Harvard Business School (MBA) Grads Make Most Money: Report
According to a new report from BusinessWeek and PayScale, Harvard Business School gives grads the most bang for their buck (and those are big bucks: Harvard is one of the most expensive B-schools in the country).
BusinessWeek has the numbers:
On average, MBAs from the top 45 B-schools will make around $2.5 million in base pay and bonuses over the course of a 20-year career. But there are great differences between the total compensation of the schools at the top of the list compared with those closer to the bottom, especially as MBAs move deeper into their careers. An MBA grad from Harvard, for instance, will earn nearly $4 million over the span of two decades. A grad from the University of Iowa's Tippie College of Business will earn less than half that. Newly minted MBAs at some top programs, such as Yale, earn high starting salaries but experience only a minimal increase over time. At other schools, such as the University of Connecticut, MBA grads more than double their salaries over the 20-year period.
The report's lower-ranking schools included the University of Michigan, Yale, MIT and Dartmouth, the grads of which see an average 46 percent increase in pay during their careers.
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"The differences might not seem like a lot now, but over time, it will be very hard to recoup that lost income," Dorf says. "Over 20 years, the difference will grow exponentially."
VARIATIONS AMONG INDUSTRIES
At Dartmouth, starting salaries dropped 7.5 percent, to $124,000, compared with last year. Similarly, at Wharton—the program with the highest average salary at graduation—the median compensation of MBA graduates fell 5.5 percent, to $137,000. "These are schools known for investment banking and consulting, areas where salaries have dropped off a bit," Lee says. The news is more positive for MBAs further along in their careers. In fact, overall, MBA grads at the 20-year mark actually experienced a 2 percent increase in pay compared with last year.
The main pay differentiators among B-schools are the kinds of jobs grads are looking for. "Industry is everything," says Andy Chan, vice-president for career development at Wake Forest University (Wake Forest Full-Time MBA Profile)."If you look at the [mix] of industries that schools like Stanford (Stanford Full-Time MBA Profile), Harvard, and MIT send students into compared with everyone else, it accounts for the biggest difference in salary." At Wharton, 80 percent of MBA grads go into finance and consulting jobs at such companies as McKinsey andBain. Similarly, 76 percent of MBA grads from Columbia get jobs in the same two industries, pushing the school's median starting salary to $119,000.
On the other hand, graduates from the Michigan's Ross School—ranked 5th overall inBloomberg Businessweek's 2008 ranking of full-time MBA programs—brought home a median salary of $107,000, according to PayScale, 22nd among the top 45 programs. At Michigan, nearly as many students go into marketing and sales positions as finance, with large numbers of students signing on at companies such as Amazon.com (AMZN), Kraft Foods (KFT), and Procter & Gamble (PG).
REGIONAL PREMIUMS
Location also plays a role in the compensation differences, or what Tepper's Dammon calls a "New York premium." While MBAs from Wharton and Columbia tend to flock to Wall Street, where a cost-of-living premium further boosts salary numbers, most Ross grads stay in the Midwest. The same is true at Southern Methodist University's Cox School of Business (Cox Full-Time MBA Profile). While 45 percent of Cox MBAs go into finance-related positions, three out of four grads remain in the Southwest, where salaries pale in comparison with those offered to MBAs in the Northeast. At Cox, recent MBA grads earned a median salary of $77,200, significantly lower than the $90,860 average median across all 45 programs.
According to PayScale's Lee, a hiring year hasn't been good for MBAs since 2007. But there are signs of hope: Nine of the 45 top MBA programs experienced small upticks in starting salaries in 2010, including Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business (Mendoza Full-Time MBA Profile) and Boston University (Boston Full-Time MBA Profile). While the increases—only a few hundred dollars, on average—aren't enough to usurp any of the top earning B-schools in the near future, for the MBAs entering the workforce, a small increase this year could mean a much larger payoff 20 years down the road.
Gloeckler is a staff editor for Bloomberg Businessweek in New York.
Source:
1) http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/content/may2010/bs20100521_243715_page_3.htm
2) http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/24/harvard-mba-grads-make-mo_n_587901.html?view=print