That's a fair point even though Indiana and Rice appear to be ranked similarly to GU, the GU name will most likely take you further than those other two. I guess to me the bigger point is, does it even make financial sense to for the MBA (especially given the market saturation) if you got into a school of the caliber of GU, Rice, Indiana, etc (at least per the rankings, those three school seems to have fairly similar outcomes at least average salary wise but Indiana does seem more selective). I am and for a long time have been of the opinion, no, if you fail to get into the top 10 (some even say M7 but I think top 10 is fine) than financially it may not be worth it. But of course it does depend on individual circumstances. But the outcomes, at least in terms of average salary (which I agree is just one data point) of say GU, Rice, Indiana just does not seem worth the massive investment of time, money, and lost income. |
Anyone who is hiring MBA’s is able to differentiate between these. I would not have the same expectations of the education of a full program vs a partial program. Similarly I wouldn’t have the same expectations of someone who went to Harvard vs Phoenix online. That said, it isn’t the time of day classes are taken that is the differentiator. You can do a full program and take some classes in the evening, or take twice as long and do it part time. The difference is whether you are fulfilling all of the credit hours, classes, and graduation requirements of the full program at the business school with the business school professors. |
Typically, an executive MBA is more prestigious than just a regular MBA for youngsters with just a couple of years of post-undergraduate degree work experience. |
Of course! |
+1 WTAF? |
Will probably drop out of the T25, and replaced with Georgia Tech and maybe Vanderbilt. Atlanta and the rest of the southern schools will continue to rise. |
Georgia Tech? Get serious. |
It’s not M7 & its average pay ($138k) & ROI are not great. 50% acceptance rate dooms it, but it’s #1 in top 6 city. Ok, nothing more to say. Everybody get back to making look like you are busy. |
Actually, it’s just the opposite, I see an executive mba as more of an honorary degree. That one is definitely part time or online, and given to people who have already made it to the C suite or senior leadership. The full-time MBAs usually have around 5 years of work experience and actually have to do work in their classes. |
+1 |
+2 |
Only in person non-executive MBAs mean something. The online MBAs are cash cows for the institutions. The Executive MBAs are cash cows for the institutions.
Prestigious MBAs: UPenn Wharton Harvard Stanford MIT Chicago Northwestern Columbia Yale NYU Dartmouth Oxford Insead LSE That's it folks! |
Reasonable opinion for one who lacks actual knowledge, but I disagree. Regular full-time MBAs are for those with 2 to 5 years of post-undergraduate degree work experience; Executive MBAs typically require at least 10 years of post-undergraduate work experience and 5 years work experience as a manager or above. all executive MBAs are cohort based and are designed to be part-time as most or usually all participants are working while enrolled in an EMBA program. Regular MBA candidates would be lost in an EMBA program. Regular MBAs are at the kiddie stage with respect to management know-how and experience. |
LOL ! No, you are wrong. You misunderstand both EMBA programs and "honorary degrees". |
No. Executive MBAs are NOT prestigious. |