It’s widely known that obtaining an MBA degree can bring a lot of stress at all stages. Business school applications, reviewing for exams, doing projects and finding jobs tend to make an impact on your mental well-being. Reet Sen, a Hult International Business School alumni (class of 2015), knows it all too well.
Student Loan Hero, a consulting company, made a very prospective-MBAs-relevant piece of research, which resulted in the following conclusion: graduates of Lehigh University College of Business and Economics (Pennsylvania) have not gathered any debt.
For companies, the most important thing is the money they earn, or return. Still, it is now believed that there are other equally important factors, namely the social and environmental impact of businesses.
It’s by no means easy to choose the MBA program that suits all your educational and professional needs, especially when there are so many things to think over. One of the crucial factors for most applicants is the business school’s place in rankings.
After a Forbes two-year report, now comes the next business school ranking from Times Higher Education, a British magazine about the state of higher education. Several days ago, they published their 2018 World University Rankings comparing higher educational institutions in the fields of business and economics.