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发表于 2003-8-16 06:27:00
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[size=4]Emphasis on Rankings [/size]
Hiring four top consultants full time for three months is not cheap, but Agnew is sure it was the right thing to do.
"How could we not afford to use every resource available to help our students launch careers? It's novel and bold, and we're not doing other things because of this," he said. "It was a sacrifice to our community, but we thought this was the right step."
Not only does it help students, it also adds to the school's ranking on lists, such as those put out by Business Week magazine. The lists are a key recruiting tool for the best students and faculty.
"It so happens that the rankings measure placement rates and these kinds of things that rate how well we're doing. But I wouldn't say this is driven by rankings," Agnew said of the consultants.
Whether for rankings or no, top-rated schools around the country are taking extraordinary measures to improve their students' chances.
Agnew said that the Smith school is not able to release this year's placement figures but that the students are slightly ahead of last year's, when 50 to 60 percent of the class accepted offers. Among the 100 students in the Stanton Chase program, 33 students had job offers as of May 6.
The recent trends are not encouraging. In 1998, 80 percent of Smith's MBA graduates seeking employment had jobs by the time they graduated. In 2002, 54.4 percent did.
Harvard Business School's career services office this year also hired outside consultants to work with MBA students. Those who are interested can call and work with the career coaches throughout their tenure as students. The school pays for the consultants.
So far, 80 percent of the graduating class have job offers, and about 65 percent have accepted them.
The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania hired Peter Degnan this year to be its new director of MBA career management. He brings to the job the perspective of having worked as an investment banker for 20 years. Wharton's career center, which is tapping search firms to help students this year, expects the same percentage of graduating MBA students -- about 76 percent -- to have jobs as last year.
S.C. Johnson, the namesake of Cornell University's Johnson Graduate School of Management, paid to fly recruiters in on his corporate jets in March.
Other schools are footing the bill to take students to the companies, instead of waiting for recruiters to come to them. Almost all schools have beefed up the staff in their career centers, or fired and hired new directors.
American University's Kogod School of Business boosted job search efforts and took students to companies this year, now that many companies have reduced on-campus recruiting.
"We've taken students on a roadshow," said Kristine Korva, director of graduate career services.
For spring break, 25 students visited five companies in New York. Another 20 to 30 students visited D.C. area companies and organizations recently.
"They have smaller staffs, less bandwidth to go to campuses," said Korva. "We need to make it easier to see our students, so we come to you."
At George Washington University, MBA students were recently treated to what was billed as a "Just in Time" recruiting fair. Thirty companies that have last-minute job openings or internships to fill came to the school to recruit job seekers in what was a kind of speed-dating event for grads.
"Many companies are waiting longer to do the hiring," Korva said, a common complaint among those who tried to get a job earlier in the semester. But as companies tighten budgets, they often hold off on hiring until they are sure they can afford it.
Georgetown University has an entirely new staff at its business school career center. With that came new ideas. Amy G. McNamara, assistant director of employer relations, said they are doing anything they can to introduce their students to potential employers.
Companies that used to be charged a fee for access to the school's books of student résumés are now given them free. Executive search firms came to a fair in April where they offered their services to students. And Georgetown, along with 18 other schools in an MBA consortium, has access to a virtual career fair, run through MonsterTrak. "We're doing it because we're in a market where companies have the upper hand," said McNamara.
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