In the U.S. it's all about fit for your career not about which one is the most popular Every school here has its own strengths and specific differentiation You can see in their mission statements from Deans and take a deep look into their program designs If you summarize the curriculum of each school into one sentence my personal interpretation is probably like this:
HBS is corporate restructuring and entrepreneurship Wharton is well-balanced general management Stanford is entrepreneurial general management Kellogg is stratigic marketing management Chicago is economic management MIT is executional management science Columbia is entrepreneurship and finance management Ross is strategic management practices Duke is fundamental general management with medical strength Berkeley is environmental general management with tech VirginiaDarden is quantitative general management Dartmouth Tuck is strategic management with finance strength NYU Stern is practical finance management UCLA is entrepreneurial general management with tech and entertainment strengths Cornell Johnson is analytical social management Yale SOM is organizational management for managers
Austin McCombs is general management with accounting strength
USC Marshall is general management
LBS is strategic management
Insead is economic strategy management
IMD is leadership menegement
Queens is analytical strategic management
It's hard to vote the favorate 3
while finding the fit is the ultimate goal
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