Why Accreditation Efforts Stall (and How to Restart Them)

By Dr. Vlad Krotov

Accreditation is widely recognized as one of the most powerful mechanisms for continuous improvement in business schools. Whether operating under the standards of AACSB International, EFMD Global, the Association of MBAs/BGA, ACBSP, or other accreditation bodies, business schools are expected to demonstrate systematic processes for improving academic programs, supporting faculty development, ensuring that students achieve meaningful learning outcomes, and advancing broader organizational goals.

However, despite good intentions, many accreditation initiatives lose momentum over time. Business schools may begin with enthusiasm and strong leadership support, but progress can gradually slow. Committees stop meeting regularly, and critical accreditation processes—such as assurance of learning (AoL), faculty qualification tracking, and strategic planning—become inconsistent. In some cases, accreditation efforts stall completely, putting the school at risk of losing accreditation or failing to achieve reaccreditation.

Understanding why accreditation efforts stall (and how to restart them) is essential for schools that want to maintain their accreditation status and continue improving their academic programs.

Why Accreditation Efforts Stall

Leadership Transitions

One of the most common reasons accreditation initiatives stall is leadership change. When a dean, associate dean, or accreditation director leaves the institution, the momentum built around accreditation can quickly dissipate.

New leaders often arrive with different priorities, and accreditation processes may temporarily fall to the background while the administration focuses on other pressing issues such as enrollment, budgeting, or program development. Without a dedicated champion, accreditation initiatives can easily lose direction.

Unfortunately, accreditation timelines do not pause during leadership transitions. Required reporting cycles, assurance of learning processes, and faculty qualification tracking must continue regardless of administrative changes.

Accreditation Is Treated as a One-Time Project

Another common issue is the perception that accreditation is a temporary project rather than an ongoing management system. Business schools sometimes mobilize faculty and staff only when an accreditation visit approaches, producing large amounts of documentation in a short period of time.

Once the review is completed, however, many of these processes lose priority. Committees stop meeting, data collection slows, and institutional knowledge begins to fade.

Accreditation bodies increasingly expect continuous improvement systems, not periodic bursts of activity.

Faculty Burnout and Administrative Overload

Accreditation work often falls on a small number of dedicated faculty members or administrators. Over time, these individuals can become overwhelmed by the demands of data collection, reporting, and coordination across departments.

Without clear systems and support structures, accreditation work can feel like an additional administrative burden rather than a meaningful quality improvement process. When key individuals step back, the entire system may stall.

Poor Data Management

Many schools struggle with maintaining consistent and reliable accreditation data. Information related to faculty qualifications, research productivity, Assurance of Learning results, and strategic initiatives is often scattered across spreadsheets, emails, and departmental files.

When data systems are fragmented, preparing accreditation reports becomes time-consuming and frustrating. Faculty may lose confidence in the process, and institutional leaders may underestimate the effort required to maintain compliance.

The Risks of a Stalled Accreditation Process

When accreditation systems stall, the risks can be significant.

Schools may fall behind on critical processes such as:

  • Assurance of Learning data collection and analysis
  • Faculty qualification monitoring
  • Strategic planning and impact reporting
  • Documentation required for accreditation reviews

Over time, these gaps can lead to negative outcomes during accreditation reviews, including additional documentation requests, accreditation deferral, or even the loss of accreditation status.

Beyond reputational consequences, losing accreditation can affect student recruitment, employer perception, and partnerships with other institutions.

For these reasons, maintaining momentum in accreditation processes is essential.

How Schools Can Restart Accreditation Efforts

Reestablish Clear Governance Structures

The first step in restarting stalled accreditation efforts is to reestablish clear governance structures. Schools should ensure that accreditation responsibilities are clearly assigned and supported by institutional leadership.

Effective accreditation systems typically include:

  • A designated accreditation leader or director
  • Faculty committees responsible for Assurance of Learning
  • Administrative support for data collection and reporting
  • Regular review meetings to monitor progress

Creating clear accountability helps restore momentum and ensures that accreditation work is distributed across the organization.

Simplify and Systematize Processes

Many stalled accreditation systems suffer from unnecessary complexity. Schools often develop overly elaborate assessment systems that become difficult to sustain over time.

Restarting the process often requires simplifying procedures, clarifying responsibilities, and implementing manageable data collection systems that faculty can realistically maintain.

Maintain Continuity During Leadership Changes

Because leadership transitions are inevitable, institutions should ensure that accreditation systems do not depend entirely on one individual.

Documentation, procedures, and data systems should be delegated to different people and structured in a way that allows new leaders to quickly understand the institution’s accreditation processes and continue them without disruption.

The Role of Accreditation Consultants in Maintaining Momentum

One of the most effective ways to prevent accreditation initiatives from stalling is to engage experienced accreditation consultants.

An accreditation consulting firm such as Accreditation.Biz can provide continuity, expertise, and project management support that helps schools maintain steady progress even during periods of organizational change.

In general, accreditation consultants can assist institutions in several critical ways:

Maintaining Continuity During Leadership Transitions

When internal leadership changes occur, consultants can provide stability and ensure that accreditation processes continue without interruption. Because consultants are already familiar with accreditation standards and institutional systems, they can not only maintain the momentum but also help new administrators quickly understand the status of ongoing initiatives.

Preventing Costly Mistakes

Accreditation standards are complex and constantly evolving. Schools that attempt to navigate these requirements without experienced guidance may inadvertently make mistakes that delay accreditation progress. Experienced accreditation consultants can help business schools interpret standards correctly and design simple yet effective systems that are less likely to stall. 

Providing Immediate Expertise

Hiring a full-time accreditation officer can take months, and new staff may require significant time to develop expertise in accreditation standards and reporting processes. In contrast, accreditation consultants can begin supporting the institution almost immediately, bringing years of experience and proven frameworks for managing accreditation systems.

Keeping the Process Moving Forward

Perhaps most importantly, consultants help maintain momentum. Accreditation requires consistent attention over multiple years. External advisors provide structure, accountability, and project management discipline that ensures progress continues even when internal priorities shift. Quite often, even simple reminders about important accreditation requirements and deadlines can help everyone stay on track. 

Accreditation as a Long-Term Commitment

Successful accreditation is not achieved through short bursts of activity before peer review team (PRT) visits. Instead, it requires a sustained commitment to continuous improvement, supported by effective leadership, clear systems, and reliable data.

When accreditation efforts stall, the consequences can be significant. However, with the right governance structures, simplified processes, and experienced guidance, institutions can quickly restart their accreditation initiatives and regain momentum.

For many schools, partnering with experienced accreditation consultants provides the expertise and continuity needed to keep accreditation systems functioning smoothly. Such partnerships can help business schools ensure that the institution continues moving forward and avoids costly setbacks.

In the end, accreditation is not just about meeting external standards. It is about building a stronger institution that consistently delivers high-quality education and meaningful learning outcomes for its students.

One Cannot See One’s Own Eyes: Why Business Schools Benefit from an Accreditation Consultant

External perspective from an accreditation consultant

“One cannot see one’s own eyes.” — Ethiopian proverb

This simple proverb captures a powerful truth: no matter how capable or experienced we are, we all have blind spots. 

That insight applies directly to business schools pursuing accreditation.

From within an institution, everything may appear aligned:

  • A clearly articulated mission
  • A strategic plan approved by faculty and administration
  • Faculty with strong academic and professional credentials
  • Assurance of Learning (AoL) processes in place
  • Active engagement with students and stakeholders

And yet, accreditation reviews are conducted by external peer reviewers representing other, often similar business schools and such bodies as:

  • AACSB International
  • EFMD Global (EQUIS)
  • Association of MBAs (AMBA)

These organizations evaluate schools from a different vantage point: one that is comparative, evidence-based, and standards-driven.

What feels coherent internally may look fragmented externally. What feels “good enough” may not meet global peer expectations. This is where “blind spots” emerge.

Common Blind Spots in Accreditation

Some of the most common and serious “blind spots” with respect to accreditation standards that we see are discussed below. 

Strategy–Execution Gaps

A compelling strategic plan exists, but documentation does not demonstrate systematic execution of the plan, measurable outcomes, or continuous improvement.

Assurance of Learning Weaknesses

Learning goals are defined, but:

  • Rubrics are missing or inconsistent
  • Data collection cycles lack discipline
  • “Closing of the loop” has never been performed in a meaningful way

All these issues can lead external peer reviews to a conclusion that the school’s assessment system is not adequate. 

Faculty Qualification Risk

Faculty classifications (e.g., SA, PA, SP, IP under AACSB) may seem to be strong overall, but there are clear gaps when faculty qualifications are analyzed by disciplines, programs, or with respect to teaching loads or future retirement projections.

Documentation and Narrative Misalignment

The self-evaluation report may describe excellence, but the supporting documents do not fully align with the narrative. Quite often, external peer reviewers usually pay less attention to what business schools say and more attention to what the actual documentation appears to suggest. 

Impact Gaps

Advisory boards exist, but their strategic influence is unclear. Corporate engagement is active, but impact evidence is limited.

Oftentimes, these issues are not real problems or failures with respect to accreditation standards. Quite often, these are just perspective gaps that can be rectified with minimal training or additional supporting documentation. 

What an Accreditation Consultant Actually Does

Of course, an accreditation consultant does not replace institutional leadership or faculty ownership when it comes to rectifying these deficiencies. Instead, accreditation consultants provide:

  • External Perspective: Accreditation consultants can read your documentation as a peer reviewer would. 
  • Standards Interpretation: Accreditation standards are principle-based and sometimes ambiguous. Experienced consultants understand how standards are interpreted during review visits.
  • Risk Identification: Accreditation consultants can identify structural vulnerabilities early, before they become findings of external reviewers. 
  • Narrative Coherence: Accreditation consultants ensure alignment among mission, vision, strategy, faculty portfolio, assurance of earning, engagement, and impact.
  • Visit Preparation: Accreditation consultants can help a business simulate reviewer questions and stress-test responses via a “mock visit.” 

In short, they help the institution see what it cannot see on its own.

Accreditation Is a Strategic Transformation — Not Compliance Exercise

Accreditation is often misunderstood as a documentation project. It is not.

It is a strategic transformation process that requires:

  • Cross-functional alignment
  • Data discipline
  • Cultural buy-in
  • Evidence of impact
  • Continuous improvement

Leading this transformation while simultaneously evaluating it objectively is extremely difficult.

Just as an organization may hire an external auditor for financial integrity, engaging an accreditation consultant strengthens academic integrity and strategic clarity.

The Value of a Second Set of Eyes

The Ethiopian proverb reminds us: You cannot see your own eyes. But someone else can.

For business schools, that second set of eyes can mean:

  • Fewer surprises during the peer review visit
  • Greater faculty confidence
  • Clearer documentation
  • Stronger strategic coherence
  • Reduced stress
  • Higher probability of a positive outcome

Seeing clearly, before others evaluate you, is not a weakness. It is strategic leadership.

Keep in mind that for many business schools pursuing accreditation the question is not whether your school is strong. The question is whether you can objectively see your own blind spots.

Sometimes, the most valuable step forward is inviting someone else to help you see.

Do We Need an Accreditation Consultant?

International Business Accreditation Consultant

By Dr. Vlad Krotov

Pursuing international business accreditation is one of the most consequential strategic decisions a business school can make. Achieving an international accreditation—such as AACSB, EQUIS(EFMD), AMBA(BGA), or ACBSP—signals quality, academic rigor, and global credibility to students, employers, and peer institutions alike.

At the same time, these accreditations are neither quick nor simple to obtain. Accreditation projects demand sustained and disciplined effort across multiple years, careful coordination among faculty and staff, and significant financial investment. For many schools, accreditation becomes not just a quality initiative, but a major organizational change effort.

When business schools move from aspiration to execution (and realize how complex, time consuming, and expensive an accreditation effort can be), a practical and often unavoidable question emerges for deans and other academic leaders: 

Do we need an accreditation consultant?

While some institutions attempt to manage the accreditation process entirely in-house, many discover that the scope, risk, and complexity involved make external support both economically and strategically sound. Indeed, there are numerous advantages to working with knowledgeable, experienced, trustworthy, and motivated accreditation professionals. Some of these advantages are discussed in the sections below. 

Cost Savings and Predictable Expenses

In many countries, hiring a full-time accreditation professional is expensive. For example, in the United States, a realistic base salary to hire someone is around $80,000 or more. When payroll taxes, benefits, professional development, and overhead are added, the true cost can approach twice that amount.

A contract with an accreditation consultant is often significantly less than the fully loaded cost of a permanent hire. Just as important, consulting fees are predictable, time-bound, and milestone-driven, allowing institutions to budget with far greater clarity and confidence.

By hiring an international accreditation consultant for business schools, such as Accreditation.Biz, schools gain access to senior-level expertise at a fraction of the cost of building the same capability internally.

Allowing Faculty to Focus on the Core Mission

Faculty are hired to teach, conduct research, mentor students, and contribute intellectually to the discipline—not to manage accreditation logistics. Accreditation projects require extensive work in such areas as:

  • Assurance of Learning (AoL) system design
  • Data collection and validation
  • Documentation and reporting
  • Continuous improvement narratives

An accreditation consultant absorbs much of this operational and technical burden. This allows faculty to focus on teaching, research, and service to the school and broader community—the very activities that accreditation agencies, such as AACSB, expect institutions to prioritize.

Avoiding Costly Mistakes in a High-Stakes Process

Accreditation is not just time consuming. It is expensive. For example, to obtain AACSB accreditation, business schools often face:

  • Tens of thousands of dollars in accreditation and membership fees
  • Hundreds of thousands (if not millions) in indirect costs related to faculty and staff hiring, new faculty workload models, and research infrastructure

Thus, mistakes in interpretation, sequencing, or implementation can be very costly. Poorly designed AoL systems, confusing faculty qualification policies, or weak strategic alignment can lead to delays, additional visits, or adverse outcomes. An experienced accreditation consultant helps institutions get it right the first time, reducing rework, delays, and unnecessary spending.

Reducing the Risk of Accreditation Failure

International business accreditation, such as AACSB, is too important to approach experimentally. It is better not to be accredited than to start the process, invest heavily, and fail. Accreditation project failure can negatively affect:

  • Institutional reputation
  • Faculty and staff morale
  • Student recruitment and retention
  • Confidence among employers and other external stakeholders

Accreditation consultants bring pattern recognition developed across many institutions. They understand where schools typically struggle, how peer review teams actually interpret standards, and what constitutes an optimal way to meet the requirements of a particular standart. This experience significantly lowers institutional risk.

Maintaining Momentum

One of the most common challenges in accreditation is loss of momentum. Internal leadership changes, shifting priorities, or faculty turnover can stall accreditation progress for months or even years. An accreditation consultant provides:

  • Clear timelines and deliverables
  • External accountability
  • Continuous forward pressure

This helps schools stay on schedule and avoid the slow drift that often undermines accreditation efforts.

Translating Standards into Practical Action

Accreditation standards are intentionally principle-based and flexible—but that flexibility can be confusing. Many business schools fall into extremes: they either don’t do enough to meet an accreditation standards, or do things in the most tedious and expensive way. Accreditation consultants, with their practical experience, help translate accreditation standards into:

  • Practical, validated policies and procedures
  • Simple and scalable quality improvement systems related to strategic management and assurance of learning
  • Templates and documentation that align with formal standards and actual expectations of peer review team members

Rather than guessing what accreditation reviewers really want, business schools canb benefit from experience-based interpretation grounded in prior visits and outcomes.

External Perspective

Internal accreditation project teams can become too close to their own processes and viewpoints. An external accreditation consultant brings an objective, independent perspective that helps identify blind spots, inconsistencies, and overcomplication. This outside view is especially valuable when:

  • Preparing for eligibility or initial accreditation
  • Conducting gap analyses
  • Preparing for peer review team visits

Deficiencies should be detected and addressed in advance, so that there are no unpleasant surprises during the actual high-stake accreditation milestones. 

Building Sustainable Systems

Good accreditation consulting is not about “checking boxes.” It is about building sustainable systems that continue to function long after the review visit. Experienced consultants focus on:

  • Long-term sustainability of the accreditation project
  • Continuous improvement culture
  • Faculty ownership without burnout

This focus helps ensure that accreditation is not just achieved—but maintained efficiently.

Conclusion: Who Benefits Most from an Accreditation Consultant?

Some large, well-funded business schools have the internal expertise and resources to manage accreditation independently. Even so, many of these institutions find that they can save time and money by outsourcing parts of the process—such as AoL system design, mock visits, or standards gap analyses.

For smaller institutions and international business schools, the benefits are often even greater. Limited internal resources, unfamiliarity with North American or European business education processes, and high financial stakes make external expertise particularly valuable.

In these cases, working with an experienced accreditation consultant—such as Accreditation.Biz—can mean the difference between a controlled, successful accreditation journey and an expensive, stressful, and uncertain one.