What’s the ROI of my MBA going to be ?
Which colleges have the best ROI?
How do I calculate the ROI of an MBA ?
How often have you heard these questions but had no idea of the answers to them? Well you need not worry anymore as in this video we take a deep dive into everything you need to know about the ROI of your MBA to help determine the true value of your degree.
ROI is an acronym for Return on Investment, which measures a degree’s profitability and how you are better equipped with knowledge that an MBA offers. ROI helps you to measure how and in what time you can pay back the hefty amount of fees that you took as a loan in order to become debt-free. We not only discuss how you can calculate the ROI of your MBA, but what are some of the major factors to keep in mind when you are calculating the same.
With this we come to the end of our series “THE ROI OF MBA”. Let us know in the comments if you enjoyed this series and got to learn about financing your MBA and are now more confident to go ahead and get that degree for yourself. Tell us in the comments below, which other kind of videos you would want us to make in the comments below.
Comments
Joe
InsideIIM , an empathizing post on male general category engineers is due :( .. Please do that atleast to make us feeel goood.... Everywhere we look around at this time of the year , it is the helpless state of the not so brilliant engineers who could not rape CAT but did descent. - Just a bit emotions playin , welcome to ignore this comment..!
10 Jan 2013, 11.19 AM
Surya
Despite the assiduous efforts of the IIMs to increase their intake of girls, a double century seems a long shot. Any such possibility, though, would amount to marginalisation of the General male! Diversity: A must The primary objective of any institute of management must be to remedy local problems. And this can only be achieved by putting together a class that reflects the demographics of the population. But the composition of the candidates who make the cut will never reflect that if the composition of the participants itself is deviant. It is no surprise then that the intake of girls through test scores is low, given their low enrollment for the test itself. So any attempt to accommodate more girls into the system is only an intervention to equalise outcomes. Also, the idea of awarding additional points for gender throws up issues of differential ability. Clearly, girls are not in any way inferior to boys: four girls secured 99.99 %ile. So giving away brownie points for gender is a veiled insult to female intelligence. What the institutes must focus on, really, is to improve the diversity of participating students rather than trying to present the illusion of diversity in a batch that is virtually monolithic. They need to introspect on the testing process. Is the examination itself facilitating diversity or is it favorable to only a section of the student population? It's not surprising that CAT is dominated by engineers throughout.
10 Jan 2013, 12.19 PM
Nirmal
This reminds me of classical business cum engineering case study. When your product is not doing well, you should concentrate more on improving the product. I think mere marketing stints of any kind would cause more harm than help.
10 Jan 2013, 02.02 PM
Satwinder
I am definitely in favor of diversity, but not by blatantly giving additional marks to any particular category[not limiting to females alone]. Interesting article overall.
11 Jan 2013, 01.52 PM
rahul
CAT-99.7 Btech-64% 10th- 81% 12th-82% Workex- 3 years, Male Will i get IIM-L call ?
13 Jan 2013, 01.12 PM