Terry College of Business

[5] All of the college's programs are accredited by AACSB International – the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business.

[7] All UGA students who plan to pursue a bachelor's degree in business are initially admitted to the Terry College as intended-business majors.

Students can apply to a Terry major once they meet all application eligibility requirements, typically during their second year at UGA.

[8] Undergraduates can supplement their degree program with one or more certificates, which are proof of skills development offered in eight areas of specialization: actuarial science, entrepreneurship, FinTech, legal studies, music business, personal and organizational leadership, sustainability, and workforce diversity.

The Terry Full-Time MBA degree program is taught on the Athens campus, with staff, team rooms, and classrooms headquartered in Correll Hall.

[10] The first-year core curriculum provides a solid foundation of management principles and business practices.

Terry's Executive MBA is geared toward mid- to senior-level managers with a minimum of seven years of work experience.

ILA provides students with self-assessments, coaching/mentoring, action learning and feedback focused on the development of greater emotional competence.

Music and entertainment industry executives are brought in from across the country to speak to classes, providing not only "real world" perspective, but also networking opportunities.

[20] This certificate program prepares students for the complex legal environment of business and helps them also to gauge their interest in pursuing a Juris Doctor degree.

[21] The Entrepreneurship Program is a campuswide initiative that is housed in the Terry College of Business and open to all UGA students, regardless of their major or area of study.

[22] The program focuses on the four key tasks of entrepreneurship: opportunity identification, resource acquisition and deployment, goal setting and strategy formulation, and implementation.

Competitors participate in a series of interactive seminars and individual coaching sessions focused on starting a business.

The first year of competition (2008–09) resulted in eight businesses being launched, $212,000 of initial revenue, and procurement of angel funding.

[23] Dedicated in December 1990, the Selig Center improves upon its predecessor, the Division of Research, which was established in the late 1940s.

Each year the Terry College hosts the Georgia Economic Outlook series in 12 cities throughout the state.

The Terry College’s state-of-the-art home is a modern, collaborative, learning, teaching and working environment for students, faculty and staff.

Located on West Broad Street, Studio 225 includes a mix of offices and multipurpose educational areas — such as a maker space, a pitch deck and study nooks — where students interested in entrepreneurship can meet, collaborate and form teams.

UGA alumnus Charles S. Sanford Jr. gave the largest donation for the building that bears his family’s name.

The center also serves as a focal point and meeting place for Terry students, alumni, faculty, and staff to interact with Atlanta's business community.

The 38,000-square-foot facility located inside Live Oak Square on Lenox Road features tiered executive classrooms, conference rooms, break-out meeting spaces and interview suites.

[43] UGA's Griffin campus, located 40 miles (64 km) south of Atlanta, was established as the Georgia Experiment Station in 1888.

The early years of the school were "fragile" as the program struggled to secure the faculty and funding needed to serve the several students who had declared their intention to pursue the new Bachelor of Science in Commerce degree.

The name honors Mr. and Mrs. Terry, who were distinguished benefactors of the college and endowed faculty chairs, research fellowships, scholarships, and funded facility upgrades.

Terry MBAs on an International Business program trip to China
Former Viacom executive Jimmy Barge meets with students following his Terry Leadership Speaker Series presentation, January 2010.
UGA President Emeritus Charles B. Knapp delivers the economic forecast for 2014 to regional business leaders at the Georgia Economic Outlook Series.
Construction of UGA’s Business Learning Community was completed in 2019.
The Terry Executive Education Center in Atlanta.