I think it really depends on one's career goal. If you really want to get your MBA and afterwards, work in Germany, then I think German is an essential skill you have to master at some point. I don't think I have met anyone who can not speak the local language and yet still managed to land a job in management consulting here in Germany. A lot of the clients will be German companies, and if you've ever worked as a consultant, you would know, some of the most valuable intel will be gathered from the coffee corner chitchat.
So, I guess my point is: if you only speak English and have no plan of picking up German, then you should think hard and carefully before getting an MBA from Germany. But if you plan to master the language, I believe Pforzheim is an excellent and relatively inexpensive choice.
To Razors Edge: The fact that Pforzheim does not release detailed career data also struck me as strange during my MBA program research. But later I realized, it just doesn't seem like something German institutes do (except for the few internationally-ranked ones perhaps). But based on a brochure I have at hand, their graduates from classes 11-13 seem to have gone to places like BASF, BOSCH, Daimler, Bombardier, Henkel, HSBC, KPMG, MCG Consulting, Oracle, Sandoz, SAP, Toyota, GIZ, Avantalion Consulting, etc...
I think it really depends on one's career goal. If you really want to get your MBA and afterwards, work in Germany, then I think German is an essential skill you have to master at some point. I don't think I have met anyone who can not speak the local language and yet still managed to land a job in management consulting here in Germany. A lot of the clients will be German companies, and if you've ever worked as a consultant, you would know, some of the most valuable intel will be gathered from the coffee corner chitchat.
So, I guess my point is: if you only speak English and have no plan of picking up German, then you should think hard and carefully before getting an MBA from Germany. But if you plan to master the language, I believe Pforzheim is an excellent and relatively inexpensive choice.
To Razors Edge: The fact that Pforzheim does not release detailed career data also struck me as strange during my MBA program research. But later I realized, it just doesn't seem like something German institutes do (except for the few internationally-ranked ones perhaps). But based on a brochure I have at hand, their graduates from classes 11-13 seem to have gone to places like BASF, BOSCH, Daimler, Bombardier, Henkel, HSBC, KPMG, MCG Consulting, Oracle, Sandoz, SAP, Toyota, GIZ, Avantalion Consulting, etc...