Undergraduate business after graduation

<p>What is the chance of getting a job in financial fields after graduating from a good business school like McDonough school ( G-town) campared to liberal arts college Econs and G-town ( traditional school) ? Which one is better for future jobs?
After graduating and getting jobs, getting to MBA program is hard so what do students usually do next?</p>

<p>bump 10 char</p>

<p>after graduation (undergraduate business school), what do students usually do ???</p>

<p>Smoke pot and collect unemployment checks.</p>

<p>What about Wharton? After undergraduate Wharton, do they go to MBA or PhD Economics?</p>

<p>Nah they just upgrade to coke AND pot.</p>

<p>what u you mean? i dont get your point</p>

<p>What he means is your question is stupid as hell. People get jobs after they graduate, more specifically jobs in business fields.</p>

<p>they get jobs.</p>

<p>Getting an MBA after graduation DOES NOT HAPPEN. It might if you want to go to a mediocre business school, but even then why bother when it’ll just tarnish your credentials with garbage.</p>

<p>This is how it works</p>

<p>do well in undergrad
do well with your employers, climb the ranks. If at all possible avoid company hopping
get very solid recommendation letters from employers.
nail the GMAT(or GRE if accepted)</p>

<p>THEN APPLY… 5 years after. B schools don’t want to bother with you until you’ve actually accomplished something in life. The people who get into top Bschools usually aren’t the ones who NEED it.</p>

<p>if you show up at an mba admitted student weekend with no work experience (and while still in undergrad), you’ll feel horribly out of place</p>

<p>even my friend, who got into stanford mba right out of undergrad (penn), realized there was no value in going straight to even a top-ranked program - and so she’s deferred matriculation and is working in finance</p>

<p>No :slight_smile: Actually I mean if they get undergraduate degrees in business( Non-Wharton), they have lower chance of being admitted to graduate school right ? Is that true that undergraduate and graduate business are nearly similar (learn the same thing)? And my point is not what will they do after graduation. They can get jobs of course but getting another MBA is useless right? So as I mentioned in the first post, what will they do next after jobs? ( getting MBA or continuing their jobs forever or else)
Thank you</p>

<p>the greatest value of an mba is in networking</p>

<p>mba degrees are required in order to advance in some fields, or are a useful credential in others - they’re also useful as a stepping stone when changing between fields - so some pursue them, and others see no need; it’s not one single set path</p>

<p>and no, undergraduate major doesn’t make a big difference in mba admissions</p>

<p>What about the Wharton and Pepperdine 5 year MBA programs? Both are respected universities (wharton at a level higher than Pepperdine obviously), so what about their 5 year deals?</p>

<p>i am pretty sure that the wharton 5 year mba program doesn’t accept any more than 5-10 people per year</p>

<p>and again, value is hurt when lacking work experience</p>