Top 20 Canada MBA Rankings 2026
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This report forms part of the EduTimes MBA Ranking Program Ranking series, which evaluates MBA programs across global, regional, European, Asia-Pacific, Canada, Latin America, Middle East and North Africa, executive, online and hybrid, one-year, part-time, and dual-degree formats. The series assesses business schools based on institutional reputation, career outcomes, employer access, alumni network quality, academic strength, program structure, regional market authority, and long-term leadership value.
Canadian MBA programs occupy a distinctive position within graduate management education. Unlike the U.S. MBA market, which is dominated by large two-year programs and highly structured recruiting pipelines, the Canadian MBA market is shaped by national employer networks, regional business hubs, immigration-linked career planning, public-private leadership, financial services, consulting, technology, energy, natural resources, healthcare, sustainability, and professional mobility within Canada.
A strong Canadian MBA program must therefore be evaluated not only by global ranking visibility, but also by its authority within Canada’s business ecosystem. This includes access to Toronto finance and consulting, Montreal bilingual and international business networks, Vancouver’s Pacific-facing economy, Calgary’s energy and corporate leadership market, Ottawa’s public-sector and policy-linked institutions, and regional employer relationships across Canada.
QS’s 2026 Canada MBA ranking identifies Toronto Rotman as the leading full-time MBA program in Canada, with 22 Canadian business schools included in the table. QS also identifies McGill Desautels and Western Ivey among the other leading Canadian schools in the 2026 ranking. The Financial Times’ 2026 Global MBA Ranking included five Canadian business schools in the global top 100: Ivey, Rotman, McGill Desautels, Queen’s Smith, and UBC Sauder.
This ranking identifies MBA programs whose platforms demonstrate sustained relevance across Canadian employer markets, finance, consulting, technology, energy, healthcare, entrepreneurship, public-private leadership, and regional corporate management. Rather than ranking Canadian schools only by global prestige, the objective is to recognize MBA programs whose Canada-market position is structurally important.
Market Overview
The Canadian MBA market is smaller than the U.S. MBA market, but it is strategically important because of Canada’s immigration system, public-university strength, financial sector, consulting market, technology ecosystems, energy and natural resources industries, and regional corporate networks. Canadian MBA candidates often evaluate programs through a different lens from U.S. applicants: local employment probability, permanent-residency pathways, tuition cost, post-graduation work rights, domestic employer recognition, and regional alumni networks may matter as much as global ranking position.
Toronto is the most important Canadian MBA market. Rotman, Schulich, Ivey, Queen’s Smith, McMaster DeGroote, and several Ontario-based programs benefit from proximity to Canada’s largest financial, consulting, corporate headquarters, pension-fund, healthcare, and technology ecosystem. Rotman has the clearest downtown Toronto advantage, while Ivey and Smith compete through case-method training, alumni networks, and strong national employer recognition.
Montreal forms a second major cluster. McGill Desautels, HEC Montréal, Concordia John Molson, and Laval serve a bilingual and internationally connected business environment. Montreal’s ecosystem includes finance, aerospace, AI, gaming, healthcare, public-sector institutions, consumer industries, and international organizations. This gives Quebec-based MBA programs a differentiated profile within Canada.
Western Canada has its own logic. UBC Sauder and Simon Fraser Beedie serve Vancouver’s Pacific-facing economy, sustainability, real estate, technology, natural resources, entrepreneurship, and Asia-linked business networks. Calgary Haskayne and Alberta are especially relevant for energy, natural resources, infrastructure, finance, and corporate leadership in Western Canada.
Atlantic Canada and smaller regional markets also matter. Dalhousie Rowe, Memorial, and other regional programs may not compete with Rotman or Ivey on national prestige, but they can provide meaningful access to local employers, public-sector networks, family businesses, healthcare, logistics, energy, and regional leadership roles.
The Canadian MBA category is therefore not simply a list of schools closest to U.S. MBA prestige. It is a domestic market-authority ranking that evaluates how business schools function inside Canada’s regional employment ecosystems.
Industry Trend — 2026
The Canadian MBA market in 2026 is shaped by five major trends: immigration-linked demand, Toronto market concentration, technology and AI growth, energy and sustainability transition, and increasing pressure for return on investment.
First, immigration-linked demand remains central. Canada continues to attract international professionals who view an MBA as a pathway into the Canadian labor market. For these candidates, employer access, work authorization, local internships, and alumni networks may matter more than global brand perception.
Second, Toronto continues to dominate Canadian MBA employment. Financial services, consulting, pension funds, asset management, private equity, insurance, healthcare, fintech, and corporate headquarters roles remain concentrated in the Greater Toronto Area. Schools with strong Toronto access have a structural advantage.
Third, technology and AI have become more important. Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Waterloo, and Ottawa all support technology and AI-related employment ecosystems. MBA programs connected to analytics, digital transformation, product strategy, fintech, healthcare technology, and AI commercialization are becoming more relevant.
Fourth, energy and sustainability remain critical in Western Canada. Calgary and Edmonton are still tied to energy, natural resources, infrastructure, and industrial transition, but the market increasingly includes sustainability, energy transition, climate finance, and clean technology.
Fifth, return on investment is under scrutiny. Canadian MBA applicants often compare tuition, salary outcomes, regional employment access, opportunity cost, and immigration value. This favors programs with strong domestic employer recognition and practical placement infrastructure.
Methodology — Core Eligibility Criteria
To ensure structural consistency within the category, MBA programs considered for this ranking were evaluated based on the following eligibility conditions:
- Operates as a full-time MBA, accelerated MBA, professional MBA, executive-format MBA, or MBA-equivalent flagship management program based in Canada
- Demonstrates meaningful relevance in Canadian business markets, finance, consulting, technology, energy, healthcare, entrepreneurship, public-private leadership, corporate strategy, regional management, or international business
- Publishes or is associated with credible ranking visibility, employer access, alumni outcomes, institutional recognition, or regional market reputation
- Maintains academic and career infrastructure supporting MBA learners, including career services, alumni networks, leadership development, entrepreneurship centers, corporate partnerships, experiential learning, or employer relationships
- Represents a specific MBA program or business school, rather than a non-degree executive course, undergraduate business program, short certificate, or generic corporate training product
Programs were evaluated primarily on Canadian market authority, not only on global ranking visibility.
Methodology — Ranking Factors
Programs included in the ranking were evaluated using a combination of qualitative, quantitative, and structural considerations. Key factors considered include:
- Canadian institutional reputation and long-term MBA brand strength
- Regional employer access and credibility among corporations, consulting firms, banks, public-sector institutions, family businesses, and technology employers
- Alumni network depth within Canada and internationally
- Strength in Canadian career pathways, including finance, consulting, technology, energy, healthcare, entrepreneurship, corporate strategy, and public-private leadership
- Career outcomes, salary progression, promotion relevance, and post-MBA resilience
- Academic strength, leadership development, curriculum quality, and faculty reputation
- Regional relevance across Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa, Atlantic Canada, and other Canadian business markets
- Long-term program stability and relevance within Canadian management education
The objective of the ranking is to identify Canadian MBA programs whose platforms maintain sustained relevance within national and regional graduate management education.
The MBA Ranking Top 20 Canada MBA Rankings 2026 evaluates programs based on Canadian market authority, institutional reputation, employer access, alumni network strength, leadership relevance, regional ecosystem value, career outcomes, and long-term domestic influence.
The ranking universe consisted of approximately 35–50 Canadian MBA, professional MBA, and MBA-equivalent management programs, from which 20 programs were selected for inclusion.
Tier classifications reflect relative institutional positioning within the Canadian MBA market and do not represent admissions advice, employment guarantees, salary guarantees, promotion guarantees, investment recommendations, procurement recommendations, or endorsement of any specific program.
Tier I — Leading Canada MBA Programs
Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto
- Location: Toronto, Ontario
- Program type: Full-Time MBA
- Core strengths: Toronto finance, consulting, technology, healthcare, pension funds, corporate leadership
Rotman School of Management is Canada’s leading MBA platform and the clearest national flagship for candidates targeting Toronto’s financial, consulting, technology, healthcare, public-sector, pension-fund, and corporate headquarters markets. Its location in downtown Toronto gives students direct proximity to Canada’s largest business ecosystem.
Rotman’s strength lies in market access. Toronto is Canada’s dominant center for banking, asset management, insurance, consulting, fintech, healthcare, private capital, and professional services. MBA candidates benefit from the ability to network with employers, alumni, executives, and investors throughout the program.
QS ranked Rotman first in Canada in its 2026 Canada MBA ranking. The school also appeared in the Financial Times 2026 Global MBA top 100, reinforcing its international visibility alongside domestic leadership.
Rotman’s Toronto location, employer access, academic reputation, alumni depth, and national MBA brand support its position as a Tier I Canadian MBA program.
Ivey Business School, Western University
- Location: London, Ontario
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Case method, consulting, finance, general management, Canadian corporate leadership
Ivey Business School is one of Canada’s strongest MBA programs and a major national platform for consulting, finance, general management, private capital, entrepreneurship, and corporate leadership. Its case-method pedagogy gives it a distinctive identity within the Canadian MBA market.
Ivey’s strength lies in leadership formation and employer credibility. The school has a strong reputation among Canadian employers, especially for candidates who can operate in decision-oriented, case-driven, and client-facing roles. Its alumni network is deeply embedded in Canadian business, finance, consulting, and executive leadership.
Ivey announced that its MBA ranked first in Canada and 74th globally in the Financial Times 2026 Global MBA Ranking, its highest FT position since 2012. This supports its Tier I position, particularly for candidates seeking a strong Canadian MBA with national employer reach.
Ivey’s case-method model, FT performance, alumni network, and Canadian employer credibility support its Tier I placement.
McGill Desautels Faculty of Management
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Montreal, bilingual business leadership, international management, finance, mobility, healthcare and AI ecosystem
McGill Desautels is one of Canada’s strongest MBA programs and a major platform for candidates seeking Montreal, Quebec, Canadian, and international career opportunities. Its parent university brand gives it strong recognition both within Canada and globally.
Desautels’ strength lies in international and bilingual market positioning. Montreal’s ecosystem includes finance, AI, aerospace, healthcare, gaming, public-sector institutions, and international organizations. McGill’s institutional brand gives the MBA a level of international visibility that is especially valuable for globally mobile candidates.
McGill reported that its MBA ranked 87th globally in the Financial Times 2026 Global MBA Ranking and placed in the top three in Canada. The school also stated that its program ranked first in North America for international faculty and international mobility. QS also identified McGill Desautels as one of the leading Canadian MBA programs in its 2026 Canada table.
Desautels’ international brand, Montreal location, bilingual-market relevance, and FT visibility support its Tier I inclusion.
Smith School of Business, Queen’s University
- Location: Kingston, Ontario
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Team-based management, consulting, finance, corporate leadership, Canadian alumni network
Smith School of Business is one of Canada’s most respected MBA platforms, with a strong national reputation in team-based management, consulting, finance, corporate leadership, and general management. Its MBA model emphasizes collaboration, leadership, and practical business decision-making.
Smith’s strength lies in Canadian employer recognition and alumni network depth. The program is especially relevant for candidates targeting Toronto, Ontario, consulting, banking, corporate strategy, technology, and leadership development roles. Its team-based learning model helps differentiate it from larger urban programs.
Smith appeared in the Financial Times 2026 Global MBA top 100 alongside Ivey, Rotman, McGill Desautels, and UBC Sauder. This confirms its position among Canada’s most internationally visible MBA programs.
Smith’s Canadian market authority, collaborative format, employer recognition, and national alumni network support its Tier I placement.
UBC Sauder School of Business
- Location: Vancouver, British Columbia
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Western Canada, Pacific Rim, sustainability, real estate, technology, natural resources, entrepreneurship
UBC Sauder is one of Canada’s strongest regional MBA platforms and the leading MBA program in British Columbia. Its Vancouver location gives it relevance in sustainability, real estate, technology, natural resources, entrepreneurship, public-private leadership, and Pacific Rim business.
Sauder’s strength lies in Western Canadian and Asia-Pacific positioning. Vancouver is a gateway to the Pacific, with connections to Asia, sustainability-oriented industries, technology startups, real estate, logistics, and natural resources. UBC’s parent university brand also carries strong international recognition.
Sauder appeared in the Financial Times 2026 Global MBA top 100 as one of five Canadian schools included in the table. This supports its position as one of Canada’s most credible MBA programs.
UBC Sauder’s Vancouver location, Pacific-facing orientation, sustainability relevance, and Canadian employer recognition support its Tier I inclusion.
Tier II — Established Canada MBA Programs
(Alphabetical order)
Alberta School of Business, University of Alberta
- Location: Edmonton, Alberta
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Energy, natural resources, public-private leadership, corporate management, Western Canada
Alberta School of Business is a strong regional MBA platform with particular relevance in energy, natural resources, public-sector interface, healthcare, infrastructure, entrepreneurship, and Western Canadian corporate leadership. Its Edmonton location places it near government, energy, public-sector, and industrial networks.
Alberta’s strength lies in its connection to the province’s economic structure. Candidates seeking leadership roles in energy, public policy, sustainability, infrastructure, healthcare, or regional corporate management can benefit from local employer access and university credibility.
The program is less nationally dominant than Rotman, Ivey, or McGill, but it remains important within Western Canada and energy-linked management education. Its regional authority supports Tier II placement.
Concordia University — John Molson School of Business
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Montreal business, finance, entrepreneurship, experiential learning, bilingual market access
John Molson School of Business is an established Canadian MBA platform with strong relevance in Montreal, Quebec, finance, entrepreneurship, experiential learning, and bilingual business leadership. Its location gives students access to Montreal’s corporate, technology, AI, gaming, aerospace, and public-sector ecosystems.
John Molson’s strength lies in practical market access and applied learning. It is especially relevant for candidates who want a Montreal-based MBA with strong links to finance, entrepreneurship, consulting, and regional corporate employers.
The program is not as globally visible as McGill Desautels, but within Quebec and Montreal it remains a strong MBA platform. Its local employer relevance and applied orientation support Tier II inclusion.
Dalhousie University — Rowe School of Business
- Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Atlantic Canada, public-sector leadership, healthcare, ocean economy, corporate management
Rowe School of Business is one of Atlantic Canada’s important MBA platforms. Its Halifax location gives it relevance in public-sector leadership, healthcare, logistics, ocean industries, energy, entrepreneurship, and regional corporate management.
Rowe’s strength lies in regional authority. Atlantic Canada has distinct economic and institutional needs, and local employer access can matter more than national ranking visibility for candidates committed to the region.
The program is especially relevant for candidates targeting Atlantic Canadian leadership roles, public-private management, healthcare, ocean-sector businesses, logistics, and regional entrepreneurship. Its Atlantic Canada role supports Tier II placement.
HEC Montréal
- Location: Montreal, Quebec
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Quebec business, bilingual leadership, analytics, public-private management, corporate strategy
HEC Montréal is one of Canada’s most important French-language and bilingual business schools. Its MBA is especially relevant for candidates targeting Quebec, Montreal, public-private leadership, analytics, corporate management, finance, and strategy roles.
HEC Montréal’s strength lies in its deep Quebec-market authority. For candidates seeking careers in French-speaking or bilingual Canadian business environments, the school’s institutional recognition is highly valuable. It also benefits from Montreal’s AI, aerospace, healthcare, finance, and public-sector ecosystems.
The program’s domestic reputation and regional employer access make it one of Canada’s strongest non-English-market MBA platforms. Its bilingual-market relevance supports Tier II placement.
Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary
- Location: Calgary, Alberta
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Energy, finance, entrepreneurship, sustainability, Western Canadian corporate leadership
Haskayne School of Business is a regionally important Canadian MBA platform, especially for candidates targeting Calgary, energy, natural resources, finance, sustainability, entrepreneurship, and corporate leadership in Western Canada.
Calgary remains one of Canada’s most important business centers outside Toronto, particularly in energy, infrastructure, corporate finance, and industrial transition. Haskayne’s MBA is therefore especially relevant for professionals seeking advancement in energy-linked or Western Canadian business environments.
The school is less internationally visible than Canada’s top five MBA programs, but its local market relevance and energy-sector positioning make it a strong Tier II program.
McMaster University — DeGroote School of Business
- Location: Hamilton / Burlington, Ontario
- Program type: MBA / co-op MBA
- Core strengths: Healthcare, operations, consulting, co-op education, Ontario employer access
DeGroote School of Business is one of Canada’s more distinctive MBA platforms because of its co-op and experiential orientation. Its location in Hamilton and Burlington gives it access to the Greater Toronto Area, healthcare, manufacturing, life sciences, operations, and regional corporate employers.
DeGroote’s strength lies in work-integrated learning. For candidates who need Canadian work experience, especially international students or career switchers, co-op and experiential formats can be especially valuable. This makes the program relevant beyond pure brand ranking.
The school is particularly useful for candidates targeting healthcare management, operations, consulting, analytics, corporate leadership, and Ontario-based employers. Its practical format and regional access support Tier II inclusion.
Schulich School of Business, York University
- Location: Toronto, Ontario
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Toronto employer access, finance, marketing, international business, sustainability, public-private leadership
Schulich School of Business is one of Canada’s best-known MBA platforms and a major Toronto-area business school. Its location gives students access to finance, consulting, marketing, healthcare, sustainability, real estate, public-sector institutions, and multinational employers.
Schulich’s strength lies in breadth. It offers a wide range of business disciplines and has long-standing recognition in Canadian management education. For candidates seeking Toronto access with a broad business curriculum, Schulich remains highly relevant.
Poets&Quants’ 2026 guide to Canadian MBA programs identifies Schulich alongside Rotman, Ivey, Smith, Sauder, and Desautels as one of Canada’s major MBA programs with distinct strengths and recruiting footprints.
Schulich’s Toronto location, broad curriculum, and Canadian market recognition support its Tier II placement.
Simon Fraser University — Beedie School of Business
- Location: Vancouver / Burnaby, British Columbia
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Vancouver business, entrepreneurship, technology, sustainability, applied management
Beedie School of Business is a strong regional MBA platform in British Columbia. Its Vancouver-area location gives it access to technology, sustainability, entrepreneurship, natural resources, real estate, public-sector organizations, and Pacific-facing business networks.
Beedie’s strength lies in applied management and regional employer access. For candidates targeting Vancouver and Western Canada, the school provides a practical MBA option with meaningful local relevance.
The program is less nationally visible than UBC Sauder, but it remains important within British Columbia’s management education ecosystem. Its Vancouver-area access and applied orientation support Tier II placement.
Telfer School of Management, University of Ottawa
- Location: Ottawa, Ontario
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Public-private leadership, healthcare, technology, government-linked management, bilingual business environment
Telfer School of Management is a regionally important MBA platform in Ottawa, with relevance in public-private leadership, healthcare, technology, government-linked management, consulting, and bilingual business environments.
Ottawa’s economy is shaped by federal institutions, technology companies, public-sector organizations, healthcare, policy, and professional services. Telfer is especially relevant for candidates who want to operate at the intersection of business, government, health systems, and technology.
The school is less finance-oriented than Toronto-based programs, but its public-sector and policy-linked positioning gives it a distinctive role in the Canadian MBA market. Its Ottawa ecosystem supports Tier II placement.
University of Victoria — Gustavson School of Business
- Location: Victoria, British Columbia
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: sustainability, international business, entrepreneurship, responsible leadership, Western Canada
Gustavson School of Business is a regionally strong Canadian MBA platform with particular relevance in sustainability, responsible leadership, entrepreneurship, international business, and public-private management. Its Victoria location gives it access to British Columbia’s public-sector, sustainability, tourism, technology, and Pacific-facing networks.
Gustavson’s strength lies in values-driven and sustainability-oriented management education. Candidates seeking careers in responsible business, social impact, regional leadership, and Western Canadian organizations can benefit from the school’s distinct identity.
The program is smaller than Canada’s national MBA leaders, but its sustainability and international orientation support Tier II inclusion.
Tier III — Regionally Significant Canada MBA Programs
(Alphabetical order)
Brock University — Goodman School of Business
- Location: St. Catharines, Ontario
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Ontario regional business, accounting, entrepreneurship, professional management, applied learning
Goodman School of Business is a regionally significant Canadian MBA platform with relevance in Ontario regional business, accounting, entrepreneurship, applied management, and professional advancement. Its location in the Niagara region gives it a distinctive local employer base.
Goodman is especially useful for candidates seeking practical management education, regional career advancement, and applied business training. It is less nationally dominant than larger Ontario schools, but it remains meaningful within its regional market.
Its applied orientation and Ontario employer relevance support Tier III placement.
Carleton University — Sprott School of Business
- Location: Ottawa, Ontario
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Ottawa business, public-sector interface, technology, entrepreneurship, international business
Sprott School of Business is a regionally significant MBA platform in Ottawa. It is particularly relevant for candidates targeting public-sector interface, technology firms, entrepreneurship, nonprofit management, and internationally oriented business roles.
Ottawa’s economy creates demand for managers who understand government, technology, policy, and public-private coordination. Sprott’s location gives it practical relevance in this environment.
The school is less nationally prominent than Rotman, Ivey, or Telfer, but its Ottawa access and regional employer relevance support Tier III inclusion.
Lazaridis School of Business and Economics, Wilfrid Laurier University
- Location: Waterloo, Ontario
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Waterloo region, technology, entrepreneurship, finance, co-op and professional advancement
Lazaridis School of Business is a regionally significant Canadian MBA platform with relevance in the Waterloo technology corridor, entrepreneurship, finance, accounting, and professional management. Its location near one of Canada’s most important technology ecosystems gives it a distinctive regional profile.
The school is especially relevant for candidates seeking applied business education connected to technology, startups, finance, and regional employers in southwestern Ontario.
Lazaridis does not have the national MBA brand of Canada’s top tier, but its Waterloo-region relevance supports Tier III placement.
Memorial University — Faculty of Business Administration
- Location: St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Atlantic Canada, energy, public-sector leadership, entrepreneurship, regional management
Memorial University’s MBA is a regionally significant program serving Newfoundland and Labrador and broader Atlantic Canada. Its relevance includes energy, natural resources, entrepreneurship, public-sector leadership, regional development, and local corporate management.
Memorial’s strength lies in regional embeddedness. For candidates seeking leadership roles in Newfoundland and Labrador or Atlantic Canada, the program offers local credibility and applied management education.
The program is not nationally dominant, but its regional role and public-university backing support Tier III inclusion.
University of Manitoba — Asper School of Business
- Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba
- Program type: MBA
- Core strengths: Manitoba business, agriculture, logistics, finance, public-private leadership, regional management
Asper School of Business is an important regional MBA platform in Manitoba and the Canadian Prairies. Its Winnipeg location gives it relevance in agriculture, logistics, finance, public-sector leadership, entrepreneurship, manufacturing, and regional corporate management.
Asper is especially useful for candidates targeting Manitoba or Prairie-region leadership roles where local employer access and institutional recognition matter. The program also supports professionals seeking advancement in family business, public-private institutions, and regional corporate settings.
Its Prairie-region authority and sector relevance support Tier III placement.
Remarks
Canada MBA rankings require a different lens from global MBA rankings or U.S.-style MBA rankings. Strong Canadian programs must demonstrate not only academic quality and international visibility, but also domestic employer access, regional alumni depth, immigration-linked career value, public-private leadership relevance, and practical market authority within Canada.
The programs recognized in this ranking represent MBA platforms whose graduates maintain sustained relevance in Canadian finance, consulting, technology, healthcare, energy, entrepreneurship, public-private management, regional strategy, sustainability, and corporate leadership. Tier classification reflects relative institutional positioning within the Canadian MBA market rather than a guarantee of admissions success, employment outcomes, salary levels, or career advancement.
Tier classification reflects relative Canadian reputation, employer access, alumni network depth, regional leadership influence, career outcomes, academic credibility, immigration-linked relevance, and long-term institutional resilience. The ranking does not constitute admissions advice, employment guarantee, promotion guarantee, salary guarantee, investment recommendation, procurement recommendation, or endorsement of any specific Canadian MBA program.
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