IMI Advances Its Flagship PGDM Through Seven Specialised Career Tracks, Unified Under a Single "One IMI" Curriculum

NEW DELHI, May 28, 2026: IMI announced a new academic direction for its flagship Post Graduate Diploma in Management (PGDM) programme, introducing a practice-led curriculum architecture designed around evolving industry requirements and changing global hiring patterns. As India’s first corporate-sponsored business school, the institution is leveraging its four-decade legacy to implement the overhaul across its Delhi, Bhubaneswar, and Kolkata campuses for the incoming AY 2026–28 batch beginning July 2026.
The transition also marks the introduction of IMI’s new “One IMI” theme, bringing all three campuses under a unified curriculum architecture with aligned pedagogy, assessments, learning outcomes, and programme delivery standards.
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The newly structured curriculum has been developed in collaboration with a global prominent management consulting firm, industry leaders, academic experts, and global practitioners. Based on extensive analysis of evolving recruitment trends and workplace expectations, the programme shifts focus from traditional credential-driven learning toward demonstrable functional capability. Artificial Intelligence (AI) fluency and Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) literacy have been embedded across disciplines, to keep up with the growing integration of technology and sustainability into business decision-making. The full transition will apply to the incoming July batch, while selected specialised electives will also be introduced for the current AY 2025–27 cohort. The curriculum introduces innovations like block weeks, core course labs, communication clinics to ensure Day One readiness in the graduates for the industry.
“Management education cannot afford to remain a lagging indicator of industry change; its responsibility is to anticipate and shape it,” said Dr. Suresh Ramanathan, CEO, IMI. “At IMI, we are intentionally moving beyond traditional lecture-led models toward a deeply experiential academic architecture. By anchoring the programme around career-aligned pathways and industry-led application, we aim to ensure graduates enter organisations equipped not just with conceptual understanding, but with the judgement, adaptability, and execution capability required to contribute from day one." Dr. Ramanathan exhorted students to remain curious and keep asking questions, adding that in a day and age when AI is used to generate answers, success depends not merely on using AI, but prompting it with better and deeper questions. 

A key feature of the academic overhaul is the reorganisation of functional areas into seven specialised interdisciplinary Career Tracks aligned to distinct corporate pathways: 
  • Consulting and Strategy
  • Market Expansion and Growth
  • Finance and Capital Markets
  • Product Management
  • People and Organisation
  • Analytics
  • Operations and Supply Chain
While foundational management principles remain central to the programme, traditional end-term examinations are increasingly being replaced with continuous assessments, simulations, communication clinics, block weeks, and mandatory industry-sourced labs beginning from the very first term.
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These labs replace sanitised classroom case studies with live corporate challenges defined by incomplete data, operational ambiguity, and real-time decision-making pressure. Students will work directly on industry-linked business problems that mirror actual workplace complexity rather than theoretical simulations. This exposure culminates in a comprehensive three-term capstone project where students move from diagnosing live business problems to building and stress-testing new ventures and strategic solutions. The objective is to develop management judgement capable of responding to unpredictable market shifts and evolving business realities.
Commenting on how AI is reshaping workforce expectations, IMI alumna Dr. Arshiya Singh, Director – Global Compensation, Boston Consulting Group, said, "I don't think AI will take your job. However, the next person who uses it better than you will. So basically, despite technology and AI, there will actually be more roles than before. It's just that those roles might be different, and the expectations for existing roles might change too." 
The transition from a classroom-led approach to an application-driven model ensures that IMI graduates leave with practical exposure to the technologies, frameworks, and decision-making environments now shaping modern business. The institution’s new academic direction reflects a broader shift in management education toward long-term career readiness, industry relevance, and measurable workplace capability.
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