"In the past years, many of the projects led automatically to jobs, and that will certainly be less true this year," he said.
Changing Strategies
The changing landscape means that career services officers are being more aggressive about the way they pursue their relationships with companies. At Manchester Business School in northwest England, career services officers have noticed some companies pulling back on their recruiting budgets, choosing to hold off on campus visits. To counter that trend, the school has opened an office in London where students can meet with recruiters. They've also recently beefed up its career services and external affairs office, adding several new staff positions.
"We have to work a little harder to convince recruiters to leave London or Brussels to come to Manchester," said Michael Luger, dean of Manchester Business School. "They're still doing it, but we can't take it for granted because they are cutting costs, too."
These sorts of shifts will likely have a pronounced effect on the way British students conduct their job searches this fall. International students make up the bulk of the student body at most of the leading business schools in Britain. For example, the Cranfield School of Management boasts an 84% international student population in its MBA cohort this year. Most of these international students would typically have worked two to three years in Britain after business school, but some are deciding to head home after graduation.
"We have noticed a shift in people going home after getting their MBA," said Sean Rickard, director of the Cranfield's full-time program. "They are still keen to study here and work here, but it is becoming that much more difficult to do in the current climate."
British Advantage
Still, international students in Britain may be in a better position to land jobs in either London or other leading European cities than their counterparts in the U.S., said Derek Walker, director of careers at Oxford University's Said Business School, where 94% of the student body is international.
For one, the work permit authorization process in Britain is friendlier towards international students than the lengthy H1-B visa process in America. "I think there is an added degree of flexibility here, particularly if someone from outside the European Union wants to work in the U.K.," Walker said.
Also, many British MBAs have significantly more work experience than American business school students. For example, the average student at the Cranfield School of Management has at least eight years' work experience, compared to the three to five most American students have.
That is giving students such as Stephen Larkin, 36, an MBA student at Cranfield who worked in the banking industry for nine years before coming to business school, some hope. He decided to attend business school after being laid off from the Royal Bank of Scotland last May and is optimistic he will find a job when he graduates next September. He already has several promising leads on job offers in his chosen field—technology marketing—and believes he is in a better spot than most American business school students.
"We have a lot of business and international exposure already, so we are not coming out fresh, which is maybe the difference between the U.K. and American business schools, where the average age is in the mid- to early 20s," he said in a telephone interview. "I think that does give us a definite advantage, especially when you are looking for work in a tougher climate."
|