Hey,
I got admitted to Cornell and Rotman last year. I attended none because of visa issues but I can share my research.
Cornell:
- 2yrs of super cold location but good community
- strong job market in the US compared to Canada
- way more expensive than Rotman even considering the 36k
- Cornell carries a big brand name so still you stand in a much better place compared to other many other MBA s in the US
- you get the 3yr opt in cornell
Rotman
- metropolitan location, still cold
- much smaller market in Canada. 40m ppl in Canada vs 300m ppl in the US
- less expensive but considering your annual income and savings of Canada vs US it will almost take the same amount of time for the ROI
- everyone was telling me that Rotman is a guarantee that you get a good job (in Canada only)
-you get a 3yr work visa AND a much much easier Permanent residence. Like you can get your PR almost when you are done with the MBA
To sum it up: I am 33 and looking to get into consulting as well. Ppl tell me it is going to be difficult because the consulting companies stats (at least in MBB) for H1B is low, and they look for younger applicants who can handle the burnout of consulting longer than us. We as 30+ y.o. have gotten intelligent enough not to put so much pressure on ourselves for our jobs 😄 but thats subjective and I am sure it is possible to get into consulting if you really dream for it.
Between US and Canada:
if you want money, it comes with some more challenges and uncertainty, but the rewards are high. Even if you get an 80k paying job, you still can close your loans with your savings (if you want to go all-in) at your 40s. Thats the US.
If you want a safe side, you have kids, want to settle and look for a nice job and security, Canda is the place, with less money in it obviously.
I ran Cornell/Rotman choice through AHP system for myself last year (with the criteria important to me obviously, scoring the criteria roughly based on my guts and estimates) and Cornell got the upper hand.
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