Pros and Cons of a Quick MBA

August 28, 2007 by quickmba

I thought it would be good to sum up some of the key differences of a quick MBA vs. a traditional program in a pros/cons format:

Pros:

  1. Less time out of the job market equals less salary loss and greater ease maintaining your knowledge of a particular field
  2. Shorter time period generally equals less total program expense
  3. Shorter time period often means you have a better chance of getting an employer to pay for it and keep you on as an employee
  4. Less time spent in “core” classes (only a pro if you already have a strong base of business knowledge)

Cons:

  1. Less time to take electives/experiment
  2. Fewer internship opportunities due to not having a break in between program years
  3. Quick MBA programs still get looked down upon by some graduates of more traditional programs

I hope this helps you determine if a quick MBA is a good option for you.  I think the most important “gut check” you can do is to ask yourself “do I know what I want to do after my MBA program is complete?”.  If the answer is yes (this doesn’t mean you can’t change your mind during the program!), then the focus of a shorter program may be perfect for you.  If the answer is no, a more traditional program may be a better fit as it will give you time to experiment.

Keys to getting in – the essay

August 26, 2007 by quickmba

As anyone who has applied to a competitive MBA program will tell you, the essay is a critical factor in whether or not you get in – at least as much of a factor as the GMAT score. Even the quick MBA options you are going to apply to put very heavy emphasis on your essays; they really set you apart as an individual. I’ve found a few resources that I thought were particularly valuable, and easily available on Amazon:

Business School Essays That Made a Difference, 2nd Edition (Graduate School Admissions Gui)

Your MBA Game Plan: Proven Strategies for Getting into the Top Business Schools

Is a quick MBA or similar degree enough preparation to compete in today’s marketplace?

August 26, 2007 by quickmba

This is an interesting article. It discusses the fact that many people are looking for alternative degree options, including quick MBA degrees, and it also explores the idea that a quick MBA may not be as competitive as traditional programs in the job market. I haven’t found this to be true at all (in fact, if anything it seems employers are more impressed that I was able to complete the degree in one year), but some of the information about lower pay expectations is cause for concern and worth considering.

Is Less Enough When It Comes to B-School?

by Ronald Alsop
Provided by CareerJournal.com

Bethany Carlson has found her niche and is in a hurry to get on with her career.

So the recent college graduate has decided to skip a two-year M.B.A. and fortify her skills with a one-year specialized master’s degree in marketing at the University of Rochester’s Simon Graduate School of Business.

“An M.B.A. program prepares you better for brand management,” she says, “but I want to concentrate more on market research. One day I would like to be the vice president of customer insights at a company like Johnson & Johnson or Starbucks and bridge the areas of marketing and psychology.” The one-year time frame is also appealing, she says, because she plans to get married next summer.

Even though she feels confident about her decision, Ms. Carlson is keeping her options open, knowing that Rochester will still admit her to the M.B.A. program within five years. “I like that flexibility,” she says, “just in case I change my mind.”

This is an iframe of a ClassesUSA article insert

Flextime
More business schools are trying to woo students like Ms. Carlson as they add specialized master’s degree programs at a fast clip. With applications to full-time M.B.A. programs just starting to recover from a severe slump, schools are hoping to attract students with new types of master’s degrees. Typically one year in length, compared with the usual two-year M.B.A., they are less expensive and require less time out of the work force.

While a one-year master’s provides an in-depth education in a particular field, M.B.A. students can major in a certain subject to gain specialized expertise, too. In fact, some recruiters say an M.B.A. graduate with broad management training and an academic concentration is the ideal hire. “The specialized degree is a nice bonus, but it’s no substitute for the skills we hope to see from our two-year M.B.A. candidates,” says Mohan Nathan, associate marketing manager at Johnson & Johnson’s LifeScan unit. “Today’s medical marketers need more than just good marketing skills; they need to operate in a changing environment of reimbursement, public policy and scientific innovation. The candidate who has a specialized focus in health care and the general-management skills of an M.B.A. is particularly attractive.”

Rochester’s Simon School, in Rochester, N.Y., has been particularly aggressive at launching new master’s programs. In addition to marketing, it has added programs in accounting and medical management, and next up is a master’s in general management targeted toward scientists and engineers. “Some people in technical fields don’t want to commit to a two-year M.B.A. but want one year of management education after their undergraduate degree to give them more clout in the marketplace,” says Mark Zupan, dean of the Simon School.

Finance, management, marketing and information technology are some of the most popular one-year master’s degrees. But they come in all varieties. Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa., recently created a master’s of health and biopharmaceutical economics; the International University of Monaco launched a master’s in the management of luxury goods and services in September 2006; and the ICN Business School in Nancy, France, is offering a master’s in automotive management.

M.B.A. preferred
But is there a market for all of these degrees? Recruiters in the 2006 Wall Street Journal/Harris Interactive survey showed limited interest in hiring students with a specialized degree instead of an M.B.A. From among the specializations listed, recruiters said they were most likely to hire an applicant with a master’s in finance and least likely to recruit candidates with a master’s in health care.

Based on the survey results, people should carefully weigh the trade-offs between choosing a specialized degree or going for a more extensive M.B.A. education. Some recruiters contend that there’s no substitute for an M.B.A. and that a specialized degree is likely to limit career opportunities.

“Confidence and broader perspective are the key differentiators,” says Marco Arosti, a vice president at Morgan Stanley. Mr. Arosti, who works in investment banking, says that when the pressure is on, students with a one-year master’s have only their specialty to fall back on, while M.B.A.s have much broader skills on which to rely.

Still, some recruiters find people with a specialized master’s appealing because of their depth of knowledge and their commitment to a particular job function or industry. “Students coming out of a specialized program are perceived as having more drive and passion for the field and as more goal-oriented and focused,” says Megan Frigon, vice president of human resources and professional services at Resort Technology Partners in Avon, Colorado.

This is an iframe of a ClassesUSA article insert

Lower pay expectations
Specialized master’s students also typically don’t expect as much compensation as an M.B.A. graduate. Devin Thorpe, managing director of Thorpe Capital in Salt Lake City, finds students with a master’s degree in finance bring the necessary investment-banking skills but don’t have the same salary expectations as M.B.A.s. “I have encouraged many undergraduate students, including some of our interns, to pursue a master’s degree in finance,” he says. “That said, there is nothing in the marketplace quite like an M.B.A. from an Ivy League school.” Mr. Thorpe holds an M.B.A. from Cornell University, one of the Ivies.

As the master’s degree market becomes more and more crowded, some schools are doing their homework before jumping in. Southern Methodist University, in Dallas, recently developed small, specialized master’s programs in management and entrepreneurship. The school also sees a potential market for a finance-oriented master’s but wants to be certain it’s the right kind of finance degree. So Albert Niemi, dean of SMU’s Cox School of Business, is visiting alumni on Wall Street and at hedge funds to test the waters. “Significant mathematical skills are going to be more important,” he says, “so I think there will be a niche market for a new degree.”

Other schools have the same idea. The University of California at Los Angeles is also designing a new master’s in quantitative finance, but doesn’t have any others on the drawing board. “You have to see where your intellectual strengths are, plus it has to be something recruiters will value,” says Judy Olian, dean of UCLA’s Anderson School of Management. “I wouldn’t do it just to keep adding students; you risk diverting faculty resources to too many programs and weakening the school.”

What’s more, recruiters warn that master’s programs might fall victim to temporary fads. “Specializations can be fashionable but lose their appeal over time,” says Matthew Upton, strategic account vice president at Avaya Inc. “Some of the basics like international business or finance are still strong, but e-commerce no longer is.”

About the Author

Mr. Alsop, a Wall Street Journal news editor, writes the monthly M.B.A. Track column and served as contributing editor of this report. E-mail your comments to Ron.Alsop@wsj.com.

Great article about surge in MBA interest

August 26, 2007 by quickmba

As you will see in the article below, there is strong demand for MBA degrees worldwide.  The appetite for MBA degrees has pushed many schools to offer a variety of programs to meet the demand, including options for quick MBA degrees.

MBA Applications Reach Record High

Huge numbers of U.S. and international students are applying to graduate business schools, generating more specialized and part-time programs

by Alison Damast

Demand for admission to U.S. graduate business schools is at record levels, and the growing number of applicants is entering what some say is the most competitive pool in recent years.

The Graduate Management Admissions Council (GMAC) reported Aug. 15 that applications to business schools are being buoyed by a confident outlook on the economy and increasing demand from employers for management degrees. In turn, schools are choosing from a pool of applicants who are equally or better qualified academically than last year’s class. The majority of the group’s member schools are in the U.S.

Admissions officers have had a strong group of applicants to choose from this year. Nearly three in five full-time master’s and MBA programs reported that their applicants are of better quality than those seen last year, according to the GMAC survey.

Better Applicants, More Programs

That doesn’t surprise California admissions consultant Stacy Blackman, who helps students navigate the admissions process and work on their applications. “I think the quality of the applications that are submitted is going up,” said Blackman. “People are understanding the process better and what it takes to submit a strong application.”

The boom in applications mirrors an increase in registration volume for the GMAT—the B-school entrance exam—which this year jumped by 6.2% within the U.S. and 21% outside the U.S. And nearly two-thirds (64%) of full-time MBA programs reported an increase in application volume compared to 2006. Rosemaria Martinelli, director of admissions at University of Chicago’s business school, said applications overall have been up “substantially” for the past two years. “It’s very competitive out there. We’ve seen double-digit increases for all applications two years in a row,” she said.

One of the key movers in the growing number of applicants is demographics, says Rachel Edgington, director of market research and analysis for GMAC. A cohort of students dubbed “millenials”—those from the generation born in or after 1982—fueled much of the growth in domestic applications this year, Edgington said. “This younger generation is a much larger pool then the past generation and they are starting to enter into the application pool,” Edgington said. “Just in sheer size, they are much larger.”

Degrees in Specialized Fields

Schools are responding to demand from students by creating an array of new flexible MBA programs, ranging from part-time programs to master’s degrees in specialized business fields. In just the first half of 2007, 641 new graduate management programs were introduced, according to the GMAC report. That’s a sharp leap from a decade ago, when only 74 new programs were created.

The GMAC survey collected data from 445 programs at 252 business schools, 70% of them in the U.S. This is the first year that the survey received data from PhD programs and master’s degrees in specialized business fields, such as master’s of science in management or finance.

Fifty-six percent of full-time MBA programs said application volume from domestic candidates was up this year, a significant reversal from recent years where growth was flat. At NYU’s Stern School of Business, applications from domestic students outpaced those of international students this year, said Isser Gallogly, executive director of MBA admissions. “We saw a tipping of the scales because domestic was a little higher than international growth this year,” he said.

That’s not to say interest from international applicants is subsiding. Applications from students abroad, particularly those in India and China, remain strong.

Growth in Part-Time Programs

India is fueling most of the growth in international applications seen by full-time programs in the U.S., with 64% of B-schools reporting India as the country from which they received the greatest number of applications. “With India, the numbers were already high and for some schools, the numbers can’t get much higher,” Edgington said.

Another area showing considerable growth is part-time MBA programs, where applications increased “noticeably” over the past year, Edgington said. More than two in three part-time MBA programs reported that application volume increased over 2006 and the trend is expected to continue over the next few years, she said. Women and minorities are driving the increase in application volume, drawn by the more flexible schedule and time frame offered by such programs. Not surprisingly there is a larger proportion of women in part-time programs (37%) than among full-time programs (27%).

PhD Applications Decline

While the appeal of an MBA remains strong, the lure of a PhD in management education appears to be on the decline. PhD programs were the only program surveyed in the report that did not report strong application volume from applicants this year. Most PhD applicants—two out of three—are foreign citizens, many of whom are now opting to apply to MBA programs instead, Edgington said.

“What we see now is that the international prospective students see the MBA as more valuable than PhD in terms of global currency, name recognition, and employer respect,” Edgington said.

The PhD decline confirms fears in the B-school world that there will be a shortage of qualified professors in coming years. With application volume expected to increase over the next three years, B-schools may find themselves overwhelmed with students and lacking professors. It’s a problem the next generation of B-schoolers may want to tackle.

Getting a quick mba is an option!

August 26, 2007 by quickmba

If you are reading this site, you are probably interested in getting an MBA, but you aren’t sure that you want to take two years away from your career to do it. Are there any other options? Yes!

The idea for this site comes from my experience talking with people who are surprised that I was able to complete my MBA in one year. It turns out that there an increasing number of options for MBA degrees outside of the traditional two-year program. In fact, there has never been a better time to get your MBA degree and advance your career quickly, and without the financial toll that a traditional program can have on your wallet.

This site is dedicated to exploring the options for a quick MBA available in the marketplace, as well as reporting some of the other unique options being created by business schools around the world. I hope you find it useful!