

Foundations of Venture Capital (Online)

Columbia Business School
Columbia Business School (CBS) is a graduate-level professional school within Columbia University, founded in 1916 and located in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It is one of the oldest business schools in the United States, established with a mandate to connect rigorous academic inquiry with the practical demands of commerce in the world's leading financial centre. CBS moved to its current purpose-built home at Columbia's Manhattanville campus β Henry R. Kravis Hall and David Geffen Hall β beginning in 2022, a $600 million development that physically reflects the school's ambitions. The academic philosophy is anchored in what CBS calls "ideas at work": the conviction that theoretical insight and real-world application are inseparable, not sequential.Accreditations and RankingsAccreditations:AACSB accreditedRankings:Financial Times Global MBA Ranking: #9 (2024)Financial Times Executive Education Open Programs: Top 15 globally (2023)Financial Times Executive Education Custom Programs: Top 15 globally (2023)Bloomberg Businessweek MBA Ranking: #7 in the U.S. (2023)QS Global MBA Ranking: #14 worldwide (2024)U.S. News & World Report Best Business Schools: #8 (2024)Executive Education at a GlanceColumbia Business School Executive Education is one of the most active executive education operations in the Ivy League, running over 40 open-enrollment programs annually alongside a substantial custom and corporate solutions portfolio. The school is particularly recognised for programs in finance, value investing, private equity, digital business, healthcare management, and leadership β a reflection of both faculty research strengths and the industries concentrated in New York. Programs range from two-day intensive workshops to multi-week certificates, with the Columbia Senior Executive Program standing out as the flagship general management offering for leaders with significant organisational responsibility. Online and hybrid formats have expanded meaningfully since 2020, with several certificate programs now available in fully live-virtual formats. Open program fees typically range from approximately $3,000 for shorter workshops to $15,000 or more for multi-week residential programs; corporate custom engagements are scoped and priced separately. CBS does not widely publicise scholarships for open executive education participants, though some programs offer alumni pricing for Columbia graduates.Campus and FacilitiesThe Manhattanville campus β bounded by 125th and 133rd Streets in upper Manhattan β represents one of the most significant new business school developments of the past decade. Henry R. Kravis Hall, opened in 2022, was designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and features tiered, flexible classrooms built explicitly for discussion-heavy pedagogy, executive boardrooms, and collaborative spaces designed to eliminate the distinction between seminar and social learning. David Geffen Hall connects to Kravis and houses the business school's social and dining infrastructure. Beyond the buildings, the location matters enormously: executive participants are forty minutes from Wall Street, minutes from Harlem's emerging tech and media ecosystem, and adjacent to Columbia's broader university campus β including its medical centre, law school, and School of International and Public Affairs β enabling cross-disciplinary conversations that are structurally difficult to replicate in isolated suburban campuses.Faculty and ResearchCBS has approximately 200 full-time faculty members, drawn from economics, sociology, psychology, finance, and operations β an unusually broad disciplinary base for a business school. The school is home to several research centres directly relevant to executive learners, including the Heilbrunn Center for Graham & Dodd Investing, the Center on Global Brand Leadership, the Richard Paul Richman Center for Business, Law, and Public Policy, and the Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. Center for Leadership and Ethics. Faculty such as Tano Santos, Sheena Iyengar, and Rita McGrath are not only active researchers but regular contributors to public discourse on investing, decision-making, and competitive strategy β and they teach in executive programs rather than delegating to adjuncts. This proximity of research agenda to classroom instruction gives CBS executive programs an intellectual density that distinguishes them from provider-style executive training.Student Body, Alumni, and Career OutcomesColumbia Business School's alumni network exceeds 47,000 graduates across more than 100 countries, with particular density in financial services, technology, private equity, media, and healthcare β industries where New York's gravitational pull is strongest. Executive education cohorts are typically international and senior: participants in flagship programs such as the Senior Executive Program routinely represent companies from across North America, Europe, and Asia, with functional backgrounds spanning C-suite leadership, investment management, and entrepreneurship. CBS alumni include Warren Buffett (Class of 1951), who credits his time studying under Benjamin Graham as foundational to his investment philosophy β a lineage that continues to attract finance professionals to the school's investing-focused programs specifically. For senior executives, the CBS network operates not only through formal alumni chapters in major cities but through the informal density of CBS graduates in leadership roles at institutions including Goldman Sachs, McKinsey, Blackstone, and major technology firms.
Next Available Cohort
Choose your preferred start date
All-inclusive program fee
Duration
7 weeks
Format
online
Topic
Finance
Language
English
About This Program
Why Columbia Business School?
Few business schools can claim a campus embedded in one of the world's most consequential cities β and actually mean it. Columbia Business School has built its entire executive education philosophy around New York as a living laboratory: finance, media, technology, healthcare, and policy all intersect within walking distance of campus, and the faculty who teach executives are the same people advising the institutions that drive those industries.
Your Profile
- Mid- to senior-level finance professionals seeking to expand their practice to include more early-stage investment opportunities, understand how to value these organizations, and develop an understanding of the VC ecosystem
- Entrepreneurs, founders, and their senior management at startups seeking to understand the key drivers of investment decisions, how to get "into the deal flow," and how to secure funding for their venture
- Corporate investors seeking a model for evaluating potential acquisitions for their innovation, specialized IP, talent, or other desirable factors
- VC ecosystem players such as professionals from law organizations, accounting organizations, and benefits organizations, that support the needs of startups and VCs alike
Benefits
- Evaluate the investment potential of startups with more confidence
- Identify sources for deal flow and select the best organizations to invest in
- Develop a personal networking plan for your VC ecosystem
- Interpret the fundamental characteristics of term sheets
- Apply different methods to determine a startupβs value
- Identify key elements to consider when developing and managing a VC portfolio
What You'll Learn
- Module 1 What Is Venture Capital? - Whether your endgame is investing in the right high-growth startup or exploring your role in the VC ecosystem, you will examine the fundamentals of the venture capital landscape. You will get to know the players and their roles and examine the people and organizations in your network.
- Module 2 What Makes a Good Investment? - Unpack the due diligence process, a crucial checkpoint in determining whether a startup is aligned with your investing goals. This process shines a light on the inner workings of a startup as well as the market potential for its products and services. The four Ps model serves as a trusted framework for evaluating the investment potential of any startup.
- Module 3 What Matters in a Term Sheet? - Enter into the negotiation phase of the deal flow process by reviewing the deal structure, financial terms, and governance terms. Activities and resources are designed to deepen your understanding of what really matters in a term sheet.
- Module 4 How to Value a Startup? - Review various methodologies and the necessary components to determine a startupβs value. This module delves deeper into the final "P" in the diligence process β price β and you will hone your skills through several Excel demonstrations.
- Module 5 How to Manage a Portfolio? - Once an investment is made, there is still a tremendous opportunity to support the startup. Understand the actions that can add value, build trust, and demonstrate integrity. In addition, you will study general industry returns and calculate returns based on two methods: cash-on-cash multiple and internal rate of return (IRR).
- Module 6 Lessons Learned from 15,000 Pitches - Professor Lee shares her insights on the lessons learned from roughly 20,000 pitches that she and her organization, 37 Angels, have received. You will explore examples that illustrate what to look for when researching new startups as well as advice on how to develop your personal networking plan and how to get started with a career in the venture capital industry.
Frequently Asked Questions
How to Apply
- 1
Check your eligibility
Review the entry requirements listed on this page. Most executive programs require 8β15 years of professional experience.
- 2
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Contact the school
Send a message directly to Columbia Business School via Gradia to request a brochure or speak with an admissions advisor.
- 4
Prepare your application
Gather your CV, reference letters, and any required test scores. Many EMBA programs waive standardised tests for senior candidates.
- 5
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Apply directly through Columbia Business School's official application portal.
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