Monday, September 17, 2007

It Doesn’t (Necessarily) Take an MBA

Many people in recent decades have been incessantly taught that college is the right way to go: Get a good job, retire, so on and so forth. While in this conventional wisdom lie some very valid points—education is completely worthwhile, there are diminishing returns in some scenarios. The classic picture of an Ivy League education being responsible for making one’s way up the corporate ladder and into the corner office isn’t necessarily the one that is based in reality.

In fact, the Wall Street Journal reports:

Most CEOs of the biggest corporations didn't attend Ivy League or other highly selective colleges. They went to state universities, big and small, or to less-known private colleges.

In fact, I know for a fact (as the article reports), went to Pittsburg State University in the small community of Pittsburg, KS: A place where I resided for a small time. An accounting major there, H. Lee Scott ascended to the top spot in the world’s top corporation: Certainly no small feat.

In fact, the “Oracle of Omaha,” the third-richest man in the world Warren Buffett, is quoted as saying “I don't care where someone went to school, and that never caused me to hire anyone or buy a business.

Following the line of logic that this allows, let’s take a look at Gabriel Hammod, a Johns Hopkins student who had his mind set on law school. During the course of his undergraduate years there, however, he traded stocks, placing $1000 on Caterpillar. Finding he had a knack for it, Gabriel decided to join Goldman Sachs as a stock analyst. Instead of going to business school for an MBA, like many of his colleagues, he chose to raise $5 million and start his own hedge fund, Alerian Capital Management. Three years into it, his company now manages $300 million from New York and Dallas. Gabriel, on the other hand, at the age of 28, enjoys a seven-figure salary.

What was his logic?

Like other young people on the fast track, Mr. Hammond has run the numbers and figures that an M.B.A. is a waste of money and time — time that could be spent making money. “There’s no way that I would consider it,” he says.

The finance world is rife with these sorts of stories.

At funds that manage $1 billion to $3 billion, people with just a few years of finance experience will make $337,000 this year, Mr. Zoia says, and those with five to nine years of experience will average $830,000, up 6 percent from last year. These estimates include analysts and researchers but not portfolio traders, who can make much more because they sometimes share in profits.

The moral of this story is clear: While extrinsic qualifications such as college degrees and other pieces of paper are good, intrinsic qualifications such as leadership skill, are the make-or-break critical factor in success.



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