This page contains details on key metrics regarding student, faculty, and organizational success. The Coles College of Business makes this material public as part of its accreditation with AACSB International, the world's leading accrediting body for university schools of business. Please review the contents to learn more about how the Coles College accomplishes its mission to inspire the next generation of business leaders.

Student Success Metrics Societal Impact

Student Success Metrics

Enrollment Data

Enrollment Data (Overall)

Spring 2024
Degree Type # of Students
Undergraduate  8,595
Master's 796
Ph.D. 36
Advanced Certificates 5
Total 9,432
Fall 2023
Degree Type # of Students
Undergraduate 8,075
Master's 765
Ph.D. 39
Total 8,879

Enrollment by Major

Spring 2024
Undergraduate Degree # of Students
Accounting 969
Cybersecurity 1,050
Economics 205
Entrepreneurship 416
Finance 1,235
Hospitality Management 105
Information Security and Assurance 191
Information Systems 603
International Business 27
Management 1,758
Marketing 1,691
Professional Sales 146
Undeclared Business 187
Total 8,583
Graduate Degree # of Students
Master of Accounting 30
Master of Business Administration 541
MS in Digital Financial Technologies 74
MS in Healthcare Mgt & Informatics 90
Master of Science in Information Systems 61
Ph.D. in Business Administration 39
Total 832
Fall 2023
Undergraduate Degree # of Students
Accounting 1004
Economics  203
Entrepreneurship 483
Finance 1,320
Information Systems 577
Information Security and Assurance 220
International Business 50
Management 1,811
Marketing 1,840
Professional Sales 160
Hospitality Management 116
Undeclared Business/MGT 285
Culinary Sustainability and Hospitality 0
Total
 8,096
Graduate Degree # of Students
Macc 30
MSIS 57
MBA (includes EMBA) 519
MS-Fintech 65
MSHMI 94
Ph.D. 39
Total
 804

Enrollment in Certificate Programs

Spring 2024
Spring 2024 Undergraduate Certificates # of Students
Accounting Certificate (Undergraduate) 3
Business Fundamentals Cert (Undergraduate) 1
Info Sec & Assurance (Undergraduate) 1
Cybersecurity Certificate (Undergraduate) 4
Entrepreneurship (Undergraduate) 1
Music & Ent. Business Cert (Undergraduate) 2
Total Undergraduate Certificates 12
Spring 2024 Graduate Certificates # of Students
Business Intelligence (Graduate) 1
Financial Technology Cert (Graduate) 3
Information Sec. & Assurance (Graduate) 1
Total Graduate Certificates 5
Total Certificates 17
Spring 2024 Total Enrollment (ALL)
9,432
Fall 2023
Fall 2023 Certificates # of Students
Accounting (undergraduate) 1
Business Fundamentals (undergraduate) 3
Information Security & Assurance (undergraduate) 1
Music and Entertainment Business 1
# of Students
Total Certificates 6
Fall 2023 Total Enrollment (ALL) 8,879

Enrollment by Gender

Spring 2024
Gender # of Students
Female 3,467
Male 5,128
Total (ALL) 8,595
Gender # of Students
Female 418
Male 419
Total (ALL) 837
Gender # of Students
Female 3,885
Male 5,547
Total (ALL) 9,432
Fall 2023
Gender # of Students %
Female 3,471 43.0%
Male 4,604 57.0%
Total (ALL) 8,075 100.0%
Gender # of Students %
Female 404 50.1%
Male 400 19.9.0%
Total (ALL) 804 100.0%
Gender # of Students %
Female 3,875 43.6%
Male 5004 56.4%
Total (ALL) 8,879 100.0%

Enrollment by IPEDS Race/Ethnicity

Spring 2024
Race # of Students
American Indian or Alaskan Native 16
Asian 493
Black, Non-Hispanic Origin 2,145
Hispanic 1,305
International 140
Multi Racial - Two or More 399
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander 13
Undeclared 225
White, Non-Hispanic Origin 3,859
Total (ALL) 8,595
Race # of Students
American Indian or Alaskan Native .
Asian 60
Black, Non-Hispanic Origin 268
Hispanic 96
International 39
Multi Racial - Two or More 19
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander .
Undeclared 14
White, Non-Hispanic Origin 342
Total (ALL) 837
Race # of Students
American Indian or Alaskan Native 16
Asian 553
Black, Non-Hispanic Origin 2,413
Hispanic 1,401
International 179
Multi Racial - Two or More 417
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander 13
Undeclared 239
White, Non-Hispanic Origin 4,201
Total (ALL) 9,432
Fall 2023
Race # of Students %
American Indian or Alaskan Native 18 0.2%
Asian 450 5.6%
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander 10 0.1%
Black, Non-Hispanic Origin 1,826 22.6%
Hispanic
1,219 15.1%
White, Non-Hispanic Origin 3,842 47.6%
Two or More 371 4.6%
Undeclared 207 2.6%
Non-Resident Alien 129 1.6%
Total (ALL) 8,075 100.0%
Race # of Students %
American Indian or Alaskan Native 0 0.0%
Asian 66 8.2%
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander 0 0.0%
Black, Non-Hispanic Origin 260 32.3%
Hispanic 82 10.2%
White, Non-Hispanic Origin 340 42.3%
Two or More 16 2.0%
Undeclared 14 1.7%
Non-Resident Alien 26 3.2%
Total (ALL) 804 100.0%
Race # of Students %
American Indian or Alaskan Native 18 0.2%
Asian 516 5.8%
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander 10 0.1%
Black, Non-Hispanic Origin 2,089 23.5%
Hispanic 1,301 14.7%
White, Non-Hispanic Origin 4,182 47.1%
Two or More 387 4.4%
Undeclared 221 2.5%
Non-Resident Alien 155 1.7%
Total (ALL) 8,879 100.0%

Graduate Enrollment by IPEDS Race/Ethnicity
(excluding advanced certificates)

Spring 2024

EMBA WebMBA MACC FinTech MSHMI MSIS MBA Ph.D. Total (ALL)
Asian 1 15 1 4 6 9 22 2 60
Black, Non-Hispanic Origin 20 42 2 29 51 27 82 15 268
Hispanic 8 16 2 12 5 5 46 1 95
International . 2 1 . 10 5 19 2 39
Multi Racial - Two or More . 4 1 3 . 2 7 . 17
Undeclared . 3 . . 1 2 5 3 14
White, Non-Hispanic Origin 24 84 23 26 17 11 141 13

339

Total (ALL) 53 166 30 74 90 61 322 36 832

Fall 2023

MBA EMBA MACC FinTech MSIS MSHMI Phd GEN Total (ALL)
American Indian or Alaskan Native 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Asian 34 1 1 5 10 12 3 66
Native Hawaiian 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Black 110 20 2 28 25 59 16 260
Hispanic 54 8 0 9 5 5 1 82
White 227 23 25 21 12 18 14 340
Two or more 12 0 1 1 2 0 0 16
Undeclared 7 0 1 0 3 0 3 14
Non-Resident Alien 22 1 0 1 0 0 2 26
Total (ALL) 446 53 30 65 57 94 39 804

Degrees Conferred

Degrees Conferred Overall and by Major - Academic Year 2023-2024

AY 2023-2024 Degrees Conferred (Overall)

Program # of Students
Undergraduate 1,134
Master's 369
Ph.D. 8
Certificate 7
Total (ALL) 1,518

AY 2023-2024 Degrees Conferred by Major

Undergraduate # of Students
Accounting 176
Economics  34
Entrepreneurship 25
Finance 189
Information Systems 83
Information Security and Assurance 45
International Business 38
Management 269
Marketing 237
Professional Sales 30
Hospitality Management 8
Undeclared Business/MGT N/A
Graduate # of Students
Macc 34
MSIS 41
MBA (includes EMBA) 243
MS-Fintech 21
MSHMI 30
Ph.D. 8
Certificates # of Students
Business Fundamentals 2
Information Security and Assurance 0
Information Systems 0
Music and Entertainment Business 5
Entrepreneurship 0

Experiential Learning

 Enrollment in Internship and Co-Ops Academic Year 2023-2024

AY 2023-2024 Enrollment in Internships & Co-Ops # of Students
Overall 360

AY 2023-2024 Students Enrolled in Experiential Learning by Major (Includes Interested Students)

Major # of Students
Accounting 103
Economics 3
Entrepreneurship  11
Finance 39
Hospitality Management 5
Information Systems 20
Information Security and Assurance 9
International Business 1
Management 84
Marketing 70
Professional Sales 4
Master of Business Administration 11

Career Outcomes

The following are the results of the 2022-2023 First-Destination Survey, where recent graduates are asked about their status after graduation, including whether they are working or pursuing a higher degree. There is a one-year lag in this data due to the survey being conducted months after students have graduated. The data published in 2024 covers students who graduated in AY 2022-2023.

Career Outcomes: Class of 2022-2023

The results below are from a first-destination survey of recent graduates.

Outcome %
Working After Graduation 76.44%
Still Looking 16.76%
Continuing Education 5.67%
Military 0.60%
Not Seeking 0.80%
Volunteering 0.00%
% Reporting Positive Outcome 83.51%
Average Salary of Working $83,281

Career Outcomes by Major

Accounting %
Working 66.88%
Continuing Education 18.75%
Average Salary $62,217
Economics %
Working 56%
Continuing Education 8.00%
Average Salary $48,333
Entrepreneurship %
Working 73.91%
Continuing Education 0.00%
Average Salary $58,733
Finance %
Working 81.71%
Continuing Education 3.66%
Average Salary $61,676
Hospitality Management %
Working 85.71%
Continuing Education 0.00%
Average Salary $55,000
Information Systems %
Working 77.33%
Continuing Education 4.00%
Average Salary $65,391
Information Security & Assurance %
Working 51.28%
Continuing Education 5.13%
Average Salary $49,200.00
International Business %
Working 42.86%
Continuing Education 17.86%
Average Salary $85,000
Management %
Working 73.59%
Continuing Education 5.19%
Average Salary $58,424
Marketing %
Working 73.27%
Continuing Education 3.69%
Average Salary $47,975
Professional Sales %
Working 92.86%
Continuing Education 3.57%
Average Salary $67,563

Societal Impact

CCB is strongly committed to societal impact. This commitment manifests in the curriculum, the portfolio of intellectual contributions, and the community engagement that its faculty invest their time in. The extensive work conducted by the societal impact task force is a true testament to this commitment. Using data from various sources (primary data collection using a faculty survey and secondary data using faculty annual review documents) the task force identified societal impact themes that aligned with college activities in teaching, research, and community engagement. AACSB’s outlook on societal impact and the United Nations’ sustainable development goals (SDGs) provided the guiding framework. They performed content analyses using DICTION software on the data to algorithmically discover the themes characterizing societal impact. Faculty listening sessions and discussions with unit heads were conducted as part of robustness checks. Decent Work and Economic Growth; and Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure emerged as the top two themes. Using word clouds, multiple sub-themes emerged for these two overarching themes. The theme identification approach notably assessed the congruence of UN SDGs, AACSB’s societal impact outlook, and a business school’s strategic plan. This endeavor helped CCB with valuable inputs for resource planning and allocation and guided the new strategic planning process as well as financial planning. CCB institutionalized a process whereby each faculty when they prepare for the annual performance review, tag each of their key activities including teaching, research, and community engagement, to the themes created. We collaborated with Watermark, the system we use for AACSB data reporting purposes, to update the data entry pages to capture these societal impact-driven developments. This also included an update to the fields in the reports this system generates.

Thought Leadership, Engagement, and Societal Impact

CCB continues to be recognized for impactful research through various rankings, top-quality publications, and recognition. Annually, CCB hosts the Homeland Security Research Symposium showcasing both industry and academic experts. Additionally, its Education Economics Center hosted a hybrid educators conference that was recognized in Forbes Magazine. Similarly, its Master of Accounting Students were recently recognized for providing feedback to an IASB Exposure Draft. The faculty and students received congratulations from multiple Financial Accounting Standards Board Members. CCB has initiated strategic partnerships with external academic institutions (i.e., Georgia Fintech Academy and AURO University in India) and professional associations (i.e., American Transactions Processing Coalition – Fintech industry). Its academic units and centers of excellence continue to actively engage the business community through speaker series, internship opportunities, and professional engagement opportunities for its students.

Below are some specific examples of the profound societal impact CCB engagements create.

1. Education Economics Center

The mission of the Education Economics Center is to provide nonpartisan research and technical assistance in the evaluation and design of education policy, including both tax and expenditure issues. 

The objective of the Center is to promote the development of sound education policy and public understanding of education issues with the goal of maximizing student learning, achievement, and other important outcomes.

2. National Hybrid Schools Project

The National Hybrid Schools Project is the national clearinghouse for research, data, practices, and networking for the burgeoning hybrid home school movement.

The purpose of the Hybrid Schools Project is to document and analyze the independent actors creating these new forms of K-12 schooling outside of the conventional education system. The project explores the many ways individuals and small groups are finding different ways to serve families’ and students’ diverse needs. Over time, the project will produce unique datasets and analyses for publication. The Hybrid Schools Project will also act as a convener to bring together hybrid and micro school founders, educators, policymakers, and researchers interested in these school models.

3. Georgia Charter School Commission

³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ economics professor , executive director of the University's Education Economics Center, serves on the Georgia Charter School Commission, where he directly sets policies affecting the 50,000 K-12 students in Georgia's charter school system.

The approves and supports Georgia’s 49 charter schools. It focuses on establishing and developing high-quality charter schools by reviewing their performance and promoting immersive educational models.

Scafidi’s tenure on the commission is for two years. He plays an instrumental role in setting policies and reviewing petitions and renewals for existing and upcoming charter schools. With more than 30 years of experience studying the economics of education, has produced 20+ publications and presentations on the subject. His research interests range from economic inequality in education and housing to teaching and public school education analyses.

4. Homeland Security Symposium

The symposium on homeland security hosted by the Coles College of Business showcases quality research by both industry and academic experts on homeland security issues. This event is meant to facilitate discussions among peers on important research advancements in the homeland security domain, the current state of affairs, and related future challenges and possible strategies to tackle them. It also gives the opportunity to build partnerships and future research collaborations as researchers attempt to strategically address these challenges.

Beyond showcasing notable research and practice-oriented work in homeland security, we publish a special working paper series issue featuring Coles faculty work submitted to this event. The symposium features student research posters conducted under the mentorship of our faculty in related areas.

5. ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ SMIF

CCB’s ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ Student Managed Investment Fund LLC (³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ SMIF) provides real-time, hands-on experience in portfolio management and investing to a select group of high achievers. Students are actively involved in managing the fund daily, effectively applying classroom theory to a real-world setting. The organization operates as a limited liability corporation, solely owned by ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥, a non-profit organization. SMIF provides students with the unique opportunity to further their global education at partner institutions abroad. Currently, Student Managed Investment Fund students enjoy a privileged track for selection to the ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥-Soka University Student Exchange Program. In addition to Soka University, the ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ Student Managed Investment Fund has participated in the exchange with the University of Laval, Quebec, Canada.

6. Modular Deployment (MAD) Lab

In partnership with Mendix, the MAD lab hosts Well-Being Hackathons each year. At the event, mobile apps are designed to bring awareness or help around mental health, well-being, or related issues. This event contributes to a critical need for creativity and solutions in this area thereby making a significant positive societal contribution.

As part of the engagement, Mendix provides free mobile app development training and certification ($1350+ value!) to participants. Their platform enables even beginners to make sophisticated mobile apps. In doing so, the event also helps students enhance their resumes as there is a job market for the industry certification earned through Mendix.

7. Beta Alpha Psi (School of Accountancy)

The Iota Tau Chapter of had an excellent year of events and activities. In November 2022, for the 5th consecutive year, SOA’s chapter was recognized as a Superior Chapter by Beta Alpha Psi International. Students completed a collective of 621.8 professional development hours and 573.5 community service hours in the 2022-2023 academic year, including a new service opportunity with Junior Achievement at the World Congress Center in Atlanta. ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥â€™s BAP chapter has nearly 150 members and hosted 20 companies during the 2022 year.

8. Robin and Doug Shore Entrepreneurship and Innovation Center 

The Robin and Doug Shore Entrepreneurship and Innovation Center (RDSEIC) has developed and executed significant student, alumni, business, and community impact programs in the discipline of entrepreneurship through numerous support functions. Highlights of major impacts and accomplishments are listed by categories of student/alumni engagement, new venture creation, corporate innovation, social entrepreneurship, and the entrepreneurship fellows' program. 

a) Student Engagement

The RDSEIC embarked on increasing student engagement significantly throughout the Leven School of Management, Entrepreneurship & Hospitality, Cole’s College of Business, and across all disciplines at ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥. The goal was to enhance and expand entrepreneurial mindsets and skillsets to business students and students outside business that provide skills in support of business opportunities. This goal was accomplished by having the RDSEIC serve as the focal point for integrated programming, training boot camps, internal and external networking events, guest speakers, mentoring platforms, business funding, and coaching to both business and non-business students and alumni. The RDSEIC developed three targeted programs: CEO organization, ENACTUS, and an entrepreneurship fellows’ program.

The Collegiate Entrepreneurship Organization (CEO) operates as the main student organization to create and promote entrepreneurship to students and alumni across campus. The CEO team has a student board, meets weekly, and runs student/alumni events with RDSEIC support throughout the year. The CEO organization has grown from a handful of students to over 400 students in the past several years with average attendance at events of over 50+ students.

b) New Venture Creation

The RDSEIC is committed to action-oriented support of cross-discipline students engaging in the actual development of new venture ideas, product creation, company formulations, and launching of viable and scalable ventures that impact the local, state, and regional economies. The RDSEIC created an innovation fund to provide pre-seed capital to students and alumni along with training, coaching, and mentoring to launch these companies that operate in local, regional, and global markets. Through the support of an external donor, The Mookerji Innovation Fund was established and supported for five years. The RDSEIC has funded 20 new start-up ventures created by students and alumni from various disciplines across the ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ community within the past 24 months. In addition, most companies have received multiple rounds of funding as they develop customer discovery experience, prototype development, and early adopter customers. Companies are currently highly scalable and fundable, and two companies are operating in global markets. Multiple companies have migrated to the ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ incubator/accelerator, and several companies have placed in the finals for regional and national competitions such as Tie Atlanta and TCU’s business competition.

c) Corporation Innovation

Corporation Innovation and Entrepreneurship is an emerging area of focus for the RDSEIC. The center works with established companies and industry leaders interested in developing innovation-focused projects and teams to solve real-world problems needed within their companies. In addition, they seek to leverage entrepreneurial thinking in the development of next-generation solutions and leverage students, faculty, and domain experts as part of the new product or service offerings that will benefit their company or industry in the future. The RDSEIC has engaged with companies such as Well Star Health System, Radical Logistics, and Green Energy Accelerator.

d) Social Entrepreneurship

The RDSEIC engages in promoting and supporting social entrepreneurship with ENACTUS teams that solve problems in society through developing sustainable organizations, supporting the community, and competing on a regional and national level. The ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ team competes first at a regional level and often at the national level. The team competed at ENACTUS competition events until the Covid 19 suspension by ENACTUS. In addition, the RDSEIC is currently engaged with a social organization named the Power of Piece Project (POPP) that develops impactful programs to reduce violence in prisons and high schools around the world. The RDSEIC provides leadership consulting and experts in developing a scalable technology platform to automate and accelerate program access.

e) Entrepreneurship Fellows’ Program (EFP)

The Entrepreneurship Fellows Program is an innovative program developed to promote and train faculty across disciplines at ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥. These fellows were nominated by deans across campus colleges to participate in an extensive training program to integrate entrepreneurial mindsets and skill sets focused on action–oriented teaching concepts within their specific course disciplines. Further, approved courses were developed and certificate programs in entrepreneurship were approved through the academic process. The EFP held two cohorts totaling sixteen fellows trained across ³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ academic colleges. The RDSEIC developed and executed the program in coordination with the academic leadership of the Leven School of Management, Entrepreneurship, and Hospitality.

MSHMI Footprint, Diversity, and Student Success

MSHMI Footprint, Diversity, and Student Success

Master of Science in Healthcare Management and Informatics is experiencing exceptional growth, with many organizations unable to find qualified candidates who understand the healthcare industry, have expertise in informatics, and are capable leaders. MSHMI meets this need by empowering graduates with a holistic understanding of healthcare practices; technology, data analytics, and informatics skills; and a mastery of management and conflict-resolution techniques. The following outlines the benefits that MSHMI brings to its students, to the program, and to the digital health ecosystem. The MSHMI program provides:

  • A comprehensive curriculum spread across four colleges - Coles College of Business, with roots spread across the College of Science and Math, College of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Wellstar College of Health - and five departments.
  • Built-in opportunities for professional engagement, networking, executive mentoring, and practical real-world experience. These elements combine to provide our graduates with the skills/tools to reach their full potential. Our faculty, industry partners, and executive board members are committed to the success of students.
  • Access to all textbooks, Harvard Business Review cases, software, AHIMA VLAB (virtual lab with access to coding software, Electronic Health Records, and Analytical Tools)
  • Professional coaching and mentoring via career coach/consultant that provides services for resume review, interview prep., LinkedIn, and job search.
  • Multiple opportunities for professional networking, industry engagement, and participating in exclusive Executive Speaker series with digital health leaders via access to participation in national and local platforms – AMIA, ConV2X, TAG Digital Health, Health IT Leadership Summit, Health Connect South.
  • Opportunities for its students and faculty to participate in collaborative research, travel, conference presentations, and journal publications via funded graduate research assistantships and fellowships.
  • Support for obtaining professional certificates for career advancements - a large majority of MSHMI students graduate with additional certificates and have research publications/presentations under their belt before completing their degree.
  • Opportunities for students to get the highly selective AMIA health informatics certificate.
  • Opportunities for applied industry engagement projects, which are a cornerstone of MSHMI. Our students work in teams to apply their analytical/problem-solving skills to relevant industry projects which leads to immersive experiential learning complementing classroom learning.
  • Tutor and coaching support for classes and concepts that require hand-holding and extra support for student success.
  • A dedicated team of staff and administration supporting advising, and operational/strategic questions.
  • Student awards, recognitions, and industry events to celebrate students’ success, provide recognition and motivation, and industry engagement.
  • An inclusive environment. MSHMI, despite its STEM focus, has been able to maintain gender parity, racial and ethnic diversity, and inclusivity in the current students and alumni base.
  • Classes on Friday evenings in a combination of hybrid and virtual modalities to ensure access and wider reach of the program to a diverse student body.

The experiential learning, immersive projects that HMI students and faculty engage in have deep societal impact, build on skills associated with analytics and decision-making, and develop an understanding of healthcare policy and regulations and a holistic view of the healthcare ecosystem. Here are the top three of the most recent projects that groups of faculty and students have tackled with industry partners are outlined below. These were voted in the top three by health-tech leaders in Spring 2023 for deep societal impact, rigor, relevance, impact, and reach:

  • Suicide Ideation - in partnership with CDC, students Anas and Jasmine, Faculty - Sweta and Austin
  • Improving Patient Outcomes - Discharge with Virtual Nurse Platform. In partnership with Wellstar, Students - Bonnie, Riley, Jovelle, Faculty - Sweta, Maria, Valentina
  • Medication Adherence - Industry partner DFHA, students - Joli, Richard, Elie, Farah, Faculty - Sweta