Skip to content

    👋 Quick question — how are we doing?

    The Emerging COO: Driving Innovation and Operational Excellence
    Stanford Graduate School of Business

    The Emerging COO: Driving Innovation and Operational Excellence

    Stanford Graduate School of Business, Stanford
    HomeLeadershipStanford Graduate School of BusinessThe Emerging COO: Driving Innovation and Operational Excellence
    4 monthsDuration
    in-personFormat
    EnglishLanguage
    LeadershipTopic

    Available Cohorts

    Choose your preferred start date

    Jan 25 - May 7, 2027
    4 months · in-person · Instructor-Led · Hybrid
    Open
    Apr 26 - Aug 20, 2027
    4 months · in-person · Instructor-Led · Hybrid
    Open
    $18,000

    All-inclusive program fee

    Executive Summary

    Meet faculty director Stefanos Zenios, and hear how The Emerging COO program will help you drive and sustain innovation and operational excellence, while also strengthening collaboration with C-suite leaders.

    About This Program

    Agile. Creative. Innovative. And yes, strategic, too. The demands on today's chief operating officers have expanded far beyond optimizing resources and efficiencies. Successful COOs must also encourage and implement change in their organizations and create a culture that accelerates rather than hinders innovation. The Emerging COO: Driving Innovation and Operational Excellence will give you the strategies and leadership skills to innovate, collaborate, and execute. In this program designed for emerging and experienced COOs, you'll learn from Stanford GSB faculty with expertise in everything from agile manufacturing and supply chain to design thinking, lean startup, and storytelling. It's a unique opportunity to develop, deepen, and apply your learning.

    Why Stanford Graduate School of Business?

    Stanford GSB sits at the epicentre of Silicon Valley, which means its executive education participants don't just study innovation — they walk out the door and into the world's densest concentration of venture capital, deep-tech startups, and technology multinationals. The school's insistence that leadership begins with self-awareness, not strategy frameworks, produces a distinctly introspective style of executive development that sets it apart from almost every other elite institution.

    Your Profile

    • Emerging and experienced COOs who are motivated to lead and ignite change in their organizations - from any industry and country.
    • Senior-level operations leaders and aspiring COOs from any size or stage company - startups, high-growth, and established.

    Benefits

    • Develop strategic thinking and frameworks to achieve operational excellence.
    • Learn design thinking methodology and mindsets to lead operational innovation.
    • Explore how to integrate effective new operational routines into your organization's culture.
    • Enhance communication and leadership skills to get buy-in at the C-suite level and across the organization.
    • Network with peers from diverse industries and functional areas to gain new insights that can be applied to your organization.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How to Apply

    1. 1

      Check your eligibility

      Review the entry requirements listed on this page. Most executive programs require 8–15 years of professional experience.

    2. 2

      Compare programs

      Use Gradia's comparison tool to evaluate up to 3 programs side-by-side on fees, duration, format, and accreditation.

      Compare programs →
    3. 3

      Contact the school

      Send a message directly to Stanford Graduate School of Business via Gradia to request a brochure or speak with an admissions advisor.

    4. 4

      Prepare your application

      Gather your CV, reference letters, and any required test scores. Many EMBA programs waive standardised tests for senior candidates.

    5. 5

      Submit your application

      Apply directly through Stanford Graduate School of Business's official application portal.

      Apply now →

    Other Leadership programs at Stanford Graduate School of Business

    1 / 16