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23-03-10, 10:04 AM | #1 |
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Career Advice
I have been looking into doing an MBA......probably not in the next year but soon after that.
Any of you have an opinion on the subject? What reasons would you give for wanting to do one? I am in between minds and there is not enough info on the web to sway me to a yes or no answer. In terms of what I do: IT Service Manager for 7 years, completing my ITIL qualifications this year. So all papers in place Also got two degrees from uni. Any help to make up my mind would be greatly appreciated |
23-03-10, 10:49 AM | #2 |
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Re: Career Advice
I'd only do one if it was funded and supported by an employer. It's an expensive business funding yourself through one, more so in a ****e and unstable economy. A degree is hardly worth the paper it's printed on (I paid £25k for my sheet of A4).
Not wanting to put you off, but I'd ask myself: why you'd want to do one will it pay for itself (which may not necessarily matter to you) can you manage to do it without sacrificing too much of your work/home life |
23-03-10, 11:01 AM | #3 |
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Re: Career Advice
Surely IT is a sector where work experience and a brainis considerably more valuable than a piece of paper received after doing a detailed dissertation on a random subject.
I wouldn't bother, unless of course you do the work on a topic you have no clue about for CPD. |
23-03-10, 11:13 AM | #4 | |
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Re: Career Advice
Quote:
It will pay for itself in its long run. I would probably take a year off or stretch and do it part time while working with some sort of arrangement with work. Work would end up paying for it as I cannot afford £50k at the moment. But I'm not sure that it's worth that amount of money. There must be something else I'm missing that an MBA offers!!! |
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23-03-10, 11:16 AM | #5 | |
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Re: Career Advice
Quote:
And my aim is to achieve an executives position in the next 10 years. |
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23-03-10, 11:16 AM | #6 |
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Re: Career Advice
I've gotten a lot from it. It is a hard course and it will certainly take you away from what you're used to, especially the financial aspect.
As someone else has posted, is it relevant for what you want/need and do you want to do it?
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"It's not the years in your life, it's the life in your years." Currently - Fighting the urge... seen a nice Triumph America Previously - Honda CB125, Honda CB400-4 & BSA B40, Moto Guzzi 850, Yamaha RD250, Suzuki GT380, Kawasaki Z1B, Kawasaki Z650, Honda VFR, Triumph Street Triple R. |
23-03-10, 11:19 AM | #7 | |
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Re: Career Advice
Quote:
What I want is an executive position in the next 10 years. So my question has been doI need an MBA to reach that level? Or will an MBA speed up the trip to reach that level? Where did you do yours Bri? And more importantly WHY did you choose to do it? |
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23-03-10, 11:26 AM | #8 |
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Re: Career Advice
You just need a private school education, a wealthy father with contacts and an oxbridge network
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23-03-10, 11:34 AM | #9 |
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Re: Career Advice
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23-03-10, 11:46 AM | #10 |
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Re: Career Advice
I did mine via OU.
The WHY is quite simple; I'm an engineer by trade. I was excellent with the tools, and good at building relationships with customers and other engineers. Typically in the UK if you are a decent engineer you can end up getting promoted to the level of your incompetence, i.e. manager. Having gone through the engineer, senior engineer, team leader, the company I work for grew their business to the point they needed regional service managers. It was soon apparent that although I could motivate my Team, and build a relationship with the customers I couldn't sustain the growth in business with the skills I had. An awful lot of the soft skills I inherently had needed refining from two aspects. One, I was clumsy, and two, the refined skills mean I save time by directing my energies in a more focussed manner. I also had to learn financial mgt pretty quick. I have targets, cost centres and budgets (a good few £mill). This has been the harder of the two to learn, although I have found an awful lot of what I've learned doesn't fit into what I need. The route I chose has meant a longer time scale, which has worked against me from an advancement persepctive but I was relatively late into mgt anyway. Although it hasn't stopped my employer talking to me about level 2 mgt. The networking that you can get from being in Uni would undoubtably help but I've had no problems communicating within the industry, and perhaps more importantly have had a number of approaches with offers of employment which suggests I'm half decent at what I do. I would say go for it from two perspectives. The extra skills you learn, and the credibility it still has as a qualification, i.e. its viewed far better than a degree in mgt science.
__________________
"It's not the years in your life, it's the life in your years." Currently - Fighting the urge... seen a nice Triumph America Previously - Honda CB125, Honda CB400-4 & BSA B40, Moto Guzzi 850, Yamaha RD250, Suzuki GT380, Kawasaki Z1B, Kawasaki Z650, Honda VFR, Triumph Street Triple R. |
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