Most schools have prospective weekends, but these can be a little overwhelming.
Congrats future MBA! You’ve done it. All the studying, essay-writing, and putting on your best interview face has paid off, and now you’re in. But you’ve been accepted to more than one school. How do you figure out where to go? We’ve created the essential list for doing your due diligence on the schools that you worked so hard to get into.
Visit. While it might go without saying, we’re saying it: visit campus. These days, it’s easy to get away with being accepted to a school without ever setting foot in the building[s] because of off-campus alumni interviews and electronic applications. But really there’s no better way to get a feel for what you’re getting yourself into than asking the admissions office to hook you up with a student for the day to check out classes, group meetings, and if you’re lucky, an intramural kickball game.
Most schools have admitted/prospective student weekends, but these can be a little overwhelming, with every minute of your few days on campus highly scheduled. If you really want to know what it’s like to be a student, go visit with one on an off-day. It may mean taking a couple of days off during the week, but remember, this is two years of your life we’re talking about.
C’mon, just focus… You probably spent some time researching this for your applications, but make sure you recall what your prospective school’s academic focus is, and make sure that you care about that particular subject. Most schools don’t like to be pigeonholed as being strong in finance or marketing, and weaker in accounting or organizational management, but, well, they’ll get over it. Make sure you know what you’re most interested in learning about, and applying in your post-MBA career, and look to the schools that provide great classes and professors in those areas.
Research jobs placement. Our friends at The MBA Exchange remind us that it’s important to ask the career services department about students’ success landing internships and jobs in the industries of their choice. Don’t let a school’s academic reputation mislead you about its ability to find the right jobs for its MBAs: there are plenty of plenty who get financial services jobs from Kellogg (the “marketing school”) and CPG brand managers that emerge from Booth (the “finance school”).
Location, location, location. This is the first rule of business, is it not? Well, it doesn’t just apply to retail. Consider where your prospective schools are located, and how many of its alumni stay in the area. If you want a strong network in Dallas, you probably don’t want to go to Columbia. Similarly, think about whether or not you yourself would like to stay in the city/town of your alma mater – oftentimes that’s where the largest percentage of grads stay, at least for the first couple of years out of school.
Find out about merit-based financial aid. We all know that business school is an enormous financial commitment. Less known is that business schools have a little bit of merit-based financial aid available to students even after they’ve received their acceptance letters. Ask your admissions office, and negotiate. A professional admissions consultant can advise you on some of the do’s and don’ts that could lead to unexpected dollars and a little less loan stress.
Talk to current students. It’s easy to review a school’s admissions and marketing materials and get an on-paper look at what the school thinks it is, and wants to be. But without talking to current students who share professional or extra-curricular interests, you may be in for a big ol’ surprise. Ask the admissions office for contacts for students who lead clubs that you may be interested in joining or leading – these clubs will also crossover with professional interests. If you can’t get any additional help from admissions, just google the school and their clubs, and you’re bound to find contact info from someone who’ll give it to you straight.
Do rankings matter? If you’ve followed the steps above, then you should be able to make an informed decision without referring back to the rankings. It’s likely that the schools that you’re choosing between aren’t too far from each other in BusinessWeek, U.S. News & World Report, or any of the other published rankings. If there is a big disparity, then use the rankings to figure out the areas in which your prospective school got a bad grade. Was it teaching quality? Was it job placement rate? If school X fails at anything that’s important to you, then you have your decision right there.
And there you have it. Our essential list for making the big decision. Let us know how you went ahead and took the plunge. And good luck future MBAs!
Jenn Yee is a graduate of the Full-Time MBA program at the Kellogg School of Management, and the Founder of MBA-social.com, an online lifestyle magazine that provides MBAs with national content covering popular topics such as Career, Family, Love & Dating, Social Life, and Style. Follow her on Twitter for the latest in business education news and gossip, @mbasocial.
Jenn Yee
@Tian - You'd be surprised - people arrive at b-school knowing *exactly* what job they want coming out - and want to know how many of their predecessors have gotten those jobs. It's important to know how successful your school is at placement.
@Kirti - You're right on the international front, and I agree that the closest you can get is to speak to alumni in your desired industry, and with varied experiences. It is usually hard to find people who had bad ones, though. They don't exactly make themselves readily available for chats to prospectives. Probably best to ask whomever you're talking to about their good...and they're bad.
@Michael - Flipping a coin would've made it MUCH easier for me!
Finding it very hard to pick the right school - everyone's partial to wherever they went. You should add 'flip a coin'
Michael Swartzberg
Its not always possible to visit the school, specially if you are an international student.
Of the suggested points I would say, talking to current students and alumni is the most important. Talk to Alumni who completed school 1-3 years ago to get a real idea of job placements, as schools may present an over optimistic picture.
Also, if possible try to find people who have had really good as well as really bad experiences with the school to get a complete picture.
Kirti Dhingra
Helpful check-list! Not sure I'd be planning work placements before b-school though?
Tian Ng