Huntsman or M&T or Wharton at Upenn

<p>So my dream is to become an entrepreneur. I had deep interest in finance, math, engineering and IR. So among Huntsman, M&T and wharton, which one will prepare me best for becoming an successful entrepreneur? Also, is there any other programs at other colleges that provide exceptional education experience to prepare students to work in IB?</p>

<p>Forget all three. Go to Babson. Produces the most entrepreneurs.</p>

<p>haha no one, literally no one would choose BABSON over UPENN WHARTON of MIT SLOAN. The opportunities are just not comparable.</p>

<p>go to mit and do engineering with sloan as either minor or double major.</p>

<p>otherwise go m&t</p>

<p>dont do babson</p>

<p>Babson is #1 for entrepreneurship!!! I would go there if I had the chance…think about it, all they do is business bro!!!</p>

<p>broncos and birdman have no idea what they’re talking about.</p>

<p>Babson has been ranked #1 in Entrepreneurship for the past 14 years in a row-- and for good reason. They throw you right into entrepreneurship your freshman year, as you start and run a business with 30 of your classmates. So if you want to be a CEO at age 18, it’s possible at Babson :). And it only gets better from there. No school gives better real world application-- no matter how famous and prestegeous their name sounds. Babson gets overlooked by big name schools, but the entrepreneurial education is uncomparable.</p>

<p>To help facilitate your decision, Babson is followed by:</p>

<h1>2 - University of Pennsylvania,</h1>

<h1>3 - University of Southern California,</h1>

<h1>4 - Massachusetts Inst. of Technology, and</h1>

<h1>5 - Indiana University-Bloomington,</h1>

<p>how in the world do i have no idea what i’m talking about? look at all the criteria he listed, not just desire to be an entrepreneur. </p>

<p>-“finance, math, engineering” - babson is passable in finance, very poor for the other two
-“exceptional education experience to prepare students to work in IB?” - definitely not babson</p>

<p>and honestly I don’t care what some stupid rating says, if you graduate from Wharton or Sloan, it just isn’t comparable to graduating from Babson. Going to Wharton or Sloan and being surrounded by top-notch students just isn’t the same as being surrounded by mediocre students at Babson.</p>

<p>Who in the world would go to Babson over Wharton given the chance?</p>

<p>You don’t need a degree to be an entrepreneur; you can even start right now if you want to. So, you might as well go to Wharton for better back up opportunities in case your business doesn’t work out.</p>

<p>in any case, wharton’s got</p>

<p>[Wharton</a> Entrepreneurial Programs](<a href=“http://wep.wharton.upenn.edu/]Wharton”>http://wep.wharton.upenn.edu/)</p>

<p>the individual programs within wharton / penn don’t make a huge difference, though the technical background provided by m&t might be useful depending on the type of venture</p>

<p>You don’t become an entrepreneur by completing an entrepreneur program. Have you ever heard heard of companies hiring summer entrepreneurship analyst? You go into a reasonable field like ib or management consulting, and then go from there, and for those fields, both Wharton and Sloan are top notch.</p>

<p>^ not sure if that’s directed at me</p>

<p>point is, in addition to the curriculum, wharton has fantastic resources and connections to help aspiring entrepreneurs (the greater university does too, as with the weiss tech house)</p>

<p>Ok people on this site are pretty mean. All I’m trying to say is that at Babson, entrepreneurial thought runs through all areas of business-- and fyi it has exceptional finance and strategic management / management consulting departments. It also has the highest percentage of international students, giving everyone a global education in the classroom and out. I’m just trying to point out that it should not be overlooked just because of its name is not as well known as the others (and i’ve never heard of Huntsman). I just think that bestswimmer should look into it… that’s all.</p>

<p>The idea that you can actually learn entrepreneurship through schooling is laughable.</p>

<p>I understand that you need certain natural-given skills to be an entrepreneur. I’m not the entrepreneurial type; I don’t come up with new ideas and products on my own, and I don’t easily take risks. But through Babson’s education I’ve learned how to “think and act” like an entrepreneur. If someone said “hers my idea, make it happen” I could 100% start and run a business on my own-- something I would have never been able to do without the education I received there, and (even more importantly) something many of my friends at Ivy Leagues couldn’t do better than me.</p>

<p>If someone DOES have that entrepreneurial flair, Babson is the ideal place to develop these skills. They offer tremendous support for student entrepreneurs, host business plan competitions, offer various opportunities to start and run your own company for credit, strong networking and connections, and an energy filled with innovation and opportunity. Honestly, tell me I could transfer to Wharton free tuition tomorrow and I wouldn’t leave Babson. Tomorrow or ever. You may think that’s a stupid decision, but you haven’t experienced Babson’s education. Laugh all you want!</p>

<p>Who ever said going to school to learn entrepreneurship is laughable is an idiot. And you must be off your rocker if you wouldn’t transfer to Wharton, especially if it was for free. I understand the whole school pride thing but that’s just being retarted. You wouldn’t transfer from a school who most people have never heard of to one of the top b-schools (and alumni networks) in the WORLD??? THAT’S laughable.</p>

<p>Hahahahahahahhahahahahahahahah</p>

<p>I think it’s a little funny that babson’s rank moved up 6 spots and wharton went down 3… </p>

<p>yea babson is still #17, but if you want a small school it’s #1. it’s finally getting the attention it deserves, and moving on up.</p>

<p>^Wharton is still the best undergrad business program and babson is still a school most people (even those in finance) have never heard of</p>