Taking a more objective view, can you determine whether or not a 'sub-standard' MBA would really help your career?
Maybe there are jobs in your country that just require an MBA. A paper degree that literally says 'MBA' and is issued by a somewhat official organization may help you reach that threshold, but whether you meet all the other requirements for those jobs, and if you can actually land it, is another story. Personally, I've never seen a job ad that says "MBA required," but that's just me.
I suppose that directed learning could be considered a benefit of a sub-standard MBA, but if we're already calling the degrees sub-standard, you could probably do a lot better in this regard, often for free (coursera.)
However, the investment in a world class MBA goes a lot farther than just getting a paper degree and having directed learning. The network and career support you'd get would probably be the assets that get you the job you want.
Taking a more objective view, can you determine whether or not a 'sub-standard' MBA would really help your career?
Maybe there are jobs in your country that just require an MBA. A paper degree that literally says 'MBA' and is issued by a somewhat official organization may help you reach that threshold, but whether you meet all the other requirements for those jobs, and if you can actually land it, is another story. Personally, I've never seen a job ad that says "MBA required," but that's just me.
I suppose that directed learning could be considered a benefit of a sub-standard MBA, but if we're already calling the degrees sub-standard, you could probably do a lot better in this regard, often for free (coursera.)
However, the investment in a world class MBA goes a lot farther than just getting a paper degree and having directed learning. The network and career support you'd get would probably be the assets that get you the job you want.