Ashridge will much more experience of this than Durham, and I suggest you ask them. Durham is mainly a pre-experience and full-time school, while Ashridge is flying non-Europeans in and out all the time.
PS If scale is a factor in selecting an MBA then, as a rule of thumb, a larger programme is a *better* than a smaller one. For example, a larger programme is able to spread overheads, allowing it to allocate more resources to student support, career services and alumni networking. Often the school network in itself is bigger, and that means more possibilities. When you look at the biggest business school alumni networks, they generally belong to strong schools: Chicago, Columbia, FGV, Harvard, NYU, Penn -- no-one complains seriously that these MBAs are less valuable in the market because there are too many of them. This is only a general rule of thumb, but a specific one is to look at the price. Other things being equal, prices and rankings reflect value. Manchester Business School is more costly and more highly ranked than Aston or Durham. Personally, I think the Manchester Global MBA is not one to easily dismiss.
Ashridge will much more experience of this than Durham, and I suggest you ask them. Durham is mainly a pre-experience and full-time school, while Ashridge is flying non-Europeans in and out all the time.
PS If scale is a factor in selecting an MBA then, as a rule of thumb, a larger programme is a *better* than a smaller one. For example, a larger programme is able to spread overheads, allowing it to allocate more resources to student support, career services and alumni networking. Often the school network in itself is bigger, and that means more possibilities. When you look at the biggest business school alumni networks, they generally belong to strong schools: Chicago, Columbia, FGV, Harvard, NYU, Penn -- no-one complains seriously that these MBAs are less valuable in the market because there are too many of them. This is only a general rule of thumb, but a specific one is to look at the price. Other things being equal, prices and rankings reflect value. Manchester Business School is more costly and more highly ranked than Aston or Durham. Personally, I think the Manchester Global MBA is not one to easily dismiss.