I picked up an MBA in 2001-2003 and I couldn't agree more.
Did I learn a lot? Absolutely.
Did I meet some great people? Sure.
Worth the expense? Hell no. I could have plowed that money into a startup and learned 10x as much in 1/2 the time.
These days skip the MBA, join a startup incubator, and use the saved hundred grand or so as runway for your startup.
Exception: Ivy League schools put you in a "boys club" for the rest of your life that will open doors at startups, banks, service providers, Venture Capital firms, etc. If you are going to spend the money, for heaven's sake go to Harvard, Stanford, or somewhere else with the killer network.
Although I agree, the MBA-dissing is really old. Every time I see yet another one of these articles, I heave a sigh and think "Again? Really? Slow news day?"
That so many people make it out like a stigma to have one, is ridiculous considering that really all it is is a Master's degree.
I decided to get mine because the advanced-level courses it offered were interesting; there is no other degree where you can learn so much about so many industries. A master's degree is also a pre-requisite for a CPA, and at that point I hadn't decided if the CPA was a route I might want to take (my undergrad is in Accounting).
Finished it in one year (2004) at a state school, so the expense wasn't necessarily cost-ineffective. Took classes about strategic thinking for the global marketplace, competitive positioning and marketing, employment discrimination law, negotiation, and learned a lot of the "lingo" that is necessary for industry analysis.
Do I regret it? No. Do I recommend it? Not unless you're a person who likes learning for the sake of learning.
Yes an MBA is kind of a Masters degree, but it's not a real Masters degree. If you want to go back to school, better to do some sort of research where you can really exercise your brain and continue on from whatever inspired you @ undergrad, than waste your time learning value frameworks with other MOU wannabes.
I encourage all my friends to go to b-school but personally, I'm opting to try my own startup. Last 2 years have been a lesson on its own and I wouldn't trade it for anything. Since my friends are well connected I'm at least a few intros away if I need anything now.
I disagree. Lots of MBAs (and CPAs, etc) start and lead companies. Something like 10-20% of the graduates of top 10 MBA programs start a company when they graduate. And lots of people who do startups don't give a shit about leadership, but just want the easy life they think flipping a startup will give them. I think reality is more nuanced than you've portrayed.
I was considering a MBA several years ago. My friend made the statement: MBA is about brand recognition. Since you want to be local, go to only MIT or Harvard, otherwise just start your company.
Apparently Jack Welch made a similar comment when speaking to Sloan students a couple years back that angered the dean. When asked which courses to take, Welch replied (paraphrased), "it doesn't matter. this is a country club. network. That is value you are being provided."
I think nobody disagrees with the idea that you will learn some stuff while getting your MBA. What people disagree with is the idea that you will learn more getting an MBA at a lower tier school than you will working at a startup. MBA's are great for opening doors, you will get more doors opened working at a startup or going to an Ivy League school than getting an MBA at a lower tiered school.
My girlfriend is the assistant director of nursing at a 175 resident long term facility.
She is two months from finishing her MBA online through University of Phoenix and will be taking an $8,500 raise (from $66,500 to $75,000) just for completing the program.
This article discusses what a mistake it is to leave your current job to obtain an MBA while completely ignoring the fact that you don't -have- to leave your job to get your Masters anymore.
"When you look at today’s most evolved business organisms, it is obvious that an MBA is not required for business success."
You could argue that an undergrad degree isn't even required for business success. That's not the point. There are plenty of career paths that having a Masters is still a HUGE benefit and the health care industry might be one of the biggest.
If you are going to a World Top 5 - then it might be worth it to network with the people who are going to be hiring CEOs. But for the same money you can join the golf club.
Otherwise the world is full of middle managers who were sent on low grade MBAs by mega corps who didn't know what to do with them and couldn't fire them
When you are interviewing managers were given a year off by a now-defunct multinational to do an MBA, ask how all the projects they claimed to be deeply involved with managed to run without them during that time.
If you are going to a World Top 5 - then it might be worth it to network with the people who are going to be hiring CEOs.
Maybe not even then. I don't have the reference in front of me, but I seem to recall something about a study of the Fortune 500 CEOs, and there were as many from some state school (University of Wisconsin, maybe?) as there were from Harvard.
Here's another fun observation from that 2005 study (said as a North Carolinian who resides in Chapel Hill):
Of the Fortune 100 CEOs, the top schools for their undergraduate degrees were:
Harvard, Stanford, Yale, U. of North Carolina - 3% each
Which one of these is not like the others? :-) (To be fair though, even though it's a state school, UNC is generally pretty highly regarded and their business school is usually pretty high in the national rankings.)
That's not the statistic you are interested in though.
The question isn't - if you go to Harvard will you become head of facebook/apple. The question is if you go to Harvard will you do OK as a senior VP of a firm where the person hiring you went to Harvard.
MBA isn't for leaders - it's for followers, just very well paid followers.
I've been dreaming about finding other business owners that want to do a Do-It-Yourself MBA ( http://personalmba.com/manifesto/) -like reading program and discussion group, but have yet to make the time to organize such a thing.
I've considered getting either my MBA or my CPA, but didn't find the return on investment to be worth it.
The Personal MBA is a great program and his book is just as good (http://www.amazon.com/Personal-MBA-Master-Art-Business/dp/15...). My wife and I are part-way through both and he covers just about everything you could care to know about running a successful business.
I have a BA and MA from a large state school and found the most rewarding things from my tenure in college were the relationships I built--not the classes. I would NEVER go into debt for a Master's or MBA--it's just not worth it. Find someone else to pay (scholarship, assistantship, teaching) or get to work, it's better experience anyway.
I didn't know if it was realized probably not. But I would be delighted if we could start one! This year I started a book challenge for myself (http://111in2011.tumblr.com) and looked for discussion platforms. GoodReads is not really useful because there are too few people interested in business books. And writing short reviews/summaries about books is nice but I miss the conversations :)
So, if you start a discussion board or whatever, I'm happy if I can participate!
Haha. I had to smile at "Contrast, Repetition, Alignment and Proximity and don’t be a wimp." for Robin William's Non-Designer’s Design Book. I brought up CRAP in a meeting and I swear everyone thought I had three heads. I would have settled for two :-)
I find Fred Wilson's series (and blog posts) really informative (http://www.dailylit.com/books/mba-mondays) and highly recommended in case you wanted to add it to your list.
I went back and forth about the idea of pursuing an MBA for a few years. One day I had a conversation with a very successful small business owner and his response on the subject was "I know a lot of entrepreneurs and I can't think of a single one that has an MBA. Take that for what its worth." My deliberation ended after that conversation and articles like this just reaffirm that decision.
The author of this article wrote a interesting book chronicling his experiences at HBS. It's a quick read and helpful for anyone considering B-school (skip over the technical chapters and focus on the anecdotes). I don't agree completely with his assertions, but it's another useful datapoint to take into consideration.
One day we will see the (higher) education bubble burst. It's overdue already in my opinion.
I watched the bubble swell in the late 90's--and it has become insanely bigger and bigger in the last decade--as higher ed really turned into a business first and an education institution second.
For most of my college career I was set on continuing it further into a MS in CS. I'm approximately a year away from my BS, and there is no way that I'd deviate from this current explosion of awesome present in today's job market. I see a lot more enthusiasm for creativity and output, something that lacks from a few of the traditional college systems. Then again, I once heard "college is there to test you, not teach you."
Did I learn a lot? Absolutely.
Did I meet some great people? Sure.
Worth the expense? Hell no. I could have plowed that money into a startup and learned 10x as much in 1/2 the time.
These days skip the MBA, join a startup incubator, and use the saved hundred grand or so as runway for your startup.
Exception: Ivy League schools put you in a "boys club" for the rest of your life that will open doors at startups, banks, service providers, Venture Capital firms, etc. If you are going to spend the money, for heaven's sake go to Harvard, Stanford, or somewhere else with the killer network.