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Student entrepreneurs pitching to business leaders in Elm House TEF 2023 Silver logo

Business Management with Entrepreneurship BSc(Hons)

  • Intro
  • Entry
    criteria
  • Course
    content
  • Careers
  • Fees
    and costs
  • Location and
    student life
  • Stay in
    touch
  • Related
    courses

Intro

Business and management at Brighton is taught by our AACSB-accredited School of Business and Law. AACSB accreditation is achieved by fewer than 6% of business schools worldwide.

Our Business Management with Entrepreneurship degree opens the door to a world of opportunities. You'll develop an entrepreneurial mindset, learn how to identify gaps in the market and create innovative solutions.

This degree is all about hands-on learning, so you'll be ready to tackle real-world business challenges as soon as you graduate. Plus, we've got some great connections with top employers and industry specialists, so you'll have plenty of opportunities to network and stay up-to-date with the latest industry trends.

You’ll learn how businesses operate, covering everything from managing finances, to creating effective marketing strategies and building a strong team.

You also have the opportunity to gain valuable industry experience and earn money with an optional placement year.

Key facts

Location Brighton: Moulsecoomb

UCAS code N2N1

Full-time 3 years
With placement year 4 years

What are my next steps?

Apply now with UCAS for 2025

Discover what Brighton has to offer in our digital prospectus.

Sign up for 2026 info

Top 10% for graduate earnings in business and management, among universities with comparable entry levels.

(Average earnings three years after graduating, Longitudinal Education Outcomes 2022)

Entry criteria

Entry requirements

A-levels or BTEC
Entry requirements are in the range of A-level BBB–BCC (120–104 UCAS Tariff points), or BTEC Extended Diploma DMM–MMM. Our conditional offers typically fall within this range.

International Baccalaureate
26 points, with three subjects at Higher level.

Access to HE Diploma
Pass with 60 credits overall. At least 45 credits at level 3, with 24 credits at merit.

T-level
Merit in the Management and Administration or Digital Business Services T-levels. No other T-levels are accepted.

Foundation degree/HND
May enable you to start the course in year 2. Relevant subjects required.

Studied before or got relevant experience?
A qualification, HE credits or relevant experience may count towards your course at Brighton and could mean that you do not have to take some elements of the course or can start in year 2 or 3. 

English language requirements
IELTS 6.0 overall with a minimum of 5.5 in each element. Find out more about the other English qualifications that we accept.

Don’t meet these entry requirements?
Our Business Management BSc(Hons) with integrated foundation year provides an extra year of study at foundation level if you do not have the academic qualifications or experience needed for entry to this course.

Successful completion of the foundation year enables you to progress onto year 1 of this degree.

International requirements and visas

International requirements by country
Country name
Albania
Algeria
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Belarus
Belgium
Bermuda
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Botswana
Brazil
Bulgaria
Burma (Myanmar)
Cameroon
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Ecuador
Egypt
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Guyana
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kosovo
Kuwait
Latvia
Lebanon
Liechtenstein
Libya
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Macedonia
Malaysia
Malawi
Malta
Mexico
Moldova
Montenegro
Morocco
Namibia
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nigeria
Norway
Oman
Pakistan
Palestinian National Authority
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Qatar
Romania
Russian Federation
Saudi Arabia
Serbia
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
South Korea
Spain
Sri Lanka
Syria
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Tanzania
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United States
Uzbekistan
Venezuela
Vietnam
Yemen
Zambia
Zimbabwe

We can help you meet our English language or academic entry requirements.

View our English language courses

For pre-sessional English preparation courses.

Visit our International College

For degree preparation courses.

Visas and immigration advice

Applying for a student visa

Check out our step-by-step guidance.

Contextual admissions

At Brighton, we understand that not everyone has the same opportunities, and some may face extra challenges to meet grade requirements. If you meet our contextual admissions criteria, we’ll make you an offer of at least two grades or 16 UCAS tariff points lower than the standard for your course. Find out about contextual admissions at Brighton.

With a contextual offer, you may also qualify for extra financial support through our Brighton Boost cost of living package. Find out about the Brighton Boost.

Graphic with the text 'Potential + possibility'

Course content

Why choose this course?

  • The University of Brighton is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) – an accreditation achieved by fewer than 6% of business schools globally.
  • Practical, hands-on learning in all modules
  • Close links with leading employers and industry specialists
  • Choose to spend a year on a paid work placement putting your new skills into practice
  • Gain industry insight via experienced academics and guest lectures.
  • A course that develops your academic, professional and personal skills.
  • Tailor your degree to your interests through your choice of option modules.
Brighton Law School undergrad studying in Elm House

Year 1

All of our Business Management degrees share the same first year modules, giving you a broad understanding of business principles and practice, and preparing for more specialist studies later on in your course.

You'll explore aspects of economics, marketing, HR, law, organisational behaviour and finance.

Modules

  • Marketing Principles

    This module introduces the role and function of marketing within organisational frameworks. You'll develop an understanding of basic qualitative and quantitative tools available for analysing and interpreting the marketing environment.

  • Managing Systems and Operations

    This module introduces you to digital technologies and operations management in business. You'll explore contemporary issues, innovation and future trends in IS and operations management, examining how managers use digital technologies to measure and improve operations and systems performance. You'll also develop an understanding of processes and how to improve them in both service-oriented and manufacturing-sector organisations. 

  • Financial Knowledge and Skills for Business

    This module provides you with an introduction to fundamental concepts in the fields of financial accounting, management accounting, and finance. You will develop a basic understanding of an organisation’s financial position and performance through the application of appropriate analytical tools and procedures.

  • Business Economics

    In this module you will develop your understanding of key economic concepts by applying them to contemporary issues within the world of business and through the application of quantitative techniques. You will also gain an understanding of how political, economic and environmental factors influence the world of business.

  • Organisational Behaviour and Human Resource Management

    This module will introduce you to a range of concepts, principles and theories that have been adopted within the study of organisational behaviour and human resource management.

    This module will provide you with a grounding for understanding how people are managed and organised in the workplace.

  • Enterprise Project and Skills

    In this module you will create a business plan, a project plan and a marketing plan that include a digital presence. You'll integrate and apply skills and learning from other year 1 modules using project management skills to deliver a practical and applied business project, to demonstrate your understanding of market dynamics, financial structures and HRM employment strategies.

Postgraduate student smiling

Year 2

In your second year you'll continue to build your business skills and start to explore aspects of being your own boss.

Modules

  • International Business Analysis

    This is your opportunity to apply both macro and microeconomic analysis to a related set of case studies. You'll start by analysing an industry at a global level, move onto looking at macroeconomic data for a country that is key to that industry, and then apply microeconomic analysis to a company within that industry.

  • Managing Digital Transformation

    On this module you'll explore the impact of digital transformation in the context of business management. You'll cover the evolution of information systems, the role of AI in business, and different digital business models. Ethical and social considerations, including data privacy and the digital divide, are examined, alongside the relationship between technology and inequality. Finally, you'll look at future trends in digital business, aligning with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. 

  • Working and Learning in Teams

    The focus of this module is developing a high-performing team with your fellow students. You'll learn by doing through the practical application of tools and frameworks that support the challenges of team working. The exact content will be based on your team's needs at the time, decided in collaboration with the course team but could include team roles and learning environments, reflecting on team learning, leadership theories, giving and receiving constructive feedback and managing projects in a team.

  • Developing Business Start-ups

    In this module you'll use what you've learned so far to manage your own team venture. The emphasis is on learning by doing, allowing you to develop entrepreneurial skills and competencies. The exact content will be based on your team and your venture's needs at the time, decided in collaboration with the course team but could include recruitment, leadership and management, marketing, building a brand, social and sustainable entrepreneurship, building networks, financing a small venture or conflict management.

  • Cross-cultural Research

    Cross-cultural Research is preparation for your final year project, year abroad or placement year. You'll further develop your research skills and cross-cultural awareness by exploring the role and nature of research in academic and professional environments.

  • Managing Innovation in Start-ups

    This module focuses on the use of innovation in the twenty-first century. You'll explore structured innovation processes, the lean start-up model as well as uses of frugal innovation. You'll gain the knowledge and skills needed to manage and explore different types of innovation processes, assess the resource implications and relate innovation to organisational agility. 

Students on steps by Elm House cafe

Placement year 

The placement year is optional. In year 2, you'll decide whether to undertake a year of paid work experience or to continue to the final year.

During your placement year you will complete a business project. This project is an assessed part of your degree and, depending on the topic you choose, could also provide a valuable piece of insight for your placement employer.

Previous placement companies include American Express, BMW, Bosch, Channel 4, Disney, Electronic Arts, Hewlett Packard, Home Office, IBM, Ipsos Mori, ITV, lastminute.com, Microsoft and Rolls-Royce Motor Cars.

Our dedicated Placements and Employability team will support you throughout, helping you to get a placement.

Placement student chatting to co-worker in a restaurant

Final year

In your final year you'll study four core modules that are tailored specifically for entrepreneurship to build on your learning. You'll also choose from a number of option modules enabling you to explore subjects that really interest you.

Modules

Core modules

  • Managing, Teams and Developing People

    This module builds upon themes covered in year 1. Using a hands-on approach, you'll reinforce and build upon your understanding of theories and models, and apply these concepts by working in team activities involving management of yourself and others. You'll explore common issues that are faced when working in groups and teams equipping you with the skills to become an effective team worker and leader.

  • Developing High-performing Teams

    This module builds on knowledge developed in year 2. You'll work together developing into a high-performing team where different skills and capabilities within the team are optimised, tasks are structured and communication and cooperation is high. Students will determine the exact content of the module, in collaboration with the course team, based on your practical needs. This could include diversity and difference in teams, Tuckman's model of nurturing a team to high performance, Friend Leadership, or performance management.

  • Leading and Growing Responsible Business

    This module focuses on the knowledge and tools needed to manage the growth stage of a small venture. The emphasis is on learning by doing, and the exact content of the module will be determined by the students' practical needs. Decided in collaboration with the course team, the content could include diversification, internationalisation, long-term planning and strategy, social and sustainable entrepreneurship, financing a small venture or information and communication management.

  • Agility and Open Innovation

    This module focuses on open innovation and agility, which are crucial skills for today's businesses. You'll understand how open innovation and partnerships can create new opportunities. You will also explore and contribute value-adding strategic differentiation and gain the skills needed to manage it effectively, alongside examining innovation processes and how to assess the resources needed for them. 

Options*

  • Game Theory in Economics, Finance and Business

    This module introduces game theory, one of the most exciting, stimulating and promising subjects in modern microeconomics, which is now also broadly applied in philosophy, sociology, and political science among other fields. You'll apply game theory to financial and business analysis topics to deepen and widen your knowledge of economics, finance and business as an ongoing strategic game.

  • International Finance

    This module takes the areas of finance and financial management that you have studied before in a domestic setting, and looks at how the domestic theory alters in an international setting because of factors such as exchange rates and country risk. You'll also be introduced to the international financial management complexities associated with the foreign direct investment decisions of multinational companies.

  • Behavioural Economics

    An introduction to the theory & practice of behavioural economics, a subfield of economics that incorporates insights from psychology & other social sciences into economics. Explores the contrast between the assumptions of neo-classical economic models & evidence that people often behave in ways that are different from such assumptions. Develops an awareness of the processes, issues & vocabulary associated with behavioural economics & encourages reflection on how it relates to other disciplines.

     

    Behavioural economics is a subfield of economics incorporating insights from psychology and other social sciences. This module introduces the theory and practice of behavioural economics. You'll explore the contrast between the neo-classical economic models and evidence that people often behave in ways that do not fit with the models. You'll develop an awareness of the behavioural economics processes, issues and vocabulary, and reflect on how it relates to other disciplines.

  • Consumer Psychology

    On this module you'll focus on the main concepts used in understanding consumer psychology and consumer behaviour in the marketplace. You'll consider how these are used in marketing to both understand consumers and create strategies to ethically influence their behaviour.

  • Marketing Across Cultures

    This module examines two key challenges facing businesses today – how to identify and develop international marketing and business opportunities, and understanding the importance of cultural differences across the globe to adapt marketing strategies and tactics for business success. You'll learn about new cultures in the developed and emerging world and how to develop an international marketing plan, putting your entrepreneurial, research, creative and report writing skills in to practice.

  • Happiness: Work and Society

    This module is an opportunity to analyse the concept of happiness in work and society. You'll consider happiness at an individual, organisational and socio-economic level, exploring topics such as positive psychology, happiness and wellbeing, nurturing happiness in the organisation, the issues and challenges of measuring happiness and wellbeing, and what makes a nation happy. 

  • Retail Marketing and Distribution

    The module introduces retail marketing and distribution through practical workshops with emphasis on real retailer situations. You'll study topics from historical development, current industry structure, trends and projected developments. You will balance theory and practice to produce a viable strategic report about the marketplace.

  • Marketing Communications

    The module is an overview of the key marketing communications tools including branding, advertising, sales promotion and public relations. You'll consider the key theories of marketing communications, exploring how advertising has its effect on consumers. You'll also explore models of consumer psychology and behaviour  to further understand the role of marketing communications in society.

  • Sustainable Supply Chain Management (SSCM)

    Supply chain management (SCM) is the handling of the entire production flow of a good or service — from raw materials to delivering the final product to the consumer. On this module you'll develop a strategic understanding of SCM in a wider business context, and explore how SCM objectives have expanded to include societal and environmental implications because of, for example, depleted natural resources. You'll learn how sustainability can be a competitive advantage and explore the role of supply chains in a circular economy.

  • Researching Contemporary Issues in Finance

    Choose a specific current issue in finance to study in depth. You'll review and analyse a wide range of published data with the aim of summarising good practice and recommending a possible solution to the problem in your final report. 

  • Researching Contemporary Issues in Economics

    In this module you will apply economic principles and methods to a contemporary issue that has implications for countries, businesses or individuals in the present and in the future. You'll identify a specific topic to research, and, using the principles and methods that you've learned on your course, formulate the research questions and hypotheses, devise a methodology and identify relevant data sources.

  • Dissertation – Contemporary Issues in Tourism or Events

    On this module you'll design and develop an individual research project focusing on the tourism or events industry. You'll choose a significant issue (or issues) that interests you to investigate in depth and critically explore concepts, theories and empirical research methodology. You may also collect primary research data based on appropriate quantitative or qualitative research methodologies.

  • Researching Contemporary Issues for the Intelligent Enterprise

    Intelligent Enterprise is a management approach that applies technology and new service models to the challenge of improving business performance. On this module you will conduct in-depth research into issues and emerging technologies that promote the concept of an intelligent enterprise. You'll choose a topic to research, either from a wide range or identify a new one in this dynamic field.

  • Researching Contemporary Issues in Human Resource Management and Organisational Behaviour

    This module is an opportunity to research a contemporary human resource management or organisation behaviour issue of your choice. Through your research, you'll develop and deepen your knowledge and understanding of these topics and present your findings in a final report.

  • Researching Contemporary Issues in Supply Chain Management

    This module is an opportunity to choose and research a contemporary supply chain, supply chain management or inventory management topic that really interests you. Current trends and issues include outsourcing, use of technologies (data analysis, IoT, cloud computing), supply chain visibility among organisations and sustainable supply chains. In producing your report, you'll further develop your analysis and evaluation skills, and make recommendations for improvements  in business decision making.

     

  • Researching Contemporary Issues in Marketing

    The module is an opportunity to study a contemporary marketing issue of your choosing. You'll undertake a piece of in-depth research, further developing your analytical and critical skills and using the skills and knowledge gained on your degree to produce a report. The module is based on independent study supported by a tutor.

*Option modules are indicative and may change, depending on timetabling and staff availability.

Student laughing in a seminar

Course leader

Dr Irina Popova

Irina is the course leader on our Business Management with Entrepreneurship BSc(Hons). 

She specialises in teaching entrepreneurship, business research methods, academic and professional skills across several of our courses. 

Irina's PhD research focused on start-up incubation and she previously worked for the social venture incubation programme, currently known as Cambridge Social Ventures. The programme was funded by the Big Lottery Fund. 

Irina also carried out postdoctoral research on the digitalisation of management in the UK and Sweden. The study involved three public sector organisations in Cambridgeshire and their ICT-enabled transformation projects, as well as a local authority and a multinational company in Sweden. She worked with senior management in the public sector to deliver the programme. She is an NVivo trained expert and an experienced organisational ethnographer. 

Find out more about your course leader.

Dr Irina Popova

Careers

 

AACSB accreditation

The University of Brighton is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB).  

AACSB accredited schools lead business and management education, industry engagement and impactful research and enable our students to collaborate with academics in other world-leading universities.

Currently fewer than 6% of business schools globally are AACSB accredited. By gaining AACSB accreditation, the university has achieved its ambition to join a group of institutions considered to be the best business schools in the world.

AACSB accredited logo

Preparing for your career

Alongside the skills that you'll develop throughout the course, we also help you prepare for your career through:

  • opportunities to speak with and meet local entrepreneurs
  • networking events in conjunction with innovation accelerator PLUS X and support from beepurple
  • School of Business and Law placement and recruitment events held twice a year involving well-known, national companies as well as smaller, local businesses
  • regular employability weeks with activities to boost your employability
  • a dedicated Placements and Employability team who support you in developing your employability and securing a work placement
  • you will also have access to JobTeaser, an online placements system presenting placement options in the UK and across Europe.
Student walking out of the business and law placements office

Industry/professional links 

Employers are involved throughout the degree programme to ensure we’re helping you to develop the skills they’re looking for.

Businesses work with us by providing guest lectures, placement opportunities and live client briefs – where you present solutions to real-life companies.

We also work with organisations to develop the content of our courses.

Students presenting to a panel in Elm House atrium

Graduate destinations 

Recent graduates on our other Business Management degrees have joined companies in roles such as:

  • Deloitte, Analyst
  • Nissan Motor Corporation, Accessories Marketing Coordinator
  • Tesco, Graduate Merchandiser
  • Photobox, Social Media Manager
  • Unilever, Marketing Assistant
  • Utmost Healthcare, Business Development
  • Walt Disney Company, Partnerships Executive
Student at IBM

Further study  

This degree also opens up a range of postgraduate study options. At Brighton, for example,  you could progress on to

  • ACCA Accounting MSc
  • Economics and Finance MSc
  • Management MSc
  • Marketing MSc.
Elm House group work

Supporting your employability 

Outside of your course, our Careers Service is here to support you as you discover (and rediscover) your strengths and what matters to you. We are here for you throughout your university journey as you work towards a fulfilling and rewarding career.

Connect with our careers team

  • Find part-time work that you can combine with your studies.
  • Find, or be, a mentor or get involved with our peer-to-peer support scheme.
  • Develop your business ideas through our entrepreneurial support network.
  • Get professional advice and support with career planning, CV writing and interview top tips.
  • Meet potential employers at our careers fairs.
  • Find rewarding volunteering opportunities to help you discover more about what makes you tick and build your CV.

Whatever your career needs, we are here to help. And that’s not just while you are a student – our support carries on after you’ve graduated.

Find out more about our Careers Service...

Coloured background with the words Be More, Connected, Skilled, Employable

Fees and costs

Course fees

UK (full-time) 9,535 GBP

International (full-time) 17,250 GBP

If you choose to take the professional placement (sandwich) year offered on this course, you will pay a reduced fee during this year. Our fee for the professional placement year is £1,500 for UK students and £1,850 for international students. This fee may be subject to small increases in line with inflation.

The fees listed here are for the first year of full-time study if you start your course in the academic year 2025–26.

You will pay fees for each year of your course. Some fees may increase each year.

UK undergraduate and some postgraduate fees are regulated by the UK government and increases will not be more than the maximum amount allowed. Course fees that are not regulated may increase each year by up to 5% or RPI (whichever is higher).

If you are studying part-time your fee will usually be calculated based on the number of modules that you take.

Find out more

  • Brighton Boost – cost of living help for our new undergrad students. Find out about how we can help with your study, accommodation or travel costs and more...
  • Fees, bursaries, scholarships and government funding info for UK and international undergraduate students
  • Student finance and budgeting while studying
  • Read our student contract and tuition fee policy (pdf) for more on University of Brighton tuition fees.

Location and student life

Campus where this course is taught

Moulsecoomb campus

Two miles north of Brighton seafront, Moulsecoomb is our largest campus and student village. Moulsecoomb has been transformed by a recent development of our estate. On campus you'll find new Students' Union, events venue, and sports and fitness facilities, alongside the library and student centre.

Over 900 students live here in our halls, Moulsecoomb Place and the new Mithras halls – Brunswick, Goldstone, Hanover, Preston and Regency.

Moulsecoomb has easy access to buses and trains and to all the exciting things happening in our home city.

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Accommodation

We guarantee an offer of a place in halls of residence to all eligible students. So if you applied for halls by the deadline you are guaranteed a room in our halls of residence.

Brighton: Moulsecoomb

Halls of residence
We have self-catered halls on all our campuses, within minutes of your classes, and other options that are very nearby.

You can apply for any of our halls, but the options closest to your study location are:

  • Mithras Halls are stylish new high-rises in the heart of the student village at our revitalised Moulsecoomb campus with ensuite rooms for more than 800 students.
  • Varley Park is a popular dedicated halls site, offering a mix of rooms and bathroom options at different prices. It is around two miles from Moulsecoomb campus and four miles from the city centre, and is easy to get to by bus.

Want to live independently?
We can help – find out more about private renting.

Relaxing in halls

Modern accommodation at Moulsecoomb

Mithras halls room with a view

Relaxing in halls near the campus

Student Union social space

Student Union social space at Moulsecoomb

Local area

One of Time Out's 50 best cities in the world

“Brighton has… all the important parts of a sprawling cosmopolitan metropolis (connections to London in under an hour, an array of properly excellent restaurants, energetic late-night spots) … with the easy-breezy beachy attitude to life that makes you feel welcome in an instant.”
Time Out’s 50 Best Cities in the World, 2025

About Brighton

The city of Brighton & Hove is a forward-thinking place which leads the way in the arts, technology, sustainability and creativity. You'll find living here plays a key role in your learning experience.

Brighton is a leading centre for creative media technology, recently named the startup capital of the UK.

The city is home to a national 5G testbed and over 1,000 tech businesses. The digital sector is worth over £1bn a year to the local economy – as much as tourism.

All of our full-time undergraduate courses involve work-based learning - this could be through placements, live briefs and guest lectures. Many of these opportunities are provided by local businesses and organisations.

It's only 50 minutes by train from Brighton to central London and there are daily direct trains to Bristol, Bedford, Cambridge, Gatwick Airport, Portsmouth and Southampton.

Map showing distance to London from Brighton
Brighton Beach sunset

Maps

Moulsecoomb campus map

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Support and wellbeing

Your course team

Your personal academic tutor, course leader and other tutors are all there to help you with your personal and academic progress. You'll also have a student support and guidance tutor (SSGT) who can help with everything from homesickness, managing stress or accommodation issues.

Your academic skills

Our Brighton Student Skills Hub gives you extra support and resources to develop the skills you'll need for university study, whatever your level of experience so far.

Your mental health and wellbeing

As well as being supported to succeed, we want you to feel good too. You'll be part of a community that builds you up, with lots of ways to connect with one another, as well having access to dedicated experts if you need them. Find out more about how we support your wellbeing.

Sport at Brighton

Sport Brighton

Sport Brighton brings together our sport and recreation services. As a Brighton student you'll have use of sport and fitness facilities across all our campuses and there are opportunities to play for fun, fitness or take part in serious competition. 

Find out more about Sport Brighton.

Sports scholarships

Our sports scholarship scheme is designed to help students develop their full sporting potential to train and compete at the highest level. We offer scholarships for elite athletes, elite disabled athletes and talented sports performers.

Find out more about sport scholarships.

Students playing frisbee

Stay in touch

If you have a question about this course, our enquiries team will be happy to help.

01273 644644

Find out more about what students do at the School of Business and Law by subscribing to our blog.

Statistics

Find out more about how the academic year and degree courses are organised and about learning and assessment activities you might get to grips with at Brighton. More specific information about this course is detailed in the programme specification (linked below). You can find out also about the support we offer to help you adjust to university life.

Course and module descriptions on this page were accurate when first published and are the basis of the course. Detailed information on any changes we make to modules and learning and assessment activities will be sent to all students by email before enrolment so that you have all the information before you come to Brighton.

Discover Uni

Discover Uni enables you to compare information when choosing a UK university course. All UK universities publish Discover Uni data on their website.

Course specification

Course specifications are the approved description of each course. They contain a breakdown of the content and structure of the course, learning outcomes and assessment. Course specs are updated following course changes.

Course specification

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  • Business Management with Human Resource Management BSc(Hons)

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  • Business Analytics BSc(Hons)

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  • Business Management with Marketing BSc(Hons)

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  • Business Management with Economics BSc(Hons)

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  • Accounting and Finance BSc(Hons)

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  • Economics BSc(Hons)

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  • Finance and Investment BSc(Hons)

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  • Marketing Management BSc(Hons)

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  • Business Management BSc(Hons) with integrated foundation year

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  • Accounting, Finance and Economics BSc(Hons) with foundation year

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  • Law LLB(Hons) with integrated foundation year

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  • Fashion Design with Business Studies BA(Hons)

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  • Law with Business LLB(Hons)

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  • Sport Management BSc(Hons)

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