Congrats on making your decision! I hope you'll enjoy your time in Philly too. Make sure you write down some goals that you want to accomplish, and when (when. not IF.) you find yourself stretched at business school, take your goals out and read them, and they will tell you how you ought to prioritise.
Just some necessary self-management skills I picked up along the way.
Thanks for your answer. I agree with you that being competitive is the nature of business school. So there might be slightly different on the culture wise among all top schools, but all are competitive. Finally I decided to join Wharton. Hope I can have great two year life in Philly
Hi Jason, Could you share your thoughts about the culture of Wharton? Is it cut-throat or competitive but people still willing to help? Thanks -- by 会员 smallwo (2011/4/15 19:16:55)
I think you hit the nail on its head. It's competitive but people are still willing to help. The fact is, most people are going after the same jobs (ibanking, PE, VC, Consulting, General Management)- after all, this is why you go to business school. Besides, you have a collection of determined, smart, ambitious and successful professionals. There is bound to be competition, because that's in their nature. If you compare it to my undergrad experience at the UofC, for instance, Wharton is WAY more competitive. There is no comparison at all. But again, I think it's more to do with business school in general being competitive- not necessarily Wharton itself.
This, by the way, probably applies to all business schools. I can't say for sure, since I never attended any other.
But people also realise that you're there to make lifelong friends. You're there to build a network, and you're there to fit in. So we help each other out when we can. We have fun together, and connect friends in need with other friends who can help. We laugh, we cry, and we get drunk together.
So you are exactly right
-- by 会员 jelt2359 (2011/4/18 16:07:23)
-- by 会员 smallwo (2011/4/26 16:09:47)
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