

Leading your Family Business

International Institute for Management Development
The International Institute for Management Development — universally known as IMD — was established in Lausanne, Switzerland in 1990 through the merger of two storied institutions: IMEDE, founded in 1957 with the support of Nestlé, and IMI Geneva, founded in 1946 by Alcan. That corporate founding DNA has never left. IMD remains independent, non-profit, and deliberately small, with no undergraduate programs and no large MBA cohorts diluting faculty attention. Its founding conviction — that business schools should serve the practicing manager, not the other way around — continues to define every program design decision the school makes today.Accreditations and RankingsAccreditationsAACSB accreditedEQUIS accreditedAMBA accreditedTriple Crown status (held by fewer than 1% of business schools globally)RankingsFinancial Times Executive Education Open Programs: #1 globally (2023, 2024)Financial Times Executive Education Custom Programs: #1 globally (2023)Financial Times MBA: consistently ranked in top 20 globallyQS Global MBA Rankings: top 30 globally (2024)Bloomberg Businessweek MBA: top international programs tier (2024)Executive Education at a GlanceIMD's executive education offering is, in a meaningful sense, the school itself — it accounts for the majority of the institution's revenue and academic focus, and the Financial Times has ranked its open programs number one in the world multiple times in recent years. The school offers roughly 50 open-enrollment programs annually, alongside a substantial custom program operation serving multinationals including Nestlé, Rolex, and ABB. Open programs range from three-day intensives to flagship multi-week experiences, with durations typically falling between three days and three weeks. Key topic areas include leadership under uncertainty, family business governance, digital business transformation, high-performance boards, and strategic finance. IMD's Program for Executive Development (PED) is arguably its most famous standalone offering — a multi-week residential experience designed for senior managers stepping toward C-suite responsibility. Fees for open programs typically range from CHF 4,000 for shorter modules to CHF 25,000 or more for longer residential programs. A limited number of IMD scholarships exist for exceptional candidates demonstrating financial need or leadership potential.Campus and FacilitiesIMD's campus sits in Lausanne, directly on the north shore of Lake Geneva, with the Alps visible across the water on clear days — a setting that is striking enough to matter without being merely decorative. The campus is deliberately compact: a single interconnected set of buildings housing tiered auditoria, breakout spaces, dining facilities, and residential accommodation, all within walking distance of each other. That physical compactness is a design choice. Participants eat together, debrief in the same corridors, and run into faculty between sessions — a rhythm that accelerates the peer learning that IMD considers central to its methodology. Lausanne itself adds a particular texture: it is the headquarters city of the International Olympic Committee, a hub for global consumer goods companies, and one of Switzerland's most genuinely international cities, making it a naturally rich environment for senior professionals comparing notes across industries and geographies.Faculty and ResearchIMD has a permanent faculty of approximately 50 professors — tiny by the standards of major research universities — and that constraint is intentional. Every faculty member is expected to consult actively with corporations, ensuring that classroom content is continuously tested against live organizational problems. Research strengths with direct relevance to executive participants include family business succession, geopolitical risk and corporate strategy, digital transformation, and leadership resilience. The school hosts the IMD Global Center for Digital Business Transformation (in partnership with Cisco), the IMD Global Family Business Center — one of the world's most respected research bodies in that field — and the IMD Center for Sustainable Finance and Private Wealth. Faculty nationalities span more than 30 countries, and it is not unusual for a single program to involve professors who have recently advised a Fortune 500 board, a Southeast Asian state-owned enterprise, and a European family-controlled conglomerate.Student Body, Alumni, and Career OutcomesIMD's executive education cohorts are among the most internationally diverse of any business school, with participants typically drawn from 40 to 50 nationalities within a single program — a figure that holds up even in shorter open programs, not just the flagship residential experiences. The alumni network spans more than 60,000 individuals in over 100 countries, with particular density in Western Europe, North America, and increasingly Southeast Asia. Alumni are heavily concentrated in senior functional and general management roles at multinationals — Unilever, Nestlé, Novartis, and Julius Baer appear frequently among employer affiliations — as well as in private equity, family offices, and government-linked enterprises. Because IMD does not run large undergraduate or MBA cohorts, the executive education alumni community has an unusually high average seniority level, which makes the network more immediately useful to participants who are already operating at director level or above.
Available Cohorts
Choose your preferred start date
All-inclusive program fee
Duration
5 days
Format
in-person
Topic
Governance & Boards
Language
English
About This Program
Why International Institute for Management Development?
IMD runs one of the smallest, most selective executive education portfolios in the world — and that is precisely the point. Based on the shores of Lake Geneva, the school has built its entire identity around a single question: what does it actually take to develop a leader who performs under real pressure? The answer, refined over decades, is a model that combines unusually small cohorts, faculty who consult actively with global corporations, and a Swiss-precision focus on measurable behavioral change.
Your Profile
- Leading your Family Business has been created for members of the same family. For ideal learning benefits, we recommend team attendance – for example, family teams of several generations, siblings, cousins and or key non-family managers. Develop a common approach, a common language, and build on this by sending members to the same program, or in phases over time – ideally with key decision makers.
- Your class will comprise a carefully selected group of business-owning families who share similar issues to yours. With IMD’s rich expertise of over 30 years working with family businesses, you will benefit from the most impactful learning both individually and as a group.
Benefits
- Understand family business ecosystems - Explore what constitutes a successful family business and how external and internal forces affect family ecosystems.
- Navigate challenges - Brainstorm solutions for personal or familial challenges or crises affecting your family business – from growth, to governance, succession, and culture.
- Future-proof your business - Learn strategies to adapt and innovate in a changing landscape, ensuring your family business remains relevant and competitive for future generations.
- Grow your performance - Gain tangible take-home value and actionable insights designed to drive growth and elevate the overall performance of your family business.
What You'll Learn
- Pre-program - IMD conversation to understand your family’s goals and needs
- Day 1: How family businesses lead - Key factors behind the success of family businesses, What is your secret to success, How do you ensure you remain successful across generations
- Day 2: Leading your business - Roles and rules in a family business, Responsible ownership, Developing effective boards
- Day 3: Leading your family - Family governance foundations, Constitutions and family councils, Interpersonal dynamics and family conflict
- Day 4: Leading transitions - Managing succession, Balancing tradition and innovation, Creating a family office
- Day 5: Leading your family business legacy - Designing your purpose, Legacy narratives that engage your stakeholders, Action plan and reflections
Frequently Asked Questions
How to Apply
- 1
Check your eligibility
Review the entry requirements listed on this page. Most executive programs require 8–15 years of professional experience.
- 2
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Contact the school
Send a message directly to International Institute for Management Development 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
Submit your application
Apply directly through International Institute for Management Development's official application portal.
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