Opportunities for your organisation
Explore the many ways you can engage with Cambridge Judge Business School – recruit your talent, sponsor your employees, speak at an event or sponsor a student consultancy project.
Why work with Cambridge Judge?
Connect with one of the world’s most dynamic and international business school communities. At Cambridge Judge Business School, we work with a rich array of leading corporate and non-corporate organisations of all sizes, across all sectors.
Thinking about joining us as a corporate speaker? Have an upcoming project opportunity you’d like to discuss? Or are you looking to develop your existing people, or bring new talent on board, by recruiting from our highly talented pool of business students? Whatever your motivation, building a relationship with the Business School brings a wealth of benefits for you, and for your organisation.
- Draw on a wealth of interdisciplinary knowledge from across the wider University of Cambridge – a world-renowned institution at the forefront of academic study and research for 800 years
- Experience the benefits of an intellectually rigorous and practical curriculum that leverages the power of academia for real-world impact
- Benefit from our location at the heart of the Cambridge Cluster – we are uniquely placed to research entrepreneurship and empower entrepreneurs.
- Connect your people with our people – a collaborative and international community of world-leading faculty, committed and ambitious students and active alumni.

Recruiting from Cambridge Judge
MBAs. MFins. MPhils. Experienced business professionals, entrepreneurs, social innovators and technology experts. Source the very best Cambridge Judge Business School talent.
Student consultancy projects
Could your organisation benefit from working with our students?
Hosting a Cambridge Judge Business School student consultancy project delivers fresh ideas and energy, diverse perspectives, and invaluable insights right to your door. Access our exceptional talent pool, prepare a clear brief, and then watch as our students set to work preparing concrete deliverables to address some of your most complex business problems.
Collaborate with faculty
Access the expertise and analytical skills of our academic faculty. Many are recognised business practitioners and leaders in their fields; all are dedicated to applying years of dedicated research for real-world impact. Their goal is to engage, advise and collaborate, serving the needs of businesses, charities, social enterprises, government bodies, service organisations, and civil society sector groups.
Develop your team
Invest in your people with advanced training and development opportunities. Sponsoring employees onto a Cambridge Judge programme improves employee motivation, satisfaction and retention.
Masters programmes
Prepare your best employees to take on increased leadership responsibilities and build a stronger, more global network.
Executive Education open programmes
Support and challenge your talent on one of over 40 world-leading Executive Education programmes.
Custom programmes
Tailor a bespoke executive programme to fulfil your organisational requirements and support your company’s strategic objectives.
Work with students
News from Cambridge Judge
Research centre news
Report on UK tech cites testimony from Cambridge Judge
The UK House of Lords Science and Technology Committee cited testimony and written evidence by David Connell, Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Business Research at Cambridge Judge Business School, in a new report on the failure of UK technology companies to scale up to become global players. The report is entitled Bleeding to death: the science and technology growth emergency.
Social impact
Climate conflict: can tech make peace?
There has been a proliferation of technological tools aimed at spotting and stopping climate and conflict risks around the world, yet such tools have to be handled carefully to prevent oversimplification and the exclusion of different viewpoints, says research from the Cambridge Peaceshaping and Climate Lab at the Cambridge Centre for Social Innovation (CCSI).
Research centre news
Does monetary policy affect individuals’ interest rates equally?
In theory, a direct way through which monetary policy is able to affect demand is through consumer credit rates. When a rise in the policy rate is passed-through to consumer credit rates, taking out a loan becomes more expensive and aggregate demand is suppressed. In new research, we use Brazilian credit registry data to examine whether this pass-through of monetary policy to consumer interest rates happens equally across all borrowers. Preliminary results suggest that monetary policy disproportionately affects credit costs for lower-income borrowers such that it increases the interest rate spread across the income distribution.







