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Careers In Technology After An MBA In China

Careers In Technology After An MBA In China

Find out how students at China's top business schools are taking advantage of their new skill sets to move into tech industry careers

17/07/2025

China’s tech and AI sectors have grown exponentially in recent years, driven by financial backing from government and private investors. Some estimate that 2025 investment in AI alone will top $98 billion, a 48% increase on the previous year.

Completing an MBA in China gives students the skills they need to take advantage of the tech opportunities the country has to offer, across a range of roles—from product manager to digital transformation consultant for leading tech companies such as Google, Alibaba, and Tencent.

Hear from business school alumni about how they're combining business and tech know-how to move into the tech sector after graduation.


MBAs in China are tailored to China’s tech landscape

Curricula at many top Chinese MBA programs have tech-focused electives or specializations covering topics such as AI, big data analytics, and digital transformation.

Students can also enjoy guest lectures from tech executives and visit companies at the forefront of China’s tech revolution. Students also learn how Chinese tech firms operate in a unique regulatory, consumer and market context. 

A key feature of the Global MBA at Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management (Tsinghua SEM) is its collaboration with industry leaders, who regularly visit the Beijing campus of this top-ranked institution to share insights and provide networking opportunities for students.

Jorge Alvaro Montoya Urbano from Spain, a graduate of the Tsinghua SEM Global MBA, founded real-time AI captions software company Akkadu.ai. He says that the Tsinghua-MIT entrepreneurship course, during which students develop their own business ideas and meet with entrepreneurs from China and Silicon Valley, was invaluable. “The MIT professors are very engaging and the content of the course amazing,” says Jorge. He also highly valued access to Tsinghua’s X-lab which helped him hone and prepare to launch his business—and helped introduce him to investors.

Graduates from Tsinghua SEM entering the tech industry go on to roles as varied as management, strategy and business development as well as tech and non-tech roles (such as digital transformation, AI or product leads), and marketing and sales at Chinese and multinational tech giants. Tencent, Alibaba (China), Microsoft, Google and ByteDance are employers of Tsinghua graduating classes, and in 2024, almost a quarter of graduates (24%) secured job placements in the tech sector—not just at multinationals but at unicorns and high-growth firms such as Shokz and SHEIN, and start-ups like Zhipu AI and Polyverse.


An MBA in China helps students pivot to new careers

Jingren Zhou, who graduated from an International MBA at Antai College of Economics and Management, Shanghai Jiao Tong University says that the skills he acquired on the program allowed him to transition to a career at Google Shanghai.

“The IMBA curriculum, especially modules in digital marketing, data models, and decision-making, provided me with insights into digital media and data analysis. This process allowed me to build a strong foundation of knowledge, which subsequently supported my career transition into a related industry,” he says.

Professor Lu Lin, an expert in cross-culture management and leadership, notes that Antai IMBA graduates secure manager-level and above positions across key functional areas at leading tech companies in product management (as senior product managers), supply chain (procurement managers), sales and marketing (business development managers), and R&D (as tech leads).

“Most of our MBA graduates entering the tech industry prefer to go to big-name companies, including multinationals and private enterprises,” he says.

Typically around 20% of the school’s IMBA graduates pursue careers in tech, at companies such as Tencent, Baidu, PDD (Pinduoduo), Meituan, Google, and Amazon.


Real-world business experience prepares students for a future role in tech

China is home to more than 300 unicorns (start-ups valued at more than $1 billion), which drive its tech growth—alongside tech giants such as Lenovo and Huawei. This means there are ever more career opportunities for MBA graduates. Many leading business schools now offer specialist tech electives.

At the Business School of Renmin University of China (Renmin Business School), a top institution also based in Beijing, the International MBA students enjoy exposure to the workplace during their program. “The Renmin MBA program places significant emphasis on leveraging industrial resources, entrepreneurial networks, and alumni advantage to integrate classroom learning with real-world business experiences,” says Zhao Daxuan, associate dean of the MBA and EMBA programs.

Renmin Business School regularly invites industry experts and business leaders to deliver themed lectures, sharing insights and experience on industry trends, entrepreneurship, and innovation.

The school says that around 60% of its MBA graduates go on to secure roles in tech industries, at companies such as Beijing Jiankeyan Software Tech, Intel (China), and Sinovac Biotech—typically at middle- and high-management level.

Fuping He, of the 2024 IMBA class, secured a position as an HR business partner manager at Sinovac, supporting its international expansion. “The MBA gave me the cross-cultural leadership and global scaling skills critical for this expansion,” he says. “The program’s focus on managing multicultural teams, international HR strategy and emerging-market entry directly prepared me to build talent systems for overseas operations.”

The school’s MBA program also offers interdisciplinary MBA+ educational modes with specialized tracks in Financial Technology, Artificial Intelligence Management, Internet Content Entrepreneurship, and Business Data Analytics.

Interdisciplinarity is key at Renmin. Students learn to combine management competencies with technological knowledge to become highly effective strategic business leaders, observes Professor Zhao.


An MBA prepares students for a range of tech roles

Zhejiang University School of Management (ZJU-SOM) is located in a booming province of East China where there’s been a recent high growth in investment in technological transformation. It's the home of the 'Six Little Dragons of Hangzhou', a cluster of AI startups established in the city, including DeepSeek.

Taking advantage of the school's proximity to tech, graduates go on to work at tech research institutes specializing in emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence and biotechnology; digital intelligence companies which are involved in developing AI-powered solutions or other data or digital transformation services; smart manufacturing firms; network technology enterprises such as telecoms companies as well as e-commerce. Roles include sales, marketing and HR, as well as strategic management positions.

Recent graduates have landed roles at China Mobile, Newlix (an autonomous delivery vehicle company) and Geely, a local car manufacturer.

Ziwei Guo landed a role at a large multinational new energy vehicle company upon graduation, and says that Zhejiang’s program prepared him for his role by teaching combined theory and practice with a strong focus on business-technology crossover. He highlights a project that deepened his technical knowledge and developed his tech-commercialization thinking and says that “the case studies and hands-on projects in my MBA program deepened my understanding of real-world business and equipped me with practical analytical tools.”


As Ziwei Guo and the other grads in this article have found, studying an MBA at a top school in China can supercharge your career into a role in tech, enabling you to put your newly learned skills to practice right away.


This is an article sponsored by the named schools. Picture credit metamorworks ©iStock

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