Friday, January 15, 2010

Mba Go Kart Frames Do Any Stanford Undergraduates Go Directly Into The Business School For An MBA After They Graduate?

Do any Stanford undergraduates go directly into the business school for an MBA after they graduate? - mba go kart frames

I was not sure if this is normal to do, or whether you work for a few years before he too got his MBA.

4 comments:

Ranto said...

It is a normal thing to do.

The top B-schools should you continue three to five years of professional experience before you. In my MBA class at Duke, there were only three or four students (from 320), which came from bachelor's schools.

As a finance professor at MIT, Wharton and Maryland I do not think, remember, the MBA students without work experience. I was a student at Wharton, who is entitled to its MBA program.

mia said...

Almost everyone admitted to the business school like Stanford, have work experience (usually at least 2 years, no more, full time, experience post if) College.

Experience is the most important part of the implementation of the Business School. A candidate who jump out of the university, are let loose with a perfect and GMAT average, most likely from the business school in s / he has no experience working full time.

Occasionally, a student of May in a couple of MBA program in a school with no experience at college job fairs, but most often the students a very special case. For example, he / she would have something very impressive and unusual at the University are achieved in relation to professional experience (such as starting a successful business start-type) in the university.

mia said...

Almost everyone admitted to the business school like Stanford, have work experience (usually at least 2 years, no more, full time, experience post if) College.

Experience is the most important part of the implementation of the Business School. A candidate who jump out of the university, are let loose with a perfect and GMAT average, most likely from the business school in s / he has no experience working full time.

Occasionally, a student of May in a couple of MBA program in a school with no experience at college job fairs, but most often the students a very special case. For example, he / she would have something very impressive and unusual at the University are achieved in relation to professional experience (such as starting a successful business start-type) in the university.

Brad R said...

I have somewhere that only 2% of applicants had been approved at the Harvard Business School, less than 12 months work experience, and the average was 3.5 years, so I bet the fact that Stanford same way. You need a few more years between the two.

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