The MBA Show
Summary: The MBA Show is podcast about MBA news and issues. In 10 minutes each week, we explore the breaking headlines and ongoing issues that affect students at America's Top Business Schools. Look for our Podcast in the iTunes Store
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- Artist: Miro Kazakoff & Tom Rose
- Copyright: © Creative Commons - Attribution - Share Alike
Podcasts:
Ali Freedman from SpeakAndWriteClearly.com joins Tom and Miro to provide some tips on how MBAs can improve their speaking skills. Learn how to say your name so that employers remember you. Also, Tyra Banks is now an HBS student.
Will MBA's follow all the money sloshing into silicon valley? Yuri Milner offers $150k in convertible debt, no cap, no discount to every Y Combinator participant and Tom and Miro explain what the hell that means. Bonus: What it means that Wharton and LBS are number on in the Financial Times Rankings and How to turn one informational interview into 10.
The GMAT company has good news: every MBA is getting a job. The bad news comes from a study at Kellogg Northwestern: If you didn't go to HBS or Wharton you may have a hard time getting that i-banking job.
Take a trip back to the go-go late 90s with The MBA Show. While Tom and Miro are on vacation, they look back what life was like when everyone was getting rich and nobody knew what their Internet Start-up did or how it would make any money.
While they are away on vacation Miro and Tom dip into the MBA Show archive for this classic episode on Corporate Raiders from the 1980s.
In 1908, Harvard Business School grants the first MBA degree. Tom and Miro air a clip from back in those heady days.
While they are away on vacation Tom and Miro dig through The MBA Show archive to present great moments in business history. This week: a trip to 1776 for the invention of Capitalism.
The University of Pennsylvania Wharton School announces the biggest overhaul to its curriculum in 17 years. Wharton will now be offering free continuing education classes to its graduates for life. Miro explains the difference between "golden handcuffs" and a golden shower. Tom reveals his plans to work at Goldman Sachs for 5 years and buy three swimming pools to match.
Business Schools use the GRE as a weapon for attracting more female applicants. MiroKaz and TheRealTomRose also reveal why students at Dartmouth's Amos Tuck School of Business are more exuberant about their job prospects than Harvard's are.
Business Week releases it's top U.S. Business Schools and Howard Andersen explains why entrepreneurs should try their hardest to be Indian