What undergraduate business degree options does Tulane offer, and how do they differ?

I’m looking at Tulane and I know I’m interested in business, but I’m not sure how their undergraduate options are structured.

I’m trying to understand what business majors or degree paths they offer for undergrads and what the main differences are between them so I can tell which one fits my interests best.
22 hours ago
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Sundial Team
22 hours ago
Tulane’s main undergraduate business path is the Bachelor of Science in Management, offered through the A. B. Freeman School of Business. Within that degree, students choose a major such as Finance, Marketing, Management, Business Analytics, or Legal Studies in Business, and they all share a common business core before specializing. Tulane also lets students combine business with other interests through double majors, minors, and some coordinated programs, so the biggest difference is usually your major within the management degree rather than completely separate business bachelor’s degrees.

The BSM is the standard undergraduate business degree at Tulane. It is designed for students who want a full business curriculum, including accounting, finance, marketing, management, and data-focused coursework. After the core classes, your major shapes the emphasis: Finance is more quantitative and investment or corporate-finance oriented, Marketing focuses on consumer behavior and brand strategy, Management is broader and often fits leadership or entrepreneurship interests, Business Analytics leans into data and decision-making, and Legal Studies in Business connects business with regulation, contracts, and policy.

Tulane also offers business minors and the option to pair a business major with another field across the university. That can be a good fit if, for example, you want Finance plus computer science, or Marketing plus psychology. If you want business as your primary academic home, the BSM is usually the clearest route. If you are more interested in adding business skills to another discipline, a non-business major with a business minor may make more sense.

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