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The term “positioning” was first coined by Alries and Trout in (1969) which has since then become a major concern for business corporations, non-for-profits and even individuals. The study strives to investigate the current peculiar positioning status of private sector business schools in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. An overwhelming, majority of private sector universities in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa are charitable trusts and foundations running business schools to support camouflaged profit motives. The survey is based on multidimensional scaling technique applied to data collected from newly inducted students of 12 leading private sector business schools and departments using admitted Student Plus Questionnaire (ASQ). The multi-level data is collected over two phase’s empirical evidence collected from four business schools on twelve attributes in pilot phase; and from eight business schools on eight most relevant attributes in subsequent fullscale part of field work. The attributes were academic reputation, availability of majors, quality of social life, academic life, extracurricular activities, campus attractiveness, academic facilities and cost of study. The study argues on theoretical grounds and unravels empirically a below average performance for all business schools as evident from the combined average score of less that 50 percent. This inwardly, indicates a serious positioning issue which warrants immediate attention. The study recommends business schools to reassess their idiosyncratic positioning in wake of competitors having me too charters, similar composition in board of governors, sponsoring bodies and even similar learning curves since incorporation. The researchers leave further studies to exclusively study others and especially public sector universities to future researchers.

Muhammad Tariq Yousafzai, Maryam Khan, Usman Khan. (2017) Positioning of Private Sector Business Schools in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: A Multidimensional Positioning Study , Journal of Managerial Sciences, Volume 11, Issue 1.
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