
AI in Business Education: What Every Future Leader Must Understand
- Categories Master in Business Management
- Date 23 de January de 2026
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is no longer a distant idea. It is already part of everyday business practice across marketing, sales, finance, logistics and human resources. As organisations rely more heavily on data and digital tools to support decision-making, business education must adapt to reflect this reality.
For business schools, the challenge is not simply to explain how AI tools work, but to help students understand how to use AI strategically, responsibly and effectively in management and leadership roles. At ESEI Business School, the focus is on developing leaders who combine technological understanding with critical thinking, sound business judgement and strong values.
Why AI Knowledge Is Essential for Business Students
Today’s business leaders are expected to work with data, digital platforms and intelligent systems in almost every role. While not every manager needs technical training, every future leader must understand what AI can and cannot do in a business context, how it supports decision-making, and how to assess its risks and limitations. Companies that use AI well are improving efficiency, planning and customer targeting, while those who do not understand these systems risk making poor decisions or missing important opportunities.
How AI Is Being Used in Business Today
AI is already widely used across core business functions. In marketing and sales, it supports customer segmentation, demand forecasting, lead scoring and content personalisation. In operations and supply chain management, it helps improve inventory control, logistics planning and demand prediction. In human resources, AI tools are increasingly used in recruitment screening, skills analysis and learning and development planning. At a strategic level, leaders use AI to analyse large volumes of data, identify patterns and test different business scenarios before making important decisions. For today’s business students, understanding these applications is no longer optional.
The Importance of Ethics and Human Judgement
AI should support human decision-making, not replace responsibility. Future leaders must be able to think critically about how these systems are used and managed. This includes understanding issues such as data protection, bias in algorithms, transparency in automated decisions and the impact of automation on jobs and organisational culture. Business education must therefore develop ethical awareness alongside technical and commercial knowledge.
Learning from Industry: A Guest Speaker at ESEI
At ESEI, strong emphasis is placed on connecting academic learning with real business practice. This was recently demonstrated when the school welcomed Ygal Levy, EMEA Manufacturing Managing Director at Microsoft, to the Digital Disruption in Sales and Marketing class led by Professor Arie Elbelman. During the session, Ygal shared practical insights, examples, and case studies from Microsoft, followed by a student Q&A.
The discussion explored how digital change has reshaped sales in large international companies and examined the impact of new AI tools on modern sales departments. Students gained a clear understanding of current trends in marketing and sales, as well as the practical challenges businesses face in a fast-changing digital environment.
Preparing Students for the Future of Business
AI is now part of everyday business life, and business schools have a responsibility to prepare students accordingly. At ESEI Business School, the aim is to educate graduates who understand technology, but who also understand people, organisations and leadership. The most effective future leaders will not be those who rely blindly on technology, but those who know how to use it wisely.
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