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Admissions Consultant
Joined: 25 Jan 2010
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Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
15 Jun 2011, 22:18
Hey all, Thought we'd mix it up and spark some debate by throwing together a quick list of OUR top U.S. b-schools. It's nothing more than putting a finger to the wind, but we do spend 70-80 hours a week in this world and our clients seem to always want our opinion on the matter, so we figured we'd throw it out there. It's all opinion anyway, right? Here's the link: http://educatedoutcomes.wordpress.com/2 ... b-schools/Respectfully, Paul Lanzillotti
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Manager
Joined: 01 Jun 2011
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
16 Jun 2011, 00:26
I thought it will be a joke. I agree with the top5
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Senior Manager
Status: Happy to join ROSS!
Joined: 29 Sep 2010
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Concentration: General Management, Strategy
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
16 Jun 2011, 04:10
My personal problem with ratings - they assume an equally spaced linear scale, such as 1km... 2km... so Harvard would be supposedly 16 times better than Darden. That is misleading and creates extra hype around 1-2-3 names. Instead I prefer GMATclub's approach to cluster segmentation: super elite ultra elite near elite almost elite not elite once in a blue moon elite not in this life elite never ever elite etc (you've got the idea:) )
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Current Student
Joined: 17 Jan 2010
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
16 Jun 2011, 07:00
Vorskl wrote: My personal problem with ratings - they assume an equally spaced linear scale, such as 1km... 2km... so Harvard would be supposedly 16 times better than Darden. I don't think rankings rarely ever convey ordering by cardinal means. More often than not, the rankings are ordinal, thus is hard to quantify exactly how much "better." But I do agree that rankings tend to draw too much attention to minuscule differences between two schools that are roughly similar in quality. That being said, the list looks reasonable. Although schools 11 through 16 seem more or less interchangeable and the ranking will be just as reasonable.
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Admissions Consultant
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
16 Jun 2011, 10:31
Your points are good ones. And, in fact, while we will always respond to a request for our opinion (clearly!) and give an "at gunpoint" list, it is true that using tiers is a better approach. We use tiers for quality, selectivity, reputation, etc. It is a more nuanced way to do it. But we can all agree that when you slap together a list with no qualifying factors, nuance probably wasn't the goal. This is just our version of "in a vacuum, if we were living life over again, and every school accepted us to attend, what would the order be in which we said yes." Anyway, thanks for discussing and for reading. It's fun for us to talk about some broader things and not purely essay strategy all day, every day. Cheers, -PL
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 Paul Lanzillotti | Founder| About | mba@amerasiaconsulting.com | 877.866.9251
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Senior Manager
Status: Happy to join ROSS!
Joined: 29 Sep 2010
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Concentration: General Management, Strategy
Followers: 15
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
16 Jun 2011, 10:38
Paul, may I suggest another fun exercise? You can actually take schools clients submit as their dream or stretch ones and build the TIER list of those. It'll be interesting to see which schools are the most requested ( I believe you have wide enought customer base so it won't be sole HBS : )
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Admissions Consultant
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Posts: 800
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
16 Jun 2011, 10:44
We are actually working on that. We are taking inventory from all inquiries, initial consultations, and clients to see what schools are most "popular." There might be a little "noise" in the results because we are boutique and have a few items that have emerged as calling cards (our Columbia guide tends to draw more CBS applicants than some other schools, for instance). That said, the results should be interesting and once we have them, we will share them. (Here's a sneak preview: NYU Stern is MUCH higher on the "popularity" list than it is on our ranking ... or really any other ranking, for that matter.) -PL
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Current Student
Joined: 13 Feb 2009
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
16 Jun 2011, 14:20
I really like these rankings, but of course, I'm biased. I really like that Michigan was ahead of all of its peer schools!
In my own opinion, one cannot really distinguish Harvard from Stanford, Duke from Michigan, or Kellogg from Chicago. The type that gets into Duke is also the type that is likely to get into Michigan or Darden. That said, I prefer the following tiers:
1: Harvard/Stanford 2: Wharton 3: MIT/Booth/Kellogg/Columbia 4: Dartmouth/Berkeley 5: Yale/Stern/Ross/Fuqua/Anderson/Cornell/Darden
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Admissions Consultant
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
16 Jun 2011, 14:22
Entirely fair point. Nice job giving Wharton its own tier. That seems right to us as well. -PL
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
17 Jun 2011, 08:30
I think the tier structure, without looking at specialty is: 1: Harvard/Stanford 2: Wharton/Sloan/Booth/Kellogg/Columbia 3: Haas/Stern/Fuqua/Ross/Yale 4: Anderson/Johnson/Darden
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Admissions Consultant
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
17 Jun 2011, 23:44
I think you are underrated Haas and overrating Yale, but otherwise, that seems pretty solid. I think our tier system looks more like mreevit's, but it seems that everyone on this side of the desk (applicants and consultants) have a pretty similar perspective - certainly more normalized than what you see in the actual rankings. Not that perception is reality, but it's interesting nonetheless. -PL
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 Paul Lanzillotti | Founder| About | mba@amerasiaconsulting.com | 877.866.9251
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Senior Manager
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
19 Jun 2011, 11:37
mreevit wrote: I really like these rankings, but of course, I'm biased. I really like that Michigan was ahead of all of its peer schools!
In my own opinion, one cannot really distinguish Harvard from Stanford, Duke from Michigan, or Kellogg from Chicago. The type that gets into Duke is also the type that is likely to get into Michigan or Darden. That said, I prefer the following tiers:
1: Harvard/Stanford 2: Wharton 3: MIT/Booth/Kellogg/Columbia 4: Dartmouth/Berkeley 5: Yale/Stern/Ross/Fuqua/Anderson/Cornell/Darden This is the one I lean towards ( Amerasia's is quite good). I'd put an asterisk on Wharton, which is closer to being part of the Harvard/Stanford tier than anything else, and on Columbia, which I think tilts towards Dartmouth and Berkeley.
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Current Student
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings [#permalink]
19 Jun 2011, 21:31
I know people don't care about as much about schools outside of top-16 but here's my rank of schools such schools: 17. USC 18. UT - Austin 19. Carnegie Mellon 20. UNC - Chapel Hill 21. Washington University in St. Louis 22. Georgetown 23. Boston University 24. University of Minnesota 25. University of Notre Dame
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Re: Having some fun - our own U.S. bschool rankings
[#permalink]
19 Jun 2011, 21:31
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