BNET Insight

Back to B-School

Helping you get your armchair MBA.

New WSJ Rankings: More Bang for Your Buck in Surprising Places

December 16th, 2008 @ 7:31 am

5 Comments

Categories: Academics, Financing, Research, Schools

Tags: Wall Street Journal, ROI, Texas A&M, Business, USC, Roi/Tco, Finance, Managerial Accounting, Stacy Blackman

Before opening a vein to pay for your executive MBA, consider the Wall Street Journal’s first-ever ranking of the five-year return on investment of executive MBA programs. The results may surprise you.

Most of the schools that topped the list weren’t big brand names — or the highest-ranked in the September EMBA ranking. The No. 1 school in September, Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management, was No. 12 in returns. Ohio State comes in at No. 3 with a program that yields a 170% return on investment. Only Texas A&M’s Mays School of Business and University of Florida’s Warrington School of Business did better among U.S. schools, with five-year returns of 243% and 212%, respectively, the Journal reports. Texas A&M and University of Florida, despite a high ROI, didn’t even make the top 25 in September.

So how’d they calculate the benefit? By using the graduate-reported median raise after completion of the program as the first-year salary increase, then adding a 5% annual raise over the following four years, based on the average annual increase expected by compensation specialists and executive recruiters polled.

Texas A&M’s tuition is less than half than that of New York University’s Stern School of Business, the school with the lowest return on investment at 51%. Not all of the top schools delivered low returns, however. USC’s Marshall School of Business ranked no. 4 in the overall ranking and has a five-year return of 134%. Across town, UCLA’s Anderson School of Business took the 17 spot in overall ranking, but graduates can expect an ROI of 158%–fourth best in this latest survey’s results.

The gold plating and marble columns at top-ranked institutions may provide a non-quantifiable ROI in the form of an impressive alumni network, location or brand cache, though. One recent Columbia graduate, Izzet Bensusan, says the experience was worth every penny. “I only paid $130,000, and I got to sit with the best people in the world.”

 
Reply to Story

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Subscribe to this discussion via Email or RSS

  •  
    1

    wcgallery

    12/17/08 | Report as spam

    RE: New WSJ Rankings: More Bang for Your Buck in Surprising Places

    Based on a rate of return, total income received versus total tuition paid, I think a ten year, even twenty year study would yield far different results. It's my hunch that one would then see far more recognizable names.

  •  
    2

    argentum47

    12/17/08 | Report as spam

    RE: New WSJ Rankings: More Bang for Your Buck in Surprising Places

    The top tier names having higher long term ROI is probably a self fulfilling prophecy. Many high paying companies and industries (ie IB, PE and many fortune 500s), use the brand name as a hiring criteria. With some companies its a requirement. Plus, alums of top rank schools lean towards hiring top name school grads. Hence, anyone who comes from a lower ranked school almost has to perform better to get the same opportunity; and sometimes, their performance doesn't even matter. They just didn't go to the right school.

  •  
    3

    argentum47

    12/17/08 | Report as spam

    RE: New WSJ Rankings: More Bang for Your Buck in Surprising Places

    The top tier names having higher long term ROI is probably a self fulfilling prophecy. Many high paying companies and industries (IB, PE, VC and many fortune 500s), use the brand name as a hiring criteria. With some companies, it's a requirement. Plus, alums of top rank schools lean towards hiring top name school grads. Hence, anyone who comes from a lower ranked school almost has to perform better to get the same opportunity; and sometimes, their performance doesn't even matter. They just didn't go to the right school.

  •  
    4

    reedj

    12/17/08 | Report as spam

    RE: New WSJ Rankings: More Bang for Your Buck in Surprising Places

    State schools are the way to go - I spent about $7500 for two years at Georgia State University (graduated in 1996 so it was cheaper back then!) and went to a job where I was making $10k more than I was in the job I had prior to my MBA. Not a bad ROI at all!!!

  •  
    5

    samkelley1

    12/17/08 | Report as spam

    RE: New WSJ Rankings: More Bang for Your Buck in Surprising Places

    The only thing that tells the return on the MBA is to estimate what the return would have been had these individuals not gone to an EMBA at all.

    I'm guessing their income may have not been all that much different? Plenty of fast trackers achieve success based on personal abilities and brains separate from the EMBA.

    What do you think?

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
Click Here
advertisement
Quick Poll
What is the most important source of information about MBA programs?
Family, friends, work colleagues, or an undergraduate professor or advisor
Individual schools’ websites
Individual schools’ advertisements (newspaper, magazines, radio, internet)
Viewbooks and other print mailings from the schools
MBA resource websites and blogs
Rankings and news articles in BusinessWeek, Financial Times, or other publications

Blogger Profiles

  • Blogger Thumbnail Stacy Blackman Stacy Sukov Blackman is president of Stacy Blackman Consulting, where she consults on MBA admissions. She earned her MBA from the Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University and her Bachelor of Science from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. Stacy serves on the Board of Directors of AIGAC, the Association of International Graduate Admissions Consultants, and has published a guide to MBA Admissions, The MBA Application Roadmap. more »

advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement