management intersects with technology: artificial intelligence strategy, digital transformation, sustainability, system dynamics, and financial innovation. Program formats span intensive on-campus residentials in Cambridge, fully online programs through the MIT Sloan online platform, and blended formats — with durations ranging from two-day intensives to multi-month certificate tracks. Flagship programs include the *Artificial Intelligence: Implications for Business Strategy* program, the *Executive Program in General Management*, and the *System Dynamics for Business Policy* course — the last a direct product of MIT's legendary System Dynamics Group, founded by Jay Forrester. Open program fees typically range from approximately $3,500 for shorter courses to over $15,000 for extended programs, with some certificate programs carrying additional costs. ## Campus and Facilities MIT Sloan's primary executive education activities are anchored in the MIT campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts — a dense, walkable research environment where a five-minute walk can take you past robotics labs, quantum computing centres, and media innovation studios. The main Sloan building, E62, opened in 2010 and was designed by Fumihiko Maki to house a genuinely collaborative environment, with tiered classrooms, informal meeting spaces, and direct sightlines between floors that are intended to produce accidental conversations. For executive participants, Cambridge itself functions as a live case study: the Route 128 technology corridor, the Kendall Square biotech cluster, and the broader Boston ecosystem mean that site visits, alumni dinners, and industry panels are woven directly into the program experience. There are few cities in the world where a conversation at dinner is as likely to involve a Nobel laureate or a first-time founder. ## Faculty and Research MIT Sloan's faculty of roughly 150 senior professors spans economics, finance, operations, organisational behaviour, and — unusually for a business school — deep technical disciplines in data science and systems engineering. The school houses several research centres of direct relevance to executive participants: the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy (IDE), the Sloan Finance Group, the MIT Leadership Center, and the Center for Information Systems Research (CISR), which has produced some of the most-cited work on digital business models and IT governance. Faculty members like Daron Acemoglu (economics of technology and inequality), Erik Brynjolfsson (digital economy), and Deborah Ancona (distributed leadership) publish work that regularly reshapes boardroom conversations — and they teach in executive programs. The school's explicit expectation is that faculty bring their active research agenda into the classroom, not a polished summary of someone else's. ## Student Body, Alumni, and Career Outcomes Executive education cohorts at MIT Sloan are notably international, typically drawing participants from more than 40 countries across a single program run, with strong representation from North America, Asia-Pacific, and the Middle East. The broader MIT Sloan alumni network numbers over 90,000 graduates across more than 90 countries, with particularly heavy concentrations in technology, financial services, consulting, and advanced manufacturing. Notable alumni include Kofi Annan (former UN Secretary-General), Benjamin Netanyahu (former Israeli Prime Minister and Sloan Fellow), Carly Fiorina (former CEO, Hewlett-Packard), and John Reed (former CEO, Citicorp) — a list that reflects the school's historical pull among both private sector leaders and public sector figures. For executive education participants, outcomes tend to be measured less in placement statistics and more in organisational impact: MIT Sloan's post-program research suggests that custom clients report measurable changes in strategic decision-making processes within 12 months of program completion.
Available Cohorts
Choose your preferred start date
All-inclusive program fee
Duration
7 weeks
Format
online
Topic
Digital Transformation
Language
English
About This Program
This online program draws on the work of leading MIT faculty and cryptoeconomics expert, Professor Christian Catalini, to examine blockchain technology from an economic perspective. You’ll be offered a foundational overview of how blockchain technology works, in order to demystify the technology and to understand its possibilities and limitations. Over the course of six weeks, you’ll be guided to understand blockchain technology beyond the fundamentals, and to appreciate its application and promise in the context of your own organization.
Blockchain technology has the potential to fundamentally change the way business is conducted, and to transform the foundations of our economic and social systems. Despite its far-reaching potential, there remains a level of uncertainty around blockchain technology and the breadth of its application as an economic catalyst. This program draws on economic theory to offer participants a deep and practical understanding of blockchain technology, and to effectively demonstrate its meaningful capacity for innovation and efficiency in business.
Blockchain Technologies: Business Innovation and Application explores parallels between blockchain technology and other general purpose technologies, highlighting its capacity to enable widespread, transformational change. You’ll examine how blockchain technology can cheaply verify, under certain conditions, the attributes of a transaction. You’ll gain a deeper understanding of the cost of networking, and learn how blockchain technology can bootstrap and facilitate a marketplace without traditional intermediaries. Using an engaging mix of resources, you’ll be guided to explore the effects of blockchain technology on market power in digital platforms, privacy, and trust.
The program looks toward the future of blockchain technology, exploring its longer-term implications for business and its relationship with other emerging technologies, including AI and IoT. You’ll be offered the opportunity to apply your learnings to your own context, walking away with a proposal for a blockchain-based solution to a problem within your current or future organization.
Examine blockchain technology through an economic lens
Discover the possibilities and limitations of blockchain technology, and evaluate its long-term implications for your business
Develop a sound understanding of two key costs significantly lowered by blockchain technology: the cost of verification and the cost of networking
Propose a blockchain-based solution to address a business problem within your own context
Why MIT Sloan School of Management?
Your Profile
- This program is designed for professionals seeking a deeper knowledge of the impact and applications of blockchain technologies in an economic environment. Whether you’re an entrepreneur looking to integrate blockchain into your business plan, or you’re in an industry such as retail or finance and wanting to understand the current and future developments of this new technology, this program will be relevant to you.
- If you’re working directly within the strategic, operational, or managerial function, this program will equip you with the knowledge necessary to discover opportunities for efficiency and innovation using blockchain technology.
Benefits
- Examine blockchain technology through an economic lens
- Discover the possibilities and limitations of blockchain technology, and evaluate its long-term implications for your business
- Develop a sound understanding of two key costs significantly lowered by blockchain technology: the cost of verification and the cost of networking
- Propose a blockchain-based solution to address a business problem within your own context
What You'll Learn
- An Introduction to Blockchain Technology
- Bitcoin and the Curse of the Double-Spending Problem
- Costless Verification: Blockchain Technology and the Last Mile Problem
- Bootstrapping Network Effects Through Blockchain Technology and Cryptoeconomics
- Using Tokens to Design New Types of Digital Platforms
- The Future of Blockchain Technology, AI, and Digital Privacy