- Joined
- Apr 2, 2019
- Messages
- 816
- Reaction score
- 1,979
What do doctors typically use MBAs for? Say it is an MBA for a top ranking program like Wharton, just for the sake of covering as much of the spectrum of what they can use the degree for.
I have an MBA. Do you? An MBA program is not a networking vacation. Believe it or not, students at top 25 programs work their butts off. Furthermore, these programs address much more than banking and finance. There is a host of other disciplines addressed within a solid MBA program such as supply chain management, cost accounting, operations research, organization management, facilities location, quality control etc.Hospital management. I shadowed a PCP with an MBA and he was running several veritable urgent care fiefdoms around the state. Honestly, an MBA is just a 2 year networking vacation you take in the middle of the beginning of your finance career (between Analyst and Associate) so it's where you meet future titans of industry. Networking can be easily accomplished by going to trade shows, product demos, and biotech conferences so an MBA isn't strictly necessary anymore. The fact that more schools are winding down their MBA programs is pretty strong evidence that the cachet and lure of the MBA is fading and becoming increasingly superfluous.
To answer your question, though, Wharton would be great, because it's a hub for other top-shelf talent.
What do doctors typically use MBAs for? Say it is an MBA for a top ranking program like Wharton, just for the sake of covering as much of the spectrum of what they can use the degree for.
Why do a whole MBA when I can just read the book??win friends and influence people. 🙂
which is a good skill to have regardless of job.
Ruining everything they touch.
Dale Carnegie move over
Why do a whole MBA when I can just read the book??
Well I was mostly joking but yeah, I was specifically asking about a T10 MBA and what docs can do with that. I've got an idea nowLol.
Well so... mostly MBAs are really useless. Even in business oriented jobs like finance/consulting, MBAs are a time/money sink. Experience > MBA.
Unless the MBA is from a top 10, the degree is a $200K piece of paper.
I guess this is where it would be helpful to go to a T10 med school and do a combined MD/MBA for those truly considering the management side of healthcare.
Hospital management. I shadowed a PCP with an MBA and he was running several veritable urgent care fiefdoms around the state. Honestly, an MBA is just a 2 year networking vacation you take in the middle of the beginning of your finance career (between Analyst and Associate) so it's where you meet future titans of industry. Networking can be easily accomplished by going to trade shows, product demos, and biotech conferences so an MBA isn't strictly necessary anymore. The fact that more schools are winding down their MBA programs is pretty strong evidence that the cachet and lure of the MBA is fading and becoming increasingly superfluous.
To answer your question, though, Wharton would be great, because it's a hub for other top-shelf talent.