I am an American living in UK temporarily and am likely to go back to the States in 2 years. I am tempted to go for my MBA here as many programs are quite a lot cheaper than in the US, and I like international aspects of European MBA's. What I am not sure about is how UK MBA's are perceived by the US employers. Which programs would give me the best career prospects? I have 18 years of work experience in IT with 6 years of management experience. I am only considering part time or distance learning formats. My current idea is to move up within my company. However I want to stay open to other possibilities as well, after getting my MBA, so brand recognition is important. In my research I identified the following programs:
- LBS (EMBA, but not considering seriously, too competitive)
- Cranfield (part time)
- Warwick (DL/part time)
- Manchester (Global MBA or MBA for Engineering Business Managers, part time/blended)
Does anyone have any information on how these are perceived in US? Any others I have missed? What about Henley, Durham, Imperial College London, Cass? I've never heard of them when I lived in US, but then again, typical American will only know about Oxford and Cambridge.
Thanks for any help!
Hi,
LBS is one of the top schools, so the reputation is definitely fine. And of course, Oxford and Cambridge too...but in actuality, these, according to most ranks, are second-tier schools. The other schools you mentioned are great schools too...maybe a little out of the top 20. But brand is your concern in this case, so I'd say focus your efforts on LBS, Oxford and Cambridge.
Otherwise, besides rank, I'd say that your other concern should be your age. By the sound of your strong working experience, you're above the average applicant age. So you need to be able to answer the question: "Why MBA now?"
And btw, Imperial isn't known as a business school. It's a science school--that's my understanding at least.