Should I take a Masters or MBA course?
Ross Geraghty talks to some leading business schools and attempts to unscramble the spaghetti for you.
In a sense this is a question in two parts. First, and please don’t forget this, what is it that you, the individual graduate, want? Secondly, what do recruiters say they want for the jobs and careers that you are getting your education for? Particularly since the economic downturn, corporates and business schools proactively confer on business education. Recruiters tell the top business schools what they expect from their business managers and the schools respond.
Schools meanwhile work hard to retain individuality and educational rigour; the debate raging around the MBA academic world right now is to what extent corporate governance and ethics should become a core feature of MBA and other business programs.
How to Winning MBA Admission Interviews
Interview is a good way to show your competence to MBA admission committee. Do not be frightened, nervous, or dizzy.
Of course, every business school has different priority in interviewing their applicants. So be sure to find out what the process is at the schools you’re applying to. You can see some policies that offered by schools:
- Encouraging all of their applicants to interview prior to the application deadline
- Using interview by invitation policies
- assessing a candidate’s communication skills, passion, charisma, and their ability to effectively communicate a message
- School wants to know, why do you want an MBA? What are your future goals? And, essentially, why is this particular school the one for you?
After you know what policies that the school used and what the need of the school, you can step to face interview. It is different with writing. It needs speak aloud and clear in pronunciation. There is no way but practice before you speak.
