Scratching your head trying to figure out whether or not to get an MBA—and where to get one if the answer sounds like a yes? You’ve come to the right place.You are now reading the seventh and most comprehensive edition of a book that is considered the bible for all students and observers of graduate schools of business.Hundreds of thousands of applicants have relied on earlier versions of this book for its wealth of unvarnished, tellit- like-it-is information and analysis of the top MBA programs. Deans and recruiters also use this guide as a benchmark of how well they’ve put their ideas and strategies into place.
For this guide, BUSINESSWEEK magazine used the thousands of surveys of graduates and corporate recruiters that it collected for its most recent ranking of business schools as primary research material. That was just the beginning. Next, the staff interviewed hundreds of students, alumni, recruiters, faculty members, and deans to gain an even better understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of the top schools. The result is this book—a product that reveals far more information and insights on the best Bschools than exist anywhere else.
This guidebook is an outgrowth of BUSINESSWEEK’s biennial ranking of the best business schools, a project first tackled in 1988. Since then, the magazine has carved out management education as an important and critical area of coverage. It’s a mission that extends far beyond the pages of the magazine. BUSINESSWEEK Online, for example, has an extensive site devoted to the best business schools. It includes lengthy profiles of the 82 schools surveyed by BUSINESSWEEK in 2000, featuring helpful statistics, links to schools’ Web sites, and dozens of student comments from the survey.And this year, there are even more profiles on nonranked schools—more than 220 total B-schools, divided by geographic region. There’s a return-on-investment calculator that helps you determine the true costs of any one program and a host of transcripts of chats with students at the top schools. And something more—there are dozens of video interviews with B-school deans, admissions officers, and placement directors.You can download the transcripts of online conferences with admissions and placement professionals, read the journals of current and recently graduated MBA students, and post a question on a variety of message boards to be answered by BUSINESSWEEK staffers or other visitors to the site.
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