Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been on the hiring panel for a large, multinational bank. We do care where people went to school, but it’s certainly not Ivy or bust. I don’t have a firm cutoff, but T50 is roughly where I want to see degrees from.
However, much more important is how someone comes across and what their skill set is. Show me what you bring to the table. I would hire a Fordham grad over a Harvard grad in a second if the Fordham grad brought the skill set we need.
That's great and all, but you just said that you would trash the JMU or UMBC resume and hire the less skilled Harvard grad. That's not Ivy or bust, but it's great school or bust
I think for a lot it is great school or bust although super outstanding performance anywhere gets noticed and will get you in. Average JMU will not open a lot of doors but there are still lots of doors open.
It is job dependent. Some jobs they say there could care less. It really depends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You post about your lacrosse team networking like every week.
If your brother BOTH went to Ivy, I doubt you are some rags to riches story off the back of hard work and sportsmanship.
I mean Lacrosse is already a rich sport, I know it’s not played in poorer communities and requires expensive equipment and large fields.
Lacrosse is NOT a rich sport, it is for MC folks. Tennis or golf is a sport for the rich. It costs money to play lacrosse but nowhere near the amount for golf or tennis. Golf costs around 40k/yr and tennis around 35k/yr.
- Signed by a parent with two kids that play golf and tennis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
That’s false. You need to meet more actual people not toil in imagination land.
What matters is the Career Services Department, Recruiting, Alumni network and job or grad school placement in your area of interest.
Only some of the wealthy Intl students openly go work at some big fmaily conglomerate in the homeland. But many families require their kids to work 10 years elsewhere to learn more and new things, then come to family company.
It’s way less subtle then work for family business. It’s knowing some executive and recommending your son, and then you hire their daughter etc. it’s also knowing which careers and how to navigate them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been on the hiring panel for a large, multinational bank. We do care where people went to school, but it’s certainly not Ivy or bust. I don’t have a firm cutoff, but T50 is roughly where I want to see degrees from.
However, much more important is how someone comes across and what their skill set is. Show me what you bring to the table. I would hire a Fordham grad over a Harvard grad in a second if the Fordham grad brought the skill set we need.
That's great and all, but you just said that you would trash the JMU or UMBC resume and hire the less skilled Harvard grad. That's not Ivy or bust, but it's great school or bust
Anonymous wrote:It depends on the field. In finance and consulting it matters a lot. You could be the best student at the University of Georgia but you're not getting an interview at McKinsey or Goldman. It's dumb and outdated but that's how they roll. Pedigree degrees are important in those fields.
In STEM fields, it doesn't matter that much. MIT, Stanford, Rice and Cornell probably open a few more doors. But for the most part, publics like UIUC, Michigan, Maryland, Purdue, Georgia Tech, Texas A&M and others do a much better job than the Ivies. An Ohio State or Wisconsin degree in engineering will be taken more seriously than one from Yale or Brown.
The benefit of going to a top name school is the networking. Harvard engineering might suck, but that's a very good network for a young grad to plug into. But a lot depends on the state you live in. In states like California, Michigan, or Virginia, it's almost always better to go to the state flagship schools. If you live in Oklahoma and you're ambitious it's probably best to leave the sate.
Anonymous wrote:From your experience, do graduates of Top 25 universities and Top 10 liberal arts colleges get more interviews, interesting jobs, or money? I’m talking only about the UNDERGRADUATE degree.
I understand that anyone who goes to an Ivy MBA, law, or medical school will do well, but that’s really about the professional school, not undergraduate.
I’m trying to understand if it’s worth paying lots of money to go to a prestigious private school over a very selective state school for UNDERGRAD.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been on the hiring panel for a large, multinational bank. We do care where people went to school, but it’s certainly not Ivy or bust. I don’t have a firm cutoff, but T50 is roughly where I want to see degrees from.
However, much more important is how someone comes across and what their skill set is. Show me what you bring to the table. I would hire a Fordham grad over a Harvard grad in a second if the Fordham grad brought the skill set we need.
Anonymous wrote:The lax bro network is real. It is great where your brothers went too! I know guys who played at Harvard and Swarthmore and they all do very well and are drawn into high paying industries (mostly finance) in large numbers.
They also end up in MBA programs at places like HBS and in NYC at Columbia and NYU so OP's question is still tough to answer. They get good jobs for a few years and go to good grad schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
That’s false. You need to meet more actual people not toil in imagination land.
What matters is the Career Services Department, Recruiting, Alumni network and job or grad school placement in your area of interest.
Only some of the wealthy Intl students openly go work at some big fmaily conglomerate in the homeland. But many families require their kids to work 10 years elsewhere to learn more and new things, then come to family company.
It’s way less subtle than work for family business. It’s knowing some executive and recommending your son, and then you hire their daughter etc. it’s also knowing which careers and how to navigate them.
Unclear how you ever got an internship or job in your teens or 20s.
Did you apply and do a few rounds of interviews? And then you noticed that a bunch of hires were fast tracked into the training class or role by not interviewing, just by being someone’s kid?
That’s what you saw happening? When and where was this?!
DP. My family isn’t rich, but my dad was president of a publicly traded company. When I was interviewing for my first job after getting an MBA, my dad called someone at a company that I’d sent a resume to. The hiring manager reported up through someone used to work for my dad, and that executive made sure I got an interview. I only found that out much later, and I was pretty disappointed to hear it.
I advanced pretty quickly there, but was occasionally mystified that some people I met were really hostile on fist meeting me. I knew the company was a spin-off of my dad’s company, but didn’t know that he was deeply involved in its creation through IPO, so they all knew who my dad was and viewed me as having my job through nepotism, which turned out to be true.
???? DCUM delusion at its finest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
That’s false. You need to meet more actual people not toil in imagination land.
What matters is the Career Services Department, Recruiting, Alumni network and job or grad school placement in your area of interest.
Only some of the wealthy Intl students openly go work at some big fmaily conglomerate in the homeland. But many families require their kids to work 10 years elsewhere to learn more and new things, then come to family company.
It’s way less subtle than work for family business. It’s knowing some executive and recommending your son, and then you hire their daughter etc. it’s also knowing which careers and how to navigate them.
Unclear how you ever got an internship or job in your teens or 20s.
Did you apply and do a few rounds of interviews? And then you noticed that a bunch of hires were fast tracked into the training class or role by not interviewing, just by being someone’s kid?
That’s what you saw happening? When and where was this?!
DP. My family isn’t rich, but my dad was president of a publicly traded company. When I was interviewing for my first job after getting an MBA, my dad called someone at a company that I’d sent a resume to. The hiring manager reported up through someone used to work for my dad, and that executive made sure I got an interview. I only found that out much later, and I was pretty disappointed to hear it.
I advanced pretty quickly there, but was occasionally mystified that some people I met were really hostile on fist meeting me. I knew the company was a spin-off of my dad’s company, but didn’t know that he was deeply involved in its creation through IPO, so they all knew who my dad was and viewed me as having my job through nepotism, which turned out to be true.
Anonymous wrote:From your experience, do graduates of Top 25 universities and Top 10 liberal arts colleges get more interviews, interesting jobs, or money? I’m talking only about the UNDERGRADUATE degree.
I understand that anyone who goes to an Ivy MBA, law, or medical school will do well, but that’s really about the professional school, not undergraduate.
I’m trying to understand if it’s worth paying lots of money to go to a prestigious private school over a very selective state school for UNDERGRAD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually they have jobs waiting for them via their parent/relative’s company or connections.
It’s not just about the degree. It’s about the legions of privileges that enabled you to attend such a school in the first place. (And please none of the rags-to-riches stories - these obviously are not the norm.)
That’s false. You need to meet more actual people not toil in imagination land.
What matters is the Career Services Department, Recruiting, Alumni network and job or grad school placement in your area of interest.
Only some of the wealthy Intl students openly go work at some big fmaily conglomerate in the homeland. But many families require their kids to work 10 years elsewhere to learn more and new things, then come to family company.
It’s way less subtle than work for family business. It’s knowing some executive and recommending your son, and then you hire their daughter etc. it’s also knowing which careers and how to navigate them.
Unclear how you ever got an internship or job in your teens or 20s.
Did you apply and do a few rounds of interviews? And then you noticed that a bunch of hires were fast tracked into the training class or role by not interviewing, just by being someone’s kid?
That’s what you saw happening? When and where was this?!
Anonymous wrote:The lax bro network is real. It is great where your brothers went too! I know guys who played at Harvard and Swarthmore and they all do very well and are drawn into high paying industries (mostly finance) in large numbers.
They also end up in MBA programs at places like HBS and in NYC at Columbia and NYU so OP's question is still tough to answer. They get good jobs for a few years and go to good grad schools.