There are early entry MBAs. For example, Chicago Booth and Duke Fuqua have their own flavor of early entry MBA program. I believe Haas just started one as well. Keep in mind that there may be some restrictions on who is eligible to apply – for example, a school could require that you have a certain undergraduate major or even have attended their own University as an undergraduate student.
In my opinion, here's the bottom line –unless you have a specific reason as to why you need an MBA right out of undergraduate, I would not go and get one. Because in general, if you do enter an early entry program, you're going to be surrounded by people who don't have a lot of work experience and really can't add to your own individual education. And the flip-side of that is you won't be able to add to theirs as well. Not in as meaningful of a way as if you had one or two years of work experience in the very least.
To be honest with you, I don't even think you're thinking about this critically enough. I don't mean to sound condescending, but you're not even asking the right types of questions or providing me the right types of data. for example, what are your goals ? have even thought about what it is you want to do? how do you know that these are your goals? I'm not trying to be a jerk, but how do you know if you've never worked in the field. You may think you know what your goals are, but if you've never worked in a professional full-time role in the field, how do you know for sure? Admissions committees don't want applicants are students that think they know what they want to do. They need to know you know exactly what you want to do and that your heart is in it. a good way to show that is your choice of career path and the fact that you are successful in your role as demonstrated by your impact and leadership. But you don't have that because you don't have professional full-time experience. You don't have the evidence an admissions committee needs to be confident. of course, maybe what you have in your current repertoire is good enough for an early entry program. But again, we go back to the problem where the people who surround you in an early entry program might not do anything for you. This is because they don't have the professional maturity network that you would require to make you a better manager and leader - and of course to get you the job that you want upon graduation.
I think it was Groucho Marx that said something like "I wouldn't be a member of any club that would have me as a member." that's the advice I would follow here.
yashikaaggarwal
Does any of the top B-school intake freshers for MBA or work experience is the top most priority. Or if I am to give GMAT now and score good. Would I be eligible to apply as a fresher or what impact it will leave on my application it I decided to continue mba after 2 years of experience.
Will Now's GMAT score will be apt for the applications send by then or not.
How will I achieve that certain profile needed to get admission in Top B-school.
Kindly revert.
Thank you in advance.
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