People with Ph.Ds do not say "eeuuuwww" |
| MBAs are new new BAs. People who care about their kids push them to get an MBA. |
Exactly. It is not advanced. |
| Venture capital firms are not hiring BAs they’re hiring MBAs from Stanford Harvard and Wharton earning about $300,000 starting salary. Consulting firms, financial services all paying good money and bonuses. I’m not sure why people are sneering at MBAs |
Because a lot of the parents boasting about their kids' MBAs think that their degree from Rochester or UMD or Fordham is on par with a Harvard MBA. (I have an MBA from one of the first three schools I mentioned.) |
So these adult kids with MBAs are unemployed, that's your gripe? |
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I have an MBA in Finance. I went in person 3.5 years after work in a part time program. Pre on-line schools.
MBAs were hard back in the day. My school wanted people with work experience at prestigious companies and references etc. We were all working full time and doing school 7-10 pm. Today you can get on online or just stay one extra year in school and have one at 22 My own niece just stayed on more year on college partying and got one. In my day the classroom discussions were interesting. People in class were 25-40 many were AVPs, VPs etc trying to reach next level. |
You are a ninny. I am a boomer. Everyone, I went to college with earned a JD, MD, MBA or some combination thereof. We were all educated enough to value/respect each other's choices. Are you an uneducated MAGA or southern? |
Kellogg is ranked 2nd in the nation, and just had a 10k salary increase for their grads. Yall say anything on here, and it sounds a bit like "they're letting in too many minorities and lgbtq" to me. |
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It's a big accomplishment.
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An MBA is a very practical degree. If you're not born with a silver spoon, getting an MBA from a good program can be a huge boost for your career and earnings.
That was definitely the case for me. I came from modest means, got an MBA from a top program, and now make excellent money and have a nice career in a field I enjoy. I couldn't care less about prestige or what anyone else thinks! |
Great post. Earning an MBA after a few years of post-undergraduate work experience is a solid step on a path to promotions and higher pay. An MBA program helps in many ways, but the two most obvious are to see the big picture and to have an approach to solving problems. Another advantage to earning an MBA is, unlike law or medicine, that there are no licensing process or continuing education requirements after completing the degree requirements. Also, an MBA is a universally recognized and respected degree. Full-time MBA programs usually require 2 years of study while law school is 3 years and medical school at least 4 years. |
Interesting observation that some MBA programs do not require post undergraduate degree work experience. Your niece wasn't ready to leave college & enter the workforce full-time so she made good use of an extra year in college at a school where she was very happy. Nothing wrong with this. Happiness is hard to find. There are many options and many paths in life. I applaud her for taking time to enjoy life in a productive manner. To an extent, I am envious as well because she enjoyed her college years so much to stay an extra year. Many public universities are generous with awarding college credit for pre-college accomplishments through testing or advanced high school courses. One might enter a public university with enough credits to start as a sophomore and graduate within three years. Taking an extra year to earn a higher degree such as an MBA or specialized masters degree (very common for accounting majors) could be a wise use of time in order to mature a bit more and enjoy life at a time when one has fewer obligations. Such a student could go straight through from kindergarten to MBA and then--after a few years (say 5 years) of work experience return and earn a second masters degree. Yes, I hear the laughter, but MBA material is best learned after several years of post undergraduate degree work experience as a more mature, more experienced person. Some folks are just not ready to enter the workforce at age 21 or 22. Different paths. Or wait until 10 years or more of work experience and enroll in an EMBA program (Executive MBA). Point is that your niece used her time in a productive manner while prolonging for one year a very happy time in her young life. She can still pursue another higher degree many years later. |
NP here. What’s wrong with an MBA from Rochester/UMD/Fordham? Give me a break, it’s 2023, I don’t care if someone went to HBS. Those grads don’t have a lock on being smart, successful and worth of praise for their accomplishment. |
What are you talking about? Any degree above the baccalaureate level is by definition an “advanced degree.” |