Anonymous wrote:Banking, then PE, then top MBA, the hedge fund, then asset mgmt. now doing my own thing. It's great.
At some point, unless your bosses are doing the apprentice model with you, you are spinning your wheels. And must branch out, I was suffocating under an inept boss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an MBA from a top 10 worldwide school (so not US school.. ranks 3-10 worldwide depending on the year). My bachelor's is in IT from a top 5 US engineering school. I'm an entrepreneur and make $400k+ per year from my own busines. The MBA helped tremendously in rounding out my skills.
Out of curiosity whats the business?
Software. I see it a lot in this industry. Smart tech people but lack the business mind. The MBA really helped with that deficiency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an MBA from a top 10 worldwide school (so not US school.. ranks 3-10 worldwide depending on the year). My bachelor's is in IT from a top 5 US engineering school. I'm an entrepreneur and make $400k+ per year from my own busines. The MBA helped tremendously in rounding out my skills.
Out of curiosity whats the business?
Anonymous wrote:I have an MBA from a top 10 worldwide school (so not US school.. ranks 3-10 worldwide depending on the year). My bachelor's is in IT from a top 5 US engineering school. I'm an entrepreneur and make $400k+ per year from my own busines. The MBA helped tremendously in rounding out my skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a top 5 (Ivy League) business school. Hugely worth it for me coming out of a liberal arts undergrad with 2 years of work experience. Have been in consulting my whole career, now on my own. Have been earning in the mid 6 figures the last decade. Currently work less than full time, have tons of flexbility, and still in that earnings range. Some/many of my classmates have done way better of course - but most ended up in NY post graduation and that wasn't a path I wanted to take. I don't regret the MBA for even a minute, and I paid for the degree myself.
Mid 6 as in 500,000? That's solid...
I would love to know what kind of consulting pays that much. A lot of finance and accounting consultants are lucky yo make $150k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a top 5 (Ivy League) business school. Hugely worth it for me coming out of a liberal arts undergrad with 2 years of work experience. Have been in consulting my whole career, now on my own. Have been earning in the mid 6 figures the last decade. Currently work less than full time, have tons of flexbility, and still in that earnings range. Some/many of my classmates have done way better of course - but most ended up in NY post graduation and that wasn't a path I wanted to take. I don't regret the MBA for even a minute, and I paid for the degree myself.
Mid 6 as in 500,000? That's solid...
I would love to know what kind of consulting pays that much. A lot of finance and accounting consultants are lucky yo make $150k.
Strategy/management. It's a tougher field these days to be sure, and demand is probably on the decline tong term, but it's still out there. It does tend to be dominated by people from the top schools and credentials do matter (in addition to results of course).
Think McKinsey, Bain, etc. Many of my classmates went that route. I went a more specialized route. I earn less than they do - but don't have the same work expectations either. It's a tough career for mothers because of the travel. In fact McKinsey currently has an initiative to try to lure back women who left the firm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a top 5 (Ivy League) business school. Hugely worth it for me coming out of a liberal arts undergrad with 2 years of work experience. Have been in consulting my whole career, now on my own. Have been earning in the mid 6 figures the last decade. Currently work less than full time, have tons of flexbility, and still in that earnings range. Some/many of my classmates have done way better of course - but most ended up in NY post graduation and that wasn't a path I wanted to take. I don't regret the MBA for even a minute, and I paid for the degree myself.
Mid 6 as in 500,000? That's solid...
I would love to know what kind of consulting pays that much. A lot of finance and accounting consultants are lucky yo make $150k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a top 5 (Ivy League) business school. Hugely worth it for me coming out of a liberal arts undergrad with 2 years of work experience. Have been in consulting my whole career, now on my own. Have been earning in the mid 6 figures the last decade. Currently work less than full time, have tons of flexbility, and still in that earnings range. Some/many of my classmates have done way better of course - but most ended up in NY post graduation and that wasn't a path I wanted to take. I don't regret the MBA for even a minute, and I paid for the degree myself.
Mid 6 as in 500,000? That's solid...
Anonymous wrote:when I heard mid-6 figures, I think they mean between 100,000 and 200,000. PP, please tell us you are not making 500k and working part time!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a top 5 (Ivy League) business school. Hugely worth it for me coming out of a liberal arts undergrad with 2 years of work experience. Have been in consulting my whole career, now on my own. Have been earning in the mid 6 figures the last decade. Currently work less than full time, have tons of flexbility, and still in that earnings range. Some/many of my classmates have done way better of course - but most ended up in NY post graduation and that wasn't a path I wanted to take. I don't regret the MBA for even a minute, and I paid for the degree myself.
Mid 6 as in 500,000? That's solid...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a top 5 (Ivy League) business school. Hugely worth it for me coming out of a liberal arts undergrad with 2 years of work experience. Have been in consulting my whole career, now on my own. Have been earning in the mid 6 figures the last decade. Currently work less than full time, have tons of flexbility, and still in that earnings range. Some/many of my classmates have done way better of course - but most ended up in NY post graduation and that wasn't a path I wanted to take. I don't regret the MBA for even a minute, and I paid for the degree myself.
Mid 6 as in 500,000? That's solid...