Please help!
I have been fortunate to get into some solid programs but seem to lack a preferential choice, here is my situation:
I intend to use an MBA to transition into asset management
My ideal post-mba job would be a long only asset manager on the west coast, therefore, of the schools I applied to, Anderson seems like a logical choice. However, given the current hiring environment and difficulty of getting a job in this specific part of finance, I am worried about my prospects, particularly given how much recruiters/gatekeepers at asset managers value "prestige" of MBA programs. Through speaking with recruiters, I have learned that even some prominent, large AMs on the west coast only recruit top 5 schools or H/W/Columbia/Booth/Kellogg.
I have a decent background (7 years of IB/equity research at NYC bulge bracket firms and will hopefully have my CFA this fall), and feel confident interviewing, but I can't succeed if I don't even have the oppty to get me foot in the door.
That said, Tuck / Fuqua seem to eliminate at least some (but definitely NOT all) prestige worries, however, they pose much harder geographic networking problems.
So to sum up, my optimal MBA outcome in order of preference...
1) Asset management on west coast
2) Asset management anywhere
3) Decent job on West Coast (maybe a good bus dev job or something in entrepreneurship)
***Worst case scenario is being trapped in East Coast in non asset management job
So as I see it now I have 7 options, which do you think is best!?1) Attend Anderson and risk not even getting AM iviews
2) Attend Tuck / Fuqua and risk not being able to get to West Coast
3) Stay in job, skip MBA (also consider that at 7 years in finance, I have greater than $500k all-in oppty cost and have not gotten any scholarship $), and hope CFA and my background opens some doors later this year
4) My GMAT (just the quant score really) kept me from applying / getting into top schools, I have taken it 5 times already but I seem to improve each time I take it, I think a 720-740 is reasonable if I give myself another 1-2 tries, although that would mean waiting a year and entering MBA at 30 is not optimal, especially considering I made A2A promotion in 2009

(seems like a potential huge step backward in progression)
5) Quit job and move to West Coast and start networking full-time (easier to network once on location, v hard to get iviews from east coast)
6) Marry rich
7) Quit the rat race and become a crab fisherman on deadliest catch