A ton of good information here and I’ll try to add on a few things that might help.
For context - I have an MBA that I completed while working full time - was in person and was a grind.
I sit on the board of advisors for a business school in my area (that caters to both undergrad and grad) so your question is very common and close to home. I will give you the same thoughts and advice I give to prospective students and my employees.
#1 know your “why” Be borderline obsessive around this. MBA does not guarantee more money although that this the metric is used by many schools. you will be more successful if you clearly identify your personal objective (and in doing so can help determine if MBA is right or a different path).
#2 May be a bit of a hot topic, but graduating from an MBA program isn’t actually that difficult - applying what you learn is. MBA programs are setup to make sure you graduate - it’s up to you to apply your learnings in real life
#3 you get out what you put in - this goes back to #1 and #2. if you are willing to work hard be willing to share and learn from others and apply this at your job, you will be successful. If you just are there to get three letters behind your name on LinkedIn - waste of time. This goes back to your “why”
hope this helps and happy to answer additional questions
For context - I have an MBA that I completed while working full time - was in person and was a grind.
I sit on the board of advisors for a business school in my area (that caters to both undergrad and grad) so your question is very common and close to home. I will give you the same thoughts and advice I give to prospective students and my employees.
#1 know your “why” Be borderline obsessive around this. MBA does not guarantee more money although that this the metric is used by many schools. you will be more successful if you clearly identify your personal objective (and in doing so can help determine if MBA is right or a different path).
#2 May be a bit of a hot topic, but graduating from an MBA program isn’t actually that difficult - applying what you learn is. MBA programs are setup to make sure you graduate - it’s up to you to apply your learnings in real life
#3 you get out what you put in - this goes back to #1 and #2. if you are willing to work hard be willing to share and learn from others and apply this at your job, you will be successful. If you just are there to get three letters behind your name on LinkedIn - waste of time. This goes back to your “why”
hope this helps and happy to answer additional questions