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chestud13
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No, do it part-time or get your company to pay. I doubt you will get much in scholarships from B-schools.

Do you really want to owe 150K? Having that kind of debt hanging over your head just to go into "management consulting" which you will probably get sick of after 2-3 years.
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Well, you have a lot of options in front of you. Rice is not such a top program for consulting, as kingflacon pointed out. McCombs is better, but it's far enough away that you might as well apply to top 10 programs. the point about getting sponsored for an MBA and saving on the costs is a good one, and you can consider that option. But you could also apply to a few programs, see how things pan out and allow life to decide for you (I mean say you get into Stanford... is that worth it?? methinks so)
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I would say - do things step by step - you're in no rush.. so take your GMAT see how that goes. Are you getting the score you need for top 10 schools? Great! then visit them? do you like what you see? great! then apply!
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Part-time and full-time programs are a different beast. If you want to move up in your company to a management role, getting your MBA part-time from Rice makes sense. Management consulting sounds like a career change for you, and I think it's worth the time and $$ for a full-time program to launch your new career. The best parts of a full-time program is being able to do a summer internship in the field you're interested in and the on-campus recruiting. Finishing your MBA part-time at your company and trying to parlay that into management consulting will be a tough sell.
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CobraKai
Part-time and full-time programs are a different beast. If you want to move up in your company to a management role, getting your MBA part-time from Rice makes sense. Management consulting sounds like a career change for you, and I think it's worth the time and $$ for a full-time program to launch your new career. The best parts of a full-time program is being able to do a summer internship in the field you're interested in and the on-campus recruiting. Finishing your MBA part-time at your company and trying to parlay that into management consulting will be a tough sell.

Thanks for the replies. Just curious, my management professor back at UT Austin told me about the McCombs Houston program. Anyone know if this is just as good as the MBA program from Austin? How does it work exactly?
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That sounds like an executive MBA program which is yet another flavor of MBA. Yes after the program you will have an MBA, but its more like a part-time program than a full-time one. Again, good for advancing in your company and having the McCombs brand attached to your degree, but difficult to leverage that into a career-switch to a top tier management consulting firm.
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I am a student at the McCombs DFW program, which is exactly like the Houston program, and it is great. You will be able to network with the guys in your class that already have jobs, and still be able to recruit on-campus, all without giving up your job. According to career services, there are many recruiters that actually prefer the working professional program and I know Deloitte hires a lot of students from the professional program, unsure about the other top firms.