Subtitles section Play video
-
I'm mostly looking for flexibility, since I am a working professional.
-
I think the network is a huge factor.
-
I feel like an MBA for me is a second chance.
-
Is an MBA worth it?
-
It's a question that many prospective students, like these, are asking themselves.
-
Until recently, getting an MBA was considered a relatively safe bet, one likely to yield a big bump in salary.
-
But in recent years, applications to programs across the country are down.
-
Why, that's not entirely clear.
-
Some point to the strong economy, others to rising costs.
-
But what is certain is that schools are beginning to change as a result.
-
The Questrom School of Business at Boston University, ranked 36th last year among two year MBA programs, recently made headlines when it announced an alternative to its, roughly, $55,000 a year Residential Program.
-
A new online MBA had a ticket price far lower than its competitors.
-
We plan to launch in the Fall of 2020 an MBA degree priced at 24,000 and available only online on the edX platform.
-
It's an MBA degree, but the product is completely different than what you would get in the full time MBA, on campus.
-
It's a completely different product designed for a different audience that has different lives, different needs, so they don't have six years experience, they have beyond 10 years experience.
-
They're much more seasoned, and the MBA allows them to advance in the career they're in.
-
One of the challenges your facing, and many business schools are facing nation wide, decline in applicants.
-
Yes, nation wide the applications for MBA are down.
-
They've been down at different levels in different schools for almost five years now.
-
What about your school?
-
We were down as well, but not as significantly as others.
-
How much were you down?
-
In the MBA we were down, this year, 18%.
-
The school's dean, Susan Fournier, says, "Her MBA program was able to fill its incoming class "with qualified students."
-
But, she also saw a need for something new.
-
I was curious was Questrom's current full-time students thought about this declining interest in their degrees.
-
How many of you are confident that five years from now it'll have been worth it?
-
Meet Nari, Airian, Michael, Carolyn, Saeid and Danesh.
-
Each of these full-time Questrom students has a different background and a different career goal, but they're all confident that their MBA degree will help them take their careers to the next level.
-
Do you ever have moments when you ask yourself, is it worth it?
-
- Yes I do. - Saeid, you do?
-
Yeah, it's because the opportunity cost for me is really high.
-
You're a doctor.
-
Yeah, I had those moments, but when I sit in a class and I hear some new concepts, some new lessons, and it's like eye opening to me, wow, this is what this happen to us, or this what, this is happening.
-
I just say, this is the right time to be here, this is the right place for you.
-
Carolyn, you've never questioned whether it's worth it or not?
-
When I hear conversations like this, I think a lot of it depends on where you were before, and it sounds like some people were really in a job that they really saw themselves in and felt deeply entrenched.
-
For me I really wanted a big change, and I didn't know what that change would be, so I feel like I was the perfect person to leave and be excited about being here to reset and relearn.
-
Today, Questrom also offers a variety of specialized MBAs.
-
There's the Social Impact MBA, the MBA plus MS in Digital Technology, and the Health Sector MBA.
-
Half way through my undergraduate degree in biochemistry I realized I didn't wanna do the academic thing, but I did wanna make an impact in the health sector in life sciences.
-
And so I thought, the best way of doing that was to kind of, follow the money.
-
As an engineer, you're limited in your career choices.
-
As an engineer MBA, the door opens.
-
And so now I have the technical expertise and I know how it translates into the dollar math.
-
Have you all heard about the online program that BU just announced?
-
You know it's not gonna cost quite as much as what you're paying for here at the residential program?
-
Do you feel like, if that was offered to you as an alternative, would you have said, I'm gonna stay at home, save some money.
-
I was considering going to an online program when I was applying, but decided against it for a few reasons.
-
One is, definitely the experience.
-
You get to actually meet people.
-
It's a huge part of the value that I saw in the degree.
-
When they start offering MBAs to people through an online program, does that dilute the value of your degree?
-
It's something I'm concerned about, but having a more specialized degree, having it specifically in health sector, I think it helps me a little bit more.
-
You're here because you wanna get more than just the education out of it, and that's the biggest thing that sets the regular MBA from the online MBA part.
-
In terms of academic knowledge that one gains through a residential program, the two year program, can you get all that in an online program?
-
You won't get the ability to go deep and to specialize.
-
Can you learn leadership in an online course?
-
- Yes. - You can?
-
Yes, but you can't go as deep as you might if you took a whole other year and took nothing but leadership courses.
-
Is this a good time to be a dean of a business school?
-
It's really a test for how to manage a business.
-
This is a business.
-
It is a business, and you know, we provide products that meet people's needs and the market is very, it's very dynamic.
-
By dynamic you mean there's less demand right now?
-
No, dynamic meaning it's evolving a lot.
-
It's challenged in some ways.
-
There are some cultural trends that challenge business, overall, challenge higher ed, so you really have to know the astute business analysis of your case.
-
I'd say 50 years ago, you know, you had two products, an undergrad, an MBA, you were good to go.
-
Some schools today have one product.
-
We have 10 products, because the market is very complex.