<p>can you help me ranks schools which provide you with the most solid (job placement, salary..) in IB among the following schools?</p>
<p>Stern
Tepper
Wharton
Goizueta
Mcintire
Chicago
Washington uni in st louis
UNC
UT</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>can you help me ranks schools which provide you with the most solid (job placement, salary..) in IB among the following schools?</p>
<p>Stern
Tepper
Wharton
Goizueta
Mcintire
Chicago
Washington uni in st louis
UNC
UT</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>I think that because those are all strong, you will have great opportunities coming out of any of them. Of course Wharton would probably be the best, and then others would follow, but if I were you, I would go to the school which I found to be the best fit, where I would do the best. I would think that at that academic tier, the school wouldn’t matter that much, it would be the individual.
Anybody else, correct me if I’m wrong.</p>
<p>Wharton…Stern, McIntire, Chicago…then the rest</p>
<p>bump 10 char!</p>
<p>Wharton is a huge cut above the rest. If Ibank is really your thing then go to Wharton if you can. If not, then maybe Stern or something else.</p>
<p>just reading around, I would scratch off Goizueta. I think it’s a lower tier than all the rest of the other mentioned schools (for IBanking specifically).</p>
<p>Wharton ->>>>> Stern -> McIntire, Chicago -> the rest</p>
<p>Texas McCombs BHP places great relative to the rest of the school.</p>
<p>Tepper is ranked highly for quant, MIS, and solidly ranked for finance. I’d group Tepper with UNC, Wustl, and McCombs non-BHP. Solid programs, but a little extra step in networking is needed.</p>
<p>Wharton >>>> Stern > McIntire/UChi > Everything else</p>
<p>Wharton>>>>Stern=Chicago>>the rest</p>
<p>Wharton rapes all the other schools for job placement</p>
<p>So u mean that if i dont get into wharton, and attend other schools like NYU, Haas… then i can kiss goodbye to IB oh man…</p>
<p>Not really. Wharton has the best placement, but that doesn’t mean all other schools have nonexistent placement. If you work hard at any of those schools and get a good GPA, a MM bank is definitely feasible and perhaps even a BB.</p>
<p>
of course not
Stern, Chicago and McIntire are all heavily recruited for IB, as well as other schools you have listed. once you get in, check with your school’s career center. also remember, going to a good ugrad bschool isnt the only way to get into IB, schools in top 10-15 that dont have bschools still have students that get into IB</p>
<p>I think Wharton is best. And then Chicago.</p>
<p>Chicago is ranked very highly for IB and you will undoubted develop lots of connections with Derivative traders via La Salle street’s CME.</p>
<p>I definitely agree with the rankings, and as others have said, not going to W is not equivalent to not getting into IB. By ranking, we are expressing the number of opportunities available both in terms of companies recruiting and seats per company allocated to the school. W is clearly above the rest, but NYU and Chi all get really solid exposure as well, just not quite as much as W. Additionally, while the other schools aren’t heavily recruited, and some barely recruited, you can still utilize your alumni network from the school and network your way into some potential opportunities. For the most part, the schools outside of the top few ranked, will just require more work in terms of networking, and a little more luck.</p>
<p>IBanker</p>
<p>So u r saying that, lets say W’s opportunity is ~10 then stern will be around ~7 or 8? How about the opportunity at other schools? we can have a ranking scale, right?</p>
<p>UNC Kenan-Flagler should not be overlooked either. They place very well on wall street.</p>
<p>all of them are strong if you have connections and a decent gpa … but in this economy none are “solid” enough to get you a job right now.</p>
<p>i have a friend who graduated from Upenn Wharton 07 or 08 don’t remember but still have not gotten a job yet.</p>
<p>^^</p>
<p>He should be fine within the next few years. According to about 100% of textbooks, during full employment, anyone with qualified skills will be GUARANTEED a job. optimistic.</p>
<p>^^ What was his GPA? What internships did he have?</p>
<p>If you are talking to me … he had an internship in china for 2 years (summer)</p>
<p>He had 3.5- 4.0 range GPA </p>
<p><em>Cross your fingers</em> that the economy will get better but it dosn’t hurt to try! Work with your alumni association.</p>
<p>Here are some forums for business students and employees. Join and talk with them Good Luck!!</p>
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