nlroma1o
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For Lazio, eh?
AS Roma for sure. I'll be happy to send him to play just about anywhere in Europe.
For Lazio, eh?
I always feel a twinge of jealousy when I read things like this. I did pretty well on the GMAT (710) but never even considered a top or quasi-top program. No ragrets and all of that, it was 100% the right decision for me to go the online route with 1) opportunity cost of lost salary, 2) employer reimbursement, 3) zero desire to go into high-salary fields, and 4) a wife and child, but sometimes I get bummed that my MBA isn't anywhere near as shiny as my undergraduate degree.Beginning application process now to get MBA starting Fall 2018.
My GMAT score should get me in somewhere ranked 10-25, but we'll see. Definitely not trying to go to an average program and rack up debt. I have a buddy who is starting up at a program ranked mid 40s most places, and he got nearly a full ride. Haven't finished list of schools I'm applying to yet, but I'm jealous of his scholarship situation.
Top 100 is as low as I'd go even if it were 100% free (not judging, my program is ranked in the 80s). I pay $875 per credit and get reimbursed for $700, so the full program will cost me about $6,000 OOP.So what would y'all consider cheap or expensive for a program?
I think a lot has to do with if you are footing the bill yourself or getting help from an employer or parents.
My company does $8000 per calendar year, and thankfully my 24 month program runs through 3 different years, and adds up to basically half the program I'm in.
My thoughts were 24k in debt for a top 100 program made sense.
Top 100 is as low as I'd go even if it were 100% free (not judging, my program is ranked in the 80s). I pay $875 per credit and get reimbursed for $700, so the full program will cost me about $6,000 OOP.
Beginning application process now to get MBA starting Fall 2018.
My GMAT score should get me in somewhere ranked 10-25, but we'll see. Definitely not trying to go to an average program and rack up debt. I have a buddy who is starting up at a program ranked mid 40s most places, and he got nearly a full ride. Haven't finished list of schools I'm applying to yet, but I'm jealous of his scholarship situation.
I always feel a twinge of jealousy when I read things like this. I did pretty well on the GMAT (710) but never even considered a top or quasi-top program. No ragrets and all of that, it was 100% the right decision for me to go the online route with 1) opportunity cost of lost salary, 2) employer reimbursement, 3) zero desire to go into high-salary fields, and 4) a wife and child, but sometimes I get bummed that my MBA isn't anywhere near as shiny as my undergraduate degree.
Saw this on LinkedIn and found it interesting. I'll try to post a few more links soon. Basically several schools are closing their MBA programs due to declining enrollment and a lack of added value in the job market.
One of the schools of thought is that an MBA's only real value is the networking and that value is diminished if you go to a regional program and not a top program like Wharton or Booth.
I definitely agree with that sentiment, but I think being saddled with more student loan debt is a major breaking point for young professionals who don't see a sufficient ROI in sight.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/university-of-iowas-tippie-college-to-end-full-time-m-b-a-program-1503440964
You mean Booth or some close to the top school.
Separately, don't ever put "MBA" after your name. It's embarrassing. Unless you're a doctor, the only thing that should go after your name are professional credentials (CPA, Esq., RN, etc.)
I hate having to put my alphabet soup on everything... my current employer demands it though. I've been caught a couple times just putting my name on stuff, the powers that be were not happy... smh
I hate having to put my alphabet soup on everything... my current employer demands it though. I've been caught a couple times just putting my name on stuff, the powers that be were not happy... smh
Is that because you email externally to clients/customers? I wonder why they'd demand you put "MBA" or whatever you are in your sig if it's all internal.
Find a part-time (Booth, Ross, Kellogg) and work while you go. It's almost always better. Take the GRE instead of the GMAT---the test is cheaper and accepted everywhere. The study materials are also cheaper and the questions don't try to be as tricky.
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What do you have against Wharton?
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Top 100 is as low as I'd go even if it were 100% free (not judging, my program is ranked in the 80s). I pay $875 per credit and get reimbursed for $700, so the full program will cost me about $6,000 OOP.