As someone working in Berlin with an MBA (from a European school) I thought I would share a few thoughts:
1. On a macro level, Germany doesn't care about the MBA degree. On a CV, they don't know what it is and they don't care. About 2-3 grads from good schools with go to American companies in Europe, and a few to consulting. You want to be a top manager in Germany? Get a PhD, which is what all the top managers in Germany have.
2. Berlin really doesn't care about an MBA. There are no corporates there, only startups. Startups will pay 40k-60k, max. 60k is already pushing it. Even bigger companies like Zalando will pay an MBA less than 60k. Even with low costs of living, that still isn't a high enough salary to justify the time or money of any MBA.
3. You need German. Berlin is international, but the reality is most of the startups there still require German. There are English jobs, but if you don't speak German, you will be restricted to I guess about <10% of total job opportunities. Hamburg would be the next best place, then Munich.
4. Germans are generally risk-averse and therefore will not take chances on role changes. If you didn't do the job for years before the MBA, the MBA will not change anything. German companies really only care about previous experience. This is connected to the first point as well. So, it's not a place to change roles (which is some of the reason people do an MBA).
In general, if you want to work in Germany, just learn German and save some cash by skipping the MBA. There are lots of jobs for you there and the Blue Card program is super simple. The MBA will only slightly help this goal and cost money and time.
1. On a macro level, Germany doesn't care about the MBA degree. On a CV, they don't know what it is and they don't care. About 2-3 grads from good schools with go to American companies in Europe, and a few to consulting. You want to be a top manager in Germany? Get a PhD, which is what all the top managers in Germany have.
2. Berlin really doesn't care about an MBA. There are no corporates there, only startups. Startups will pay 40k-60k, max. 60k is already pushing it. Even bigger companies like Zalando will pay an MBA less than 60k. Even with low costs of living, that still isn't a high enough salary to justify the time or money of any MBA.
3. You need German. Berlin is international, but the reality is most of the startups there still require German. There are English jobs, but if you don't speak German, you will be restricted to I guess about <10% of total job opportunities. Hamburg would be the next best place, then Munich.
4. Germans are generally risk-averse and therefore will not take chances on role changes. If you didn't do the job for years before the MBA, the MBA will not change anything. German companies really only care about previous experience. This is connected to the first point as well. So, it's not a place to change roles (which is some of the reason people do an MBA).
In general, if you want to work in Germany, just learn German and save some cash by skipping the MBA. There are lots of jobs for you there and the Blue Card program is super simple. The MBA will only slightly help this goal and cost money and time.