<p>Great study Mr Payne.</p>
<p>Just goes to show that there is no one clear cut way to success.</p>
<p>Great study Mr Payne.</p>
<p>Just goes to show that there is no one clear cut way to success.</p>
<p>You can absolutely be successful without an MBA even in ib.</p>
<p>Let's see a few more:</p>
<p>Steve Jobs: Apple Computers, never graduated Reed College
Bill Gates: Microsoft, never graduated Harvard University
Donald Trump: Trump Organization, B.S. Economics, Wharton
Martha Stewart: Martha Stewart Living, B.A. Architectural History, Barnard College
Howard Schultz: Starbucks Coffee, Undergrad at Depauw University
Founders of Google: Google, PhD dropouts, Stanford University</p>
<p>I can go on and on, but I'll stop here. The CEO of Goldman Sachs, by the way, has a JD.</p>
<p>31% is not from my personal research, however i have seen numbers hovering around there in the past.</p>
<p>notice however one is 2005, one is 2006</p>
<p>I see what they did. They were combining majors like marketing, accounting and others to create "business administration".</p>
<p>well you seem to argue that ugrad engineering > ugrad business </p>
<p>so its only fair they would combine all aspects of business just as they combine all aspects of engineering Mr.Payne</p>
<p>Did you even read his link? If anything, it makes engineering out to be the most impressive.</p>