prestige vs job offer

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PremedSingh

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Suppose two pharmacists, "pharmacist A" and "pharmacist B" are competing for a job in retail pharmacy. "pharmacist A" graduated from a very prestigious and highly acclaimed pharmacy school, maintained a very good GPA, seems very intelligent overall. "pharmacist B" got his pharm d from a school that has a low standard of admission (low gpa requirements and less or no requirement for ec's) but worked as a pharmacy tech for 1-2 years, your typical average student...... Who in your opinion will get the job?
 
Pharmacist A will be out the door the moment a better offer comes along. Pharmacist B has fewer options and has relevant experience. I think it's pretty clear how it shakes out.
 
Grades don't matter. The name of the school is the only thing that matters and that is if the interviewer went to the same school.

1-2 years of tech experience 4 years prior to applying should have no influence on getting the job over someone with no experience.
 
Eh, prestige isn't really a thing in pharmacy. Especially if you are looking for a job in a different market than your school, where likely no one has ever heard of it.
 
school that has a low standard of admission (low gpa requirements and less or no requirement for ec's)
Schools require extracurriculars now?

Hiring managers who are preceptors would probably know which schools:
  • inadequately prepare their students for APPEs,
  • are tougher overall (which will drive down GPA),
  • don't count APPEs toward GPA (which would boost low P&T/D&D grades), and
  • make you do an extra APPE (>1440 hrs total),
low standard of admission
Admissions standards are in the past. People hiring will care about job preparedness.

Being a technician was in the past. You are an APPE or new grad now. (Wait, aren't you Pre-Med @PremedSingh ?)

Make yourself the best functionally performing APPE and you will shine. Functional performance is not equal to past academic performance or being 'smart.' Keep a record of every single achievement, project, task, presentation, etc. during APPE year and let your C.V. speak for itself. Not just I was there between these dates.

Having a license in hand is more attractive than a 'smart' student who still has to take the Practical Exam (in NY & GA), NAPLEX, and MPJE.
 
I really don't care what school you went to unless it's mine. I get students all the time from a university that claims to be a top 4 program and they're hit or miss. I care more about what your experiences in both work and school.
 
For retail, if you have tech experience...that will trump which school you went to.
 
Prestige over experience really only comes into play in a small subset of jobs and pharmacy is not one of them. You don't need prestige to move up in the ranks or get to your desired goal.
 
If the tech worked for my company they will have a better chance getting hired. The worst thing that can happen in retail is hiring a lazy pharmacist. With the tech it is already known how competent and hard working they are. School means zilch in retail.
 
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