Lancaster and Trinity are ranked very closely in terms of international mobility. That means that most likely, one will not give you a huge edge in terms of placements in the UK.
I would take a look at people in the UK who are doing the kind of work you're looking for (and who work in the companies you'd be targeting), and see where they did their MBAs.
These two schools are also pretty close in terms of employability stats - that is, 90 or 91 percent of the graduating class was able to find jobs within three months of graduation. If I were you I would as the schools directly for the stats on the number of MBAs who were able to find jobs *by graduation*, because, in the case of Lancaster, finding a job by graduation would be fairly important to you.
Nottingham fell out of the FT rankings several years ago (2010 or 2011??) so it's harder to get info about post-MBA placements for this school. Ask them directly.
Lancaster and Trinity are ranked very closely in terms of international mobility. That means that most likely, one will not give you a huge edge in terms of placements in the UK.
I would take a look at people in the UK who are doing the kind of work you're looking for (and who work in the companies you'd be targeting), and see where they did their MBAs.
These two schools are also pretty close in terms of employability stats - that is, 90 or 91 percent of the graduating class was able to find jobs within three months of graduation. If I were you I would as the schools directly for the stats on the number of MBAs who were able to find jobs *by graduation*, because, in the case of Lancaster, finding a job by graduation would be fairly important to you.
Nottingham fell out of the FT rankings several years ago (2010 or 2011??) so it's harder to get info about post-MBA placements for this school. Ask them directly.