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The choices you make along the way define your future opportunities

The master’s degree programme in Business, language and Culture  will offer you a lot of freedom of choice and the opportunity to shape the programme according to your interests: 

  • Do you want to study abroad?
  • How about a project-oriented course?
  • What do you want to learn in your assignments, projects and elective courses?
  • Do you want to work alone or with others?
  • What type of problem do you want to work on in your master’s thesis?

On mysdu you can find more about the elements and choices included in the master’s degree programme in Business, language and Culture. When graduating in two years, not two graduates will have the same competences. This means that our graduates can handle many different tasks upon completing their master’s degree. Tasks that match the competences they have developed along the way. You have many options – and to a large extent the choices you make along the way will define your options.

Examples of what graduates have learned and what they do

Below you can read more about what our graduates often gain from their years at SDU and how they contribute in the world. The lists are not exhaustive – you will find lots of graduates who have used their master’s degree programme to learn other things and created a future that you could not possibly have imagined. 

This is one of the strengths of a degree in the humanities.


You learn:

An education in Business, Language and Culture  is a learning process, where you learn to:

  • engage effortlessly in negotiations and case handling in national and international businesses.
  • analyse, assess and solve tasks related to the international activities of businesses
  • independently solve economic or commercial problems in a specific political or economic context
  • develop solutions to complex language and business economics issues in internationally oriented businesses and organisations.
  • implement and monitor international marketing programmes.

Perhaps you are thinking that your education includes other, exciting competences and much more. And that is a good thing, because you are the expert and can continue adding things to the ‘list’ during your education.


You contribute

Specifically, you can take up a position where you:

  • identify and develop solutions to linguistic and business-economic tasks and problems in private organisations.

  • prepare advanced analyses, evaluations and solutions related to the international activities of the company and the communicative and knowledge transmission tasks that arise in the process.

  • use your knowledge of international business economics, your language competences in German and Danish as regional neigbor languages and/or English and your special insight into the foreign cultures, to fulfill the duties of a position within areas such as sales, marketing, human resources and communications.