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  1. Over half of MBA students receive need-based financial aid. Each year, the school has a gap between student need and the endowment income from dedicated fellowship funds. Financial aid makes a world-class business management education accessible to capable and talented students from all backgrounds.

    • Search Funds

      Search Funds | Stanford Graduate School of Business. A...

  2. Search Funds | Stanford Graduate School of Business. A search fund is an investment vehicle, conceived in 1984, through which investors financially support an entrepreneur’s efforts to locate, acquire, manage, and grow a privately held company.

  3. About | GSB Impact Fund. About Us. Launched in 2015, the GSB Impact Fund is a student-managed evergreen fund that invests in early stage for-profit ventures, seeking both attractive financial returns and measurable social value. All returns are reinvested into new enterprises.

  4. The Programs | Stanford Graduate School of Business. Programs. Browse all programs or use the filters to find the program that’s right for you. Topics. Format. Career Level. All Upcoming Programs. Sort by: |. Start Date. PhD Program. Fall 2023. In-Person.

  5. Stanford GSB, with our campus in the heart of Silicon Valley, is a one-of-a-kind MBA program that has redefined the business school experience. Here, you’ll be pushed and challenged by best-in-class faculty and supported by your classmates in an environment unlike anywhere else. Collaboration, not competition, is key in a Stanford classroom.

  6. Read the full study via Stanford Graduate School of Business here. 2022 Search Fund Study: Selected Observations This 2022 study reports on the financial returns and key characteristics of 526 search funds formed in the U.S. and Canada since 1984.

  7. The Stanford Graduate School of Business (also known as Stanford GSB or simply GSB) is the graduate business school of Stanford University, a private research university in Stanford, California. For several years it has been the most selective business school in the United States, [4] admitting only about 6% of applicants. [5]