Anonymous wrote:It’s an utter waste of time to major in business as an undergrad (and the degree isn’t well regarded). Those programs are more akin to trade schools. Undergrad education should be focused on building skills and capabilities that can be transferred to a work environment....critical thinking, research, writing, oral communication, reasoning and logic, decision making, etc. As others have said, major in a humanities or social science discipline, graduate and work four years and then go to a top 10 MBA program if you can.
Anonymous wrote:SO much bad information being spewed here from people who have no idea how undergrad recruiting works if your are trying to do anything banking, finance, audit or consulting related. If you are not at a "targeted" university for undergrad, ie one that these companies actually actively recruit on campus for, do not think that a liberal arts degree is going to magically open doors for careers in these areas. If you are from a top rated larger university, that has an undergrad business school, it is very difficult to secure internships and jobs with an econ or other non business degree (engineering is an exception). The recruiters assume that you could not get into the business school if you have a liberal arts degree but are wanting to do business/banking. If you are from a top 20 liberal arts school that is desired by some of these industries, you can break into these fields though with a little planning. If you want a more "insider" look at how all this works, look at the forum for "Poets & Quants". Do not look at USNEWS and all the other BS ranking sites for advice. They are useless. Also, an MBA is very valuable currently, but after a few years in the industry. Most companies will not only pay for it, but will help you get into a top MBA program, in exchange for a promise to continue to work for them for a period of time, typically 2-5 years after you get the MBA.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s my take on the UG biz degree vs. Econ/liberal arts:
I graduated with econ a few years ago from a semi-target (think Notre Dame or Vandy) and I have a job in FP&A at a tech company. To me, recruiting straight out of college with a non-business degree is a bit of an awkward place to recruit from. Most dumb HR people will ask you "why econ" (or history, or math, or whatever) as if there were a chance you could find work as an "economist" or “mathematician” straight out of undergrad. However, when you get to actually interview with the team you would potentially work with, many managers find it refreshing someone has a "bigger picture" about the economy and will sometimes ask you macro economic trends if they ask about your major.
The thing about majoring in something outside of business/finance if you want to work in the field is that you still need to convey that you know financial modelling and basic accounting. Many times in interviews, I had to specifically call out that I had accounting courses in my curriculum and that I have an equal amount of finance And business courses as well. As long as you can convey that, then you should be fine. But please do not think for a second that you can major in history and that they will hire you simply because you come across as intelligent, well-spoken, and having critical thinking skills. Ultimately whoever is hiring you wants you on data analysis and financial modelling, not researching macroeconomic trends or medieval history. So if you cant convince them of a basic DCF, or even a rollforward you're SOL.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s my take on the UG biz degree vs. Econ/liberal arts:
I graduated with econ a few years ago from a semi-target (think Notre Dame or Vandy) and I have a job in FP&A at a tech company. To me, recruiting straight out of college with a non-business degree is a bit of an awkward place to recruit from. Most dumb HR people will ask you "why econ" (or history, or math, or whatever) as if there were a chance you could find work as an "economist" or “mathematician” straight out of undergrad. However, when you get to actually interview with the team you would potentially work with, many managers find it refreshing someone has a "bigger picture" about the economy and will sometimes ask you macro economic trends if they ask about your major.
The thing about majoring in something outside of business/finance if you want to work in the field is that you still need to convey that you know financial modelling and basic accounting. Many times in interviews, I had to specifically call out that I had accounting courses in my curriculum and that I have an equal amount of finance And business courses as well. As long as you can convey that, then you should be fine. But please do not think for a second that you can major in history and that they will hire you simply because you come across as intelligent, well-spoken, and having critical thinking skills. Ultimately whoever is hiring you wants you on data analysis and financial modelling, not researching macroeconomic trends or medieval history. So if you cant convince them of a basic DCF, or even a rollforward you're SOL.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s my take on the UG biz degree vs. Econ/liberal arts:
I graduated with econ a few years ago from a semi-target (think Notre Dame or Vandy) and I have a job in FP&A at a tech company. To me, recruiting straight out of college with a non-business degree is a bit of an awkward place to recruit from. Most dumb HR people will ask you "why econ" (or history, or math, or whatever) as if there were a chance you could find work as an "economist" or “mathematician” straight out of undergrad. However, when you get to actually interview with the team you would potentially work with, many managers find it refreshing someone has a "bigger picture" about the economy and will sometimes ask you macro economic trends if they ask about your major.
The thing about majoring in something outside of business/finance if you want to work in the field is that you still need to convey that you know financial modelling and basic accounting. Many times in interviews, I had to specifically call out that I had accounting courses in my curriculum and that I have an equal amount of finance And business courses as well. As long as you can convey that, then you should be fine. But please do not think for a second that you can major in history and that they will hire you simply because you come across as intelligent, well-spoken, and having critical thinking skills. Ultimately whoever is hiring you wants you on data analysis and financial modelling, not researching macroeconomic trends or medieval history. So if you cant convince them of a basic DCF, or even a rollforward you're SOL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a free market capitalist who completely supports business as a worthy career, but I wonder why any bright kid who can attend a selective college would choose to major in business for his/her undergrad degree. Why do I say this? For the following reasons:
1. If one wants to maximize possibilities for the most sought after business jobs (eg, IB, consulting, hedge fund, PE, VC, top corporate jobs), then an MBA from a top business school is the ultimate credential. But if someone is going to get an MBA down the road, why major in business in undergrad instead of anything else that won't be duplicative with graduate business school education? The top business schools are generally looking to admit and train future leaders who have not already specialized in business education as college. I would argue that any STEM subject or economics would be a better major for someone with quant skills looking to get an MBA later, and any liberal; arts major would also be better for a non-quant student also looking to get an MBA.
2. Yes, maybe your chances of getting an entry-level job in IB or consulting out of undergrad is higher with a business major from a top school, but the vast majority of these kids are probably thinking of getting an MBA after 2-3 years of work experience. If that is the case, why not study something else or a broad range of subjects in college when this is your last chance to explore and take whatever class interests you? And if your goal is to attend an M7 graduate business school, all things being equal, your chances of getting admitted with an undergrad business major is less because the value-add of a MBA is also perceived to be less by admissions officers who seek to build a diverse and interesting class with people from all academic backgrounds.
To sum it up, I'm arguing that an undergrad business degree is the worst education a smart kid can pursue. I didn't say it's the worst decision one can make or that it can't lead to a decent job after graduation, I'm just saying it's a poor education for someone smart enough to get into a highly selective school because that person could gain a more well rounded education, achieve the same outcome after graduation, and attend a top graduate business school without spending precious 4 years studying business in college.
Top students get into investment banks, private equity and hedge funds from undergrad. There's no reason to major in Economics when they could major in Finance from a top undergraduate business school. Of course if they go to an Ivy they could major in history and get into Wall Street. But that doesn't hold for students from top publics like Michigan, UVA, etc.
Finance is a better major than Economics since Economics is entirely bullshit, and MBA doesn't cover much Finance anyways
When you say Finance is a better major than Econ, let's distinguish between finance for dummies vs real quant finance. The former is what IB'ers, PE and VC do, anyone with decent high school arithmetic skills can understand financial statements and build Excel models which is why history majors from Ivy schools are capably suited. Real quant finance as practiced by the elite hedge funds requires graduate-level math, stats, and computer skills which is why they hire PhD's in quant fields. These jobs are well beyond the reach of business school kids, either undergrad or MBA, because they require elite skills, not Finance as taught in business schools. Anyone can learn NPV and derivative pricing concepts, but not everyone can apply sophisticated math models and algorithms to exploit data correlations to make money.
When I say Finance undergraduate, I meant the former, not quantitative finance.
Finance at top undergraduate business schools is far better than Economics, while getting the lower-level theoretical Economics courses are required anyways. And it is quantitatively heavy.
Economics major, meanwhile, is generally the path that students that can't even get into the undergraduate business school of their universities take. Basically, pre-Finance kids that can't get into their undergraduate business school drop out into Economics. It's a major for relatively mediocre students in the vast majority of universities throughout the country, including UVA, UT-Austin, U-Michigan, who otherwise have great undergraduate business schools.
Of course, at schools without undergrad business schools i.e. Harvard, those that want to go into business generally take Economics. But if there is an undergrad business school, then Finance major is generally better and filled with better students due to the filtering when applying for the undergrad business school.
Let's presume that your assumptions are correct, that business-minded students at universities with undergrad business schools prefer that option over majoring in Economics in the liberal arts school because they perceive this route to be more directly applicable to their near term goal of getting a finance-related job after graduation. However, there are 2 counterarguments to your position, one of which you have alluded to:
1. Why is that the most elite colleges don't offer an undergrad business major (with the exception of Penn and Wharton, but that reveals more about Penn and its relative standing)? Harvard and Stanford and other Top 10 schools have graduate business schools and could easily extend that to an undergrad option, but why don't they? Because they don't feel that devoting 4 years to studying business is a worthwhile undergrad pursuit when one can specialize in that profession later by getting an MBA. Instead, they hope to cultivate critical thinking skills which will serve their student well no matter what career they eventually pursue.
2. You criticize Econ as being more theoretical than Finance which is more practical, but that is exactly the point if the goal is to develop reasoning skills. Econ at the best schools is heavily quantitative and the best preparation for graduate school Econ is math which aligns with the skill set that quant finance is seeking. Students would be far better served majoring in Econ and taking lots of advanced math courses while also taking a few business school courses at their university than majoring in business in undergrad. Study any liberal arts subject and then get your MBA at an M7 business school. Would you rather have an undergrad business degree from Wharton or an MBA from Wharton?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a free market capitalist who completely supports business as a worthy career, but I wonder why any bright kid who can attend a selective college would choose to major in business for his/her undergrad degree. Why do I say this? For the following reasons:
1. If one wants to maximize possibilities for the most sought after business jobs (eg, IB, consulting, hedge fund, PE, VC, top corporate jobs), then an MBA from a top business school is the ultimate credential. But if someone is going to get an MBA down the road, why major in business in undergrad instead of anything else that won't be duplicative with graduate business school education? The top business schools are generally looking to admit and train future leaders who have not already specialized in business education as college. I would argue that any STEM subject or economics would be a better major for someone with quant skills looking to get an MBA later, and any liberal; arts major would also be better for a non-quant student also looking to get an MBA.
2. Yes, maybe your chances of getting an entry-level job in IB or consulting out of undergrad is higher with a business major from a top school, but the vast majority of these kids are probably thinking of getting an MBA after 2-3 years of work experience. If that is the case, why not study something else or a broad range of subjects in college when this is your last chance to explore and take whatever class interests you? And if your goal is to attend an M7 graduate business school, all things being equal, your chances of getting admitted with an undergrad business major is less because the value-add of a MBA is also perceived to be less by admissions officers who seek to build a diverse and interesting class with people from all academic backgrounds.
To sum it up, I'm arguing that an undergrad business degree is the worst education a smart kid can pursue. I didn't say it's the worst decision one can make or that it can't lead to a decent job after graduation, I'm just saying it's a poor education for someone smart enough to get into a highly selective school because that person could gain a more well rounded education, achieve the same outcome after graduation, and attend a top graduate business school without spending precious 4 years studying business in college.
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