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tracktime
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mradamsmith
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ram7
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This is a great dilemma to have. Being someone who actually has these two similar offers, I'm qualified to answer this. When I had to choose between these two schools I primarily compared the brand value, placements, and close-knit community. Measuring these factor, I was able to zero in on Ross because my post-Mba goal is consulting and Ross is better at it.
However, in your situation, the answer has to be different. Based on my research NYU stern is arguably much better in finance. So if you are sure that it would be your preferred line of work (be it PE or any other subdomain) I would strongly encourage you to join stern. But if you are still in doubt Join Ross because other than Finance Ross is better than Stern in every other domain.
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For what it is worth, I decided to go to Michigan Ross and decline the offer from NYU Stern. Not an easy decision, though and I think it necessarily has to be a personal decision that takes into account your background and what you want to get out of school (if you solely care about getting your first job, the answer might be different than preparing for a lifetime of learning, work, and relationships).

In the end, I decided Michigan would likely provide a better business school experience from a cultural standpoint, provide a better exposure to a wider array of backgrounds and future career aspirations, and is a program that's trying harder to improve and is much more transparent. The advantages I was able to find from NYU Stern was that it is likely slightly easier to recruit for finance jobs because it is located in NYC and thus easier to set up coffee chats, it has a larger alumni network in finance, probably has a better/more well-known name in finance (a friend at a successful investment firm said he'd look at a Stern resume but not one from Michigan), and maybe it has some better finance professors. I don't think viewing business school as just a route to a job is the right approach for me. That is just one element and frankly, I don't care to be around people that are solely focused on careers, either. The career offices can't really help that much in any niche field as it is, so I knew I'd mainly have a self-driven process no matter where I went.

In my weighing mechanism, I knew getting exposure to people with different backgrounds from me (engineers, factory managers, CPG marketers, etc.) was really important and I wasn't sure I'd get a ton out of being in an environment where everyone wants to just do banking/consulting/tech (which seems to be the case at NYU Stern from their career report, but also a lot of schools). It seems Ross has a much wider array of recruiting from top tier global companies outside professional services (for example, one major global industrial company only accepts applications from MBA students from HBS/Booth/Kellogg/Ross for its elite leadership development program) and Ross was one of the 5-7 schools on the recruiting list for many other companies (Stern was absent in nearly every case). Is that a function that recruiters prefer Ross students or that Stern simply is not a productive recruiting ground because of a lack of student interest? I don't know, but interesting either way.

As someone from the finance industry, I am going to business school mainly to round out my skillset in areas outside finance (even though I ultimately want to go back to the industry), so it probably made sense to go somewhere where there will be lots of student to learn from with experience outside finance. In my research, I also came to understand that it is wrong to consider Stern a "finance" school. Stern is an investment banking school in terms of career outcomes. They are very different and Stern seems to have only minor representation/recruiting in finance outside investment banking or corporate finance. Considering I have 0 interest in investment banking (and had offers for banking roles in post-MBA level positions in the past), Stern's reputation as a "finance" school was probably not very relevant to my situation. Maybe Columbia and Wharton are more deserving of that reputation?

To answer some of the prior questions and to help people in the future: I get the sense a small handful of students (maybe 1-4) successfully recruit for PE from both Ross and Stern in any given year. Didn't seem one was actually more successful as it really comes down to the individual candidate, if they are qualified, and if they are willing to put in the work. A prior poster mentioned Michigan having weaker recruiting or connections in PE than Tuck/Darden/Yale/Duke: not sure I'd agree except on Tuck. I looked at Duke carefully and their recruiting didn't seem very great either (maybe even worse than Michigan?) and frankly, didn't feel great about the school. I also felt Darden was similarly a step behind in recruiting, though I loved the case method and intense academics. And based on a friend that was a recent SOM graduate, they aren't very successful in PE either. From speaking with friends in the industry, unless you're at HBS/Wharton/Stanford, it is a tough, tough road and just determined by the individual candidates.

As an aside: try to get the underlying data from schools or students on their career reports (not specific about these schools). Some is classified differently than I'd expect, which might lead to some skewed perceptions...
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JohnJohnJ
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There are two ways to get into PE.
1. First job after MBA in PE
2. Work in IB for a few and then go to PE

Now, go to blackstone’s (worlds largest PE) website. They have a list of all their employees and where they went to school. That should tell you what school will get you that job in PE.

I know the answer to this question and the choice is kind of obvious-but it’ll be nice if you could read it up.

You want to be in a school that’s strong in finance to get that’s PE job
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