耐心读下去,会有收获的,如果你想进入top b-school. Managing
Where you go for your MBA might depend on what you plan to do with it.
Do not tell John Selkrig that his MBA is useless. The former Sydney banker received job offers from four big United States investment banks after graduating from Dartmouth College's Tuck Business School in 2001. Selkrig, who is in his mid-thirties, was an intern with one organisation but eventually joined Morgan Stanley. He is now an associate for equity sales at the Hong Kong office. "Typically, you're an associate for the first couple of years after business school and then you move on to vice-president," he says.
The worldwide economic slowdown may be restricting recruitment of new MBA graduates, but the world's biggest companies still focus on brand names such as Tuck, in New Hampshire, which The Wall Street Journal rates as the world's number-one business school. Steven Lubrano, Tuck's MBA program director, says: "Certainly the numbers that corporations are sourcing are down a bit. But we are currently at 65% placement rate for interns, and fully expect to achieve 100%." He says experienced recruiters such as Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch and UBS know that the best time to capture good graduates is during a downturn.
Gretchen Boehm, Tuck's associate director for admissions, says: "We would love to admit more students from Australia and New Zealand." Over at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, ranked best in the world by the Financial Times, more than 100 places went to applicants from Asia and Australia in 2002. Selkrig says: "Other things being equal, coming from another country is actually an advantage because schools are looking for international diversity. Every school now wants a more mixed student body." Selkrig had many Chinese, Indian and Japanese classmates at Tuck.
The study is mainly for people who plan to work overseas. Australian companies generally do not require an MBA. Ian Corley, a managing partner at the executive search firm MRI Worldwide in Sydney, says: "It might be on their wish list, but it is not a critical factor. Experience is much more important." He says Australian companies tend to give equal weight to an MBA from the Australian Graduate School of Management or the Macquarie Graduate School of Management as they do to one from Harvard. "I would also say Mt Eliza Business School," adds Erin Reagen, who also is an MRI managing partner.
It is difficult to say which business school (B-school) is the best. Take the latest US rankings. The Wall Street Journal has Tuck on top, the Financial Times honors the Wharton School, Forbes and US News & World Report name Harvard Business School, and BusinessWeek and The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) give the thumbs-up to Kellogg School of Management. The regional surveys also are puzzling. Asia Inc places the Chinese University of Hong Kong first, followed by the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad. The Financial Times has Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and Melbourne Business School as the top two. The EIU's choices are the Macquarie Graduate School of Management and the China Europe Business School in Shanghai - with the Chinese University way behind at number 11.
The varied results perhaps say more about the surveys than the schools. How to bring order to the sprawl? What follows is a list of business schools that regularly appear in the top ranks of the various international and regional surveys. Whatever the disagreements about their actual placings, these B-schools are on the radar screens of recruiters and head-hunters.
The curriculums, program structure, faculty and facilities are assessed. There are interviews with leading companies and executive-search firms as well as school officials, students and alumni. Conventional surveys often analyse B-schools as "one size fits all" entities, but each has its own specialities, something that employers are beginning to realise. Nadia Pan, the regional human resources director at the advertising company Leo Burnett Asia Pacific, says: "Experience tells us that Harvard, Kellogg, Wharton and Columbia prepare people for senior executive [leadership] roles. European schools like Insead [in France] tend to focus more on cross-cultural management." Asia-Pacific schools have a natural edge in Asian and Chinese business.
The brand-name schools are arranged under 10 student groups, from the aspiring chief executive to the would-be management consultant, to the determined entrepreneur. Space restrictions preclude niche specialisations. (Hint: non-profit organisations, consider Harvard and Yale; health care, try the University of California at Berkeley; environmental management, look at Nimbas in the Netherlands.) Read on to find the top-ranked school that might be the best fit for you.
[此贴子已经被作者于2007-12-9 0:21:17编辑过] |