i intend to get a Master in Business Admin (MBA), any book is suitable for ‘beginner’ of MBA student?

i hope can borrow from library and read it, hopefully can know the basic of what a MBA student have to study.
 

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2 Comments

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2 Responses to i intend to get a Master in Business Admin (MBA), any book is suitable for ‘beginner’ of MBA student?

  1. Cochise

    While you can get an MBA after almost any Bachelors level degree, a basic course in economics and another in business law are good places to start. Also you won’t go wrong with some knowledge of tax, accounting, and budgeting [usually that course is called something like 'managerial accounting. ']

    However, I know MBAs who got their degrees in engineering, art, education, of course business, nursing, and a few others I can’t recall right now.

    Good luck to you

  2. Prof

    MBA programs accept students in any undergraduate field. They prefer students who do not have a business background because they give you the business training but they cannot provide the broad background that managers should have. I have taught MBA students with degrees in Music, Medicine, Dentistry, Law, Psychology, Political Science, Chemistry, Biology, Engineering, and many other fields. Most MBA programs prefer students with 2-3 years work experience after the first degree. , Some accept students right out of college if they have good grades and a high GMAT score. Some MBA programs are designed specifically for new college graduates without work experience. But in those programs you don’t get the benefit of learning from other students who have work experience. A lot of valuable learning takes place through class interaction.

    Before you decide on an MBA program explore the Internet for information on available programs. There is a lot of information available. Some sites are limited to specific countries, such as Germany, UK, or Australia. There is a comprehensive free public service with more than 2,000 MBA programs listed worldwide. The nice thing is that it allows you to find the program that best fits you. It allows you to search for programs by location (US, Europe, Far East, etc. ), by concentration (finance, marketing, aviation management, health management, accounting, etc. ), by type of program (full-time, distance learning, part-time, executive, and accelerated), and by listing your own criteria and preferences to get a list of universities that satisfy your needs. Schools report their accreditation status look for AACSB accreditation or at least AACSB membership), tuition cost, number of students, class sizes, program length, and a lot of other data. Schools provide data on entrance requirements, program costs, program characteristics, joint degrees, joint degrees such as MBA/JD, and much more. You can use it to contact schools of your choice, examine their data, visit their web site, and send them pre-applications. You can see lists of top 40 schools ranked by starting salaries of graduates, GMAT scores, and other criteria. some of the other sites are less comprehensive, but all are useful.

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