
Business and Engineering
Bachelor of Engineering
Due to the teaching’s orientation towards economic and technical matters, the programme offers above-average career opportunities and security of employment. Lecturers who often gathered their experience in top management positions of companies teach up-to-date and future-oriented knowledge. To prepare students for their careers as good and practically as possible, many classes apply their learning content to issues in small, medium sized and big companies by cooperating with these companies. Students learn to meet managerial challenges with up-to-date skills in the economic-technical field as well as with professional, methodological, and social competence.
You can find more information about the programme at the website of the Faculty of Business and Engineering.
Career Perspectives
Due to the programme’s mixture of technical and non-technical elements, graduates can choose from a broad variety of occupational fields to start their career: marketing/distribution, logistics, materials management/purchasing, production, controlling, accounting, administration/organisation, or data processing. Possible fields of activity are, for example, in producing and trading companies, engineering offices, banks, insurance companies, consulting firms, but also in the public sector or when establishing one’s own company.
Programme Structure
BWW: for a technical specialisation, students can choose mechanical engineering, electrical engineering or mechatronics; for a business specialisation, students can choose purchasing, logistics, production, distribution, or controlling.
IBE: A technical specialisation is possible in mechatronics; for a business specialisation, students can choose purchasing, logistics, or production. There is an internship module (sixth semester) that introduces students to the actual work of business engineers. Studies are completed by a bachelor’s thesis that discusses a (often practical) problem on a scientific basis.