KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality is a private institution based in Bordeaux. The school offers 8 programs across hospitality management, culinary arts, tourism and adjacent disciplines.
Across all programs, graduates face a hospitality industry mid-way through an AI transition: roughly 37% of entry-level task time is automatable today, while 76% of a graduate's output can be amplified by current AI tools. We break this down per program below.
Every hospitality discipline is being reshaped at a different speed. Below is the AI exposure profile for each program at KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality, with the specific tasks being automated, the work being amplified, and the tools graduates should be fluent in before they leave.
Automation risk vs augmentation upside
Per program — automation is what AI removes, augmentation is what AI multiplies.
Diploma in Wine, Beverage & Sommelier Studies at KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality sits in the low-exposure band of the AI-impact curve. Roughly 30% of the entry-level task surface is now automatable, while 61% of a graduate's output can be amplified by AI tools. The net effect: graduates who treat AI as a co-pilot are projected to earn +8% more by year five than peers who don't. Sensory work is safe; AI lifts the commercial and educational side.
Diploma in Yacht & Cruise Hospitality at KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality sits in the moderate-exposure band of the AI-impact curve. Roughly 44% of the entry-level task surface is now automatable, while 74% of a graduate's output can be amplified by AI tools. The net effect: graduates who treat AI as a co-pilot are projected to earn +8% more by year five than peers who don't. High augmentation, low replacement — managers who use AI will out-earn those who don't.
BA (Hons) in Tourism Management at KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality sits in the high-exposure band of the AI-impact curve. Roughly 52% of the entry-level task surface is now automatable, while 74% of a graduate's output can be amplified by AI tools. The net effect: graduates who treat AI as a co-pilot are projected to earn +8% more by year five than peers who don't. Highest exposure in the discipline — traditional agency work is being rewritten end-to-end.
BA in Event Management at KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality sits in the moderate-exposure band of the AI-impact curve. Roughly 46% of the entry-level task surface is now automatable, while 75% of a graduate's output can be amplified by AI tools. The net effect: graduates who treat AI as a co-pilot are projected to earn +10% more by year five than peers who don't. Production work is being absorbed — strategy and on-site judgement command a premium.
MSc in International Tourism Management at KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality sits in the high-exposure band of the AI-impact curve. Roughly 48% of the entry-level task surface is now automatable, while 80% of a graduate's output can be amplified by AI tools. The net effect: graduates who treat AI as a co-pilot are projected to earn +15% more by year five than peers who don't. Highest exposure in the discipline — traditional agency work is being rewritten end-to-end.
MSc in Luxury Brand & Hospitality Management at KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality sits in the moderate-exposure band of the AI-impact curve. Roughly 24% of the entry-level task surface is now automatable, while 88% of a graduate's output can be amplified by AI tools. The net effect: graduates who treat AI as a co-pilot are projected to earn +26% more by year five than peers who don't. Taste and clienteling stay human — AI handles the long tail of personalisation.
MSc in Luxury Yacht & Cruise Management at KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality sits in the moderate-exposure band of the AI-impact curve. Roughly 34% of the entry-level task surface is now automatable, while 84% of a graduate's output can be amplified by AI tools. The net effect: graduates who treat AI as a co-pilot are projected to earn +22% more by year five than peers who don't. High augmentation, low replacement — managers who use AI will out-earn those who don't.
MSc in Wine & Beverage Business at KEDGE Business School - Wine & Hospitality sits in the low-exposure band of the AI-impact curve. Roughly 20% of the entry-level task surface is now automatable, while 71% of a graduate's output can be amplified by AI tools. The net effect: graduates who treat AI as a co-pilot are projected to earn +22% more by year five than peers who don't. Sensory work is safe; AI lifts the commercial and educational side.