Having completed my MBA at one of the schools on your list, I can tell you firsthand that, like Hipster (and Duncan), have stated; in Germany, your ability to speak German is more important than the school from which you completed an MBA. In 2020, it's a niche there.
Consulting is a customer-facing role, and you need to be able to speak to those customers in their first language. And despite your optimism, you will not become fluent in German from scratch during the length of the program. The sooner you accept that, the better your decision making should become.
Simply put: Without the ability to speak German you will not be interviewing/competing for MBA caliber roles. Look forward to no-name start-ups, begging alumni on LinkedIn, etc.
Without German fluency you will have simply paid for the right to enter the German job market.
There are always outliers, of course.
[Edited by TonySnow on Apr 29, 2020]
<div>Having completed my MBA at one of the schools on your list, I can tell you firsthand that, like Hipster (and Duncan), have stated; in Germany, your ability to speak German is more important than the school from which you completed an MBA. In 2020, it's a niche there.</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>Consulting is a customer-facing role, and you need to be able to speak to those customers in their first language. And despite your optimism, you will not become fluent in German from scratch during the length of the program. The sooner you accept that, the better your decision making should become.</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>Simply put: Without the ability to speak German you will not be interviewing/competing for MBA caliber roles. Look forward to no-name start-ups, begging alumni on LinkedIn, etc.</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>Without German fluency you will have simply paid for the right to enter the German job market.</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>There are always outliers, of course. </div>