Mendoza School of Business

Dean’s Vision

Dean Cremers stands at a podium in the Mendoza College of Business atrium giving a speech at an event with a crucifix on the wall behind him.

“As a business school guided by the University of Notre Dame’s Catholic identity, the Mendoza College of Business recognizes the inherent dignity of every human person. We are committed to building a community of belonging and inclusion based on respect for each and every individual as foundational to both shared and individual flourishing.”

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The Three C’s of Business

As part of his vision for the Mendoza College of Business, Dean Martijn Cremers is committed to advancing the College’s distinctive mission as a Catholic business school that seeks to produce top academic research and educate business leaders who contribute to human flourishing, cooperate in solidarity and compete with excellence. In his “Dean’s Letter,” he describes these “Three C’s” of business — three principles necessary for business seeking to be a force for shared good for all stakeholders:

CONTRIBUTE to human flourishing, serving others in response to all the gifts we have received, through which we ourselves flourish.
COOPERATE in solidarity through teamwork as part of a community, and prioritize those with the greatest needs.
COMPETE externally in the marketplace and internally toward the best version of oneself, by the grace of God and with the help of others.

Read more about Dean Cremers’ vision for the College.

Essays, Commentaries & Speeches

Martijn Cremers presented during the Education and Training session of the conference. The theme was “The Milestones of the Integral Ecology for a Human Economy.”

In his talk, Dean Cremers highlighted three closely related central themes from Laudato Si’ and Catholic Social Teaching, which he linked to a vision of business, specifically to the role of business schools in contributing to a sustainable society. He also provided a practical example of these principles in action at Mendoza College of Business.

Martijn Cremers came to Notre Dame with his family in 2012 out of a desire to integrate his Catholic faith with serving as a faculty member. As dean, his vision for Mendoza centers on his conviction that faith is a critical element to help finance contribute to human flourishing.

Lower fees and rising volatility make active management more competitive, Dean Cremers writes.

Dean Cremers introduces the “Three C’s” of business — three principles necessary for business to be a force for shared good for all stakeholders.

This paper by Dean Cremers explores what Laudato Si teaches about corporate social responsibility.

In the News

Poets & Quants for Undergrads invited the deans from its top-ranked undergraduate business school list to participate in a panel discussion.

Dean Cremers talks with P&Q about what contributed to the increase in MBA apps.

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Dean Cremers’ “integrated vision of business” is grounded in Catholic social teaching and firmly in touch with the humanities and the new big-data frontier.

Poets & Quants takes a look at what changes are in store at Notre Dame under Dean Cremers’ direction and how Mendoza will distinguish itself among its peers.

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New Mendoza dean Martijn Cremers discusses his commitment to advancing the integration of business principles and Catholic values.

Poets & Quants interviewed Martijn Cremers after he was appointed dean to talk about his vision for the future.

Videos