Welcome to the Hardcore Husky Forums. Folks who are well-known in Cyberland and not that dumb.

The Eroding Power of the MBA

135

Comments

  • BennyBeaver
    BennyBeaver Member Posts: 13,346

    REAL MBA students work full-time whilst getting the degree. Hence therefore ergo proctor ad hoc, not being "taken out of the real world" for 2 years.

    Even better, they’ll have their company pay for it.
    Yes. That's the scam plan.
  • PurpleThrobber
    PurpleThrobber Member Posts: 48,618 Standard Supporter
    I deal almost daily with 2 MBAs.

    One is fucking brilliant - Columbia MBA. Like almost too brilliant as his emotional IQ is way out of whack. But analytical skills are unreal.

    The other is quite possibly the dumbest man in N. America. He has to have either good blow or gives good handies - there is no way he should be in the position he is in without whynotboth.gif.

    One of my kids is halfway through her MBA on the company's dime at a top 10 school. She still calls mommy 3 times per day for street-smart level advice.

    It all comes down to the individual on whether it has value. The Throbber has different letters behind his name but will go toe to toe with any MBA out there.

  • Sources
    Sources Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 4,396 Founders Club
    MBAs are for networking. Who gives a shit about the curriculum?
  • BleachedAnusDawg
    BleachedAnusDawg Member Posts: 13,773 Standard Supporter
    Learned more from working hard than I ever did in college. College taught me that there are a lot of idiots with useless degrees and lots of debt. When one professor said "read this and write a 30 page essay (which would have added zero value to my life) or do service learning and write 10 pages" the choice was easy for me. Got a job out of it, then a career, and now career growth and set up well for my prime career years.
  • FireCohen
    FireCohen Member Posts: 21,823
    Sources said:

    MBAs are for networking. Who gives a shit about the curriculum?

    Morons that go to non top-10 schools, mba is edumacation is worthless without network
  • HHusky
    HHusky Member Posts: 24,368
    JD/MBA

    The JD really did prepare me to practice law. The MBA didn’t prepare me for a lot more than my BA in business had. Honestly, it just felt like any business employer was going to train you how to do things its way anyhow. In retrospect, if I had it to do over, I’d just have gone into practice a year earlier.

    I recognize that some things may well have changed in 30+ years, but that was my experience and feeling upon graduating.
  • creepycoug
    creepycoug Member Posts: 24,293
    Good post @Tequilla ... tend to agree with all of that. One point I'd amplify a little is the comment about not wanting to promote you out of a job you're doing well. To that I'd point to another comment you made about company culture. Your warning is a good one ... spot that situation early and move on if you're not where you want to be. But other companies have people dev. hardwired into their DNA. My company is like that. If you're good, you'll be spotted and promoted. The other thing we do really well is spot talent and put them in positions that are outside their area of expertise for a more well-rounded development. We have a former Tax person who is leading our migration to a new enterprise financial software platform. Kind of a big deal project.

    As to your TCU experience, I find that private institutions tend to focus on that part things ... placement, networking, etc. and do it better than the publics. I have story after story of colleagues who went to Marshall comparing that part of it to what happens at Anderson. Nobody is going to argue that a USC MBA is better than a UCLA MBA, but I believe entirely that the SC experience is better from the "club" angle of what the degree does for you. On the one hand, when Goldman is recruiting, they're going to go to Anderson over Marshall more often than not because Goldman is a savy consumer and they know that the Anderson kids cleared a tougher admissions hurdle. On the other, the SC network will be a benefit to you forever. So there's that. I'm obviously speaking in broad generalities. It wouldn't then surprise me if TCU had a more active career services office than Foster. Another program that emphasizes connections, etc. and places people in a way that outperforms its ranking is SMU. I also believe Fordham and Lehigh have that same advantage: an enthusiastic alumni base that strives to take care of their own.

    I thought the article was oversimplified. I think the more interesting question is how the MBA will compete with the multitude of specialty MS degrees ... the people coming in with comp. sci and data sci and quant skills who are going Fin. Tech., or technical MS in Finance, etc. etc. In my salad days, those degrees weren't around, and it was undergrad biz, concentrating in one of the disciplines, or MBA, which is a round robin education in all the biz disciplines.
  • RaceBannon
    RaceBannon Member, Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 115,653 Founders Club
    whlinder said:

    After graduating UW I immediately took the GMAT to try to get a decent score while I still had test taking skillz with the view that I would eventually want an MBA. The GMAT was only valid for 5 years, so 5 years later I was like ahh shit, guess I better get going with that MBA. I did not want to lose the 2 years of career progression nor could we afford no income for those 2 years, so I went the part-time route. Company paid for 1/2 and I got the rest. And so I went, very very slowly, towards the degree. It took me 5 years to complete.

    -Went to GW since it was less than Georgetown, not tied to religion, had a satellite location close to home, more internationally focused and they gave me a small scholarship
    -Classmates were fairly diverse. DC, with an international focus. That was good.
    -Plenty of people in there right out of college with no work experience looking for more degrees. That was bad.
    -I got to do a team research project abroad which was some awesome additional real world experience outside of my domain
    -A good chunk of the programs was stuff I "knew" already but was able to formalize and have the credit to prove I knew it
    -I gained general business knowledge in many areas, like finance, accounting, HR/legal, corporate strategy, company culture and leadership, which I probably would not have done as directly otherwise

    For me it was worth it since I was (and still am) able to go way in depth in my areas of expertise, but the MBA allowed me to apply that in depth knowledge to the important things that other areas of the business have to do to support my primary stuff, and they knew they couldn't bullshit me. The global focus from GW helped as well which I targeted due to working at a global company in a global industry. However, I agree there is an issue with the brand of an MBA since you can get one from so many places and the people who come out of those are in many cases morons. They cheapen the value of "an MBA" compared to people who actually pursued advanced business knowledge through a real program.

    This was a good explanation. Especially the part about people being morons. No way to paper that over but for those who aren't who have goals like you had in mind, go for it and good luck