I think you need to reflect on your career goals. Most BCG partners do have MBA degrees, but these are degrees from either the top ten US business schools, or from Insead or London Business School.
If you want to work at BCG, or in a top management role in a professional services firm, then the schools you are looking at are not a highly effective route.
The schools you are looking at would be good for finance and accounting (Bank of America, Northern Trust, JPMorgan, Ernst and Young), technology (IBM, Cisco, AT&T) or industry (Proctor and Gamble). In terms of those finance and accounting firms, DePaul and NCSU are the schools to focus on (especially for BoA, JPMorgan, NT, Allstate, Wells Fargo...).
But if you want to become partner in a banking or FS role, you should aim at much better schools.
I think you need to reflect on your career goals. Most BCG partners do have MBA degrees, but these are degrees from either the top ten US business schools, or from Insead or London Business School.
If you want to work at BCG, or in a top management role in a professional services firm, then the schools you are looking at are not a highly effective route.
The schools you are looking at would be good for finance and accounting (Bank of America, Northern Trust, JPMorgan, Ernst and Young), technology (IBM, Cisco, AT&T) or industry (Proctor and Gamble). In terms of those finance and accounting firms, DePaul and NCSU are the schools to focus on (especially for BoA, JPMorgan, NT, Allstate, Wells Fargo...).
But if you want to become partner in a banking or FS role, you should aim at much better schools.