The IMM Graduate School Joins the Global Conversation at the NIBS Annual Conference

In May 2026, the IMM Graduate School took its place among the world’s leading business schools at the Annual Conference of the Network of International Business Schools (NIBS), hosted by the International Business Academy (IBA) in Kolding, Denmark. For an Institution recently welcomed into this distinguished community, the conference was both an arrival and an invitation: a chance to learn from, and contribute to, a global network committed to excellence in business education.
Aligning with an Elite Global Network
NIBS brings together more than seventy schools of business from leading universities around the world. Its members collaborate to deliver outstanding, internationally orientated business education that prepares students to succeed in the global economy. The IMM Graduate School’s membership was recommended by fellow members UCLL University of Applied Sciences in Belgium and the IBA in Kolding and approved by the NIBS Board, a recognition of our standing as a globally engaged institution and a vote of confidence in what we offer the network in return.
This year’s theme, Business Education for a Changing World: Exploring Collaboration, Innovation and Global Impact, could hardly have been timelier. Across three days of sessions, delegates wrestled with the question of how business schools should respond to a world being reshaped by technology, shifting labour markets and the growing expectation that universities act as responsible global citizens.
Redefining the Core Values of Global Engagement

That question was brought into sharp focus by keynote speaker Dr Uwe Brandenburg. Dr Brandenburg is best known as the lead author of the landmark Erasmus Impact Study, which fundamentally redefined how we understand the link between student mobility and employability, demonstrating, on a scale rarely attempted, that an international experience shapes not only careers but character. He is also a provocative and influential thinker on the purpose of internationalisation itself. His seminal article, The End of Internationalization, co-authored with Hans de Wit, challenged the sector to move past commercial interests and return to the core values of genuine global engagement. His address was a fitting provocation for a network whose strength lies precisely in collaboration rather than competition.
Beyond the formal programme, the conference offered exactly the kind of opportunity that membership of NIBS is designed to create, and that is time to meet colleagues from across the world, to compare practice and to begin building partnerships. The IMM Graduate School’s Working Across Borders project, developed in collaboration with UCLL, is a strong example of how engagements such as the NIBS conference can be leveraged into meaningful, cross-institutional work, connecting our students and staff with peers in Europe and grounding international learning in real collaboration.
Elevating Student Research to International Benchmarks
Perhaps the clearest measure of the conference’s value lies in what follows it. As a direct result of the connections and conversations in Kolding, the IMM Graduate School’s Business Management 3 projects and the Honours Advanced Marketing Application Report will be submitted for an international project competition (The Global Undergraduate Awards). Our students’ work will now be measured against global student projects, an achievement in its own right and a powerful affirmation of the quality of the learning taking place at the IMM Graduate School.

The NIBS Annual Conference reminded us that internationalisation is not a destination but a practice: something built relationship by relationship, project by project. The IMM Graduate School returns from Kolding well connected and ready to play its full part in shaping business education for a changing world.