Minor in Management (MSOM)
School of Management
Prerequisite for all MSOM courses is completion of 38 hours.
300 Managing Financial Resources (3:3:0). Course may not
be taken for credit by School of Management majors. Focus on using basic
concepts of accounting and financial management to make investment, credit, and
operating decisions for an organization. Emphasis is on using financial reports
to aid the planning and control of organizational activities.
300 Managing Financial Resources (3:3:0). Prerequisite:
38 credit hours. Course may not be taken for credit by School of Management majors.
Focus on using basic concepts of accounting and financial management to make investment,
credit, and operating decisions for an organization. Emphasis is on using financial
reports to aid the planning and control of organizational activities.
301 Managing People and Organizations (3:3:0). Course
may not be taken for credit by School of Management majors. Introduces students
to key issues in management, organizational behavior, and human resource management.
Special attention is given to best practices used by effective managers.
302 Managing Information (3:3:0). Course may
not be taken for credit by School of Managementmajors. Provides an overview
of the strategic role of information, the need for information systems, organizing
information, integration of information systems in management processes and decision
making, and related discussions in electronic business and electronic commerce.
303 Marketing in a Global Economy (3:3:0). Course may
not be taken for credit by School of Management majors. Presents marketing
principles, concepts, strategies, and analytical tools used by profit and nonprofit
organizations to market ideas, products, and/or services to selected target groups.
Emphasis on how to develop, promote, distribute, and price the firm's offerings
in a dynamic economic, social, political, and global environment.
304 Starting and Managing the Enterprise (3:3:0). Course
may not be taken for credit by School of Management majors. Exposes students
to the behaviors required to successfully launch a new business, tools to identify
and evaluate opportunities, and the issues critical to a start up firm. These
issues include organizational structure, effective marketing strategy, operational
logistics, legal issues, financial projections, and financing options.
305 Managing International Business (3:3:0). Course may
not be taken for credit by School of Management majors. Provides a multidisciplinary
approach to the global economy from the viewpoint of managing international business.
The course introduces unique aspects of managing in the global economy including
the theory and political economy of international trade and foreign direct investment,
the global monetary system, and the strategy of international business.
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