The following was written by Wharton College Pennsylvania. This should help.
Why an MBA
The MBA is not an end in itself, but a means to an end. It is a degree designed to give you the ability to develop your career to its fullest potential, at an accelerated pace. What will you get out of an MBA? Aside from a powerful life experience, the MBA degree should supply three main value propositions: Skills, Networks, and Brand.
Skills
These include the "hard skills" of economics, finance, marketing, operations, management, and accounting, as well as the "soft skills " of leadership, teamwork, ethics, and communication that are so critical for effective management. MBA students acquire these skills inside and outside the classroom. Since MBA programs attract people from very diverse industries and cultures, a program should be able to leverage these differences and translate them into learning opportunities.
Networks
An MBA degree program offers access to a network of MBA students, alumni, faculty, and business and community leaders. This network can be very useful when beginning a job search, developing a career path, building business relationships in your current career, or pursuing expertise outside your current field. For example, entrepreneurs need access to capital, business partners, vendors, and clients. Arts-related businesses need access to funding and strategic management in order to position themselves to be relevant in the marketplace. Global businesses need access to local business cultures as they expand their enterprises to new territories.
Brand
The MBA degree is a recognized brand that signifies management and leadership training. The particular school and type of MBA program you attend also have brand associations that can help open doors based on the school's reputation. The strength of a school's brand is based on the program's history, its ability to provide students with technical skills and opportunities for personal growth, and the reach of its alumni and industry network. A powerful brand can give you the flexibility to make changes throughout your career.
please help me out
BTech students shouldn't spoil his carrier in MBA. If your aim is MBA than you should do BA, B Com, BSc or BBA. Because you are to spend a huge amount of fees in BTech which will be worthless if you choose MBA, and it's non technical stream...
there is no mba(post graduation) course before btech.bcom.bsc,bba. or any undergraduate degree..
There are many opportunities for you once you have completed your BTech. You can either continue in your education and gain an MBA or you can find a career that suits you.
The required to get IIT btech college is 60% and above.
hi, im charitha... i completed my btech... and now i want to join mba with direct admission
Individuals pursuing an MBA come from a variety of disciplines. You may be required to take some prerequisite course work at the undergraduate level - if not done so already - however it is very doable, and the MBA will enhance your career possibilities in the future.
The salary difference between MTech and BTech is low.. BTech graduates get an average salary of around 17k in India. And MTech graduates get around 19k.. So its better to do MBA after BE or BTech unless you are to bright in technical aspects..
MBA and Mtech are diversified programs. Find the trending job graph in your geographical region you will come to know which program is more lucrative.
Ob in MBA Organizational behavior is required for an MBA because its essential for a manager to understand the behavior of all the staff working with him in that company.
Yes project management courses are useful to obtain a MBA. Some schools require it to earn the MBA since project management it a key skill in the work place.
The MBA itself is very useful. the skills acquired through this program are transferable to almost any career path. Yes, of course MBA in health care is useful in terms of career and earning. MBA - health care program prepare the professionals who achieve the optimum performance for health care industry.