Ok -I've worked on a startup on the side for almost 3 years now - and so far no real success - I'm starting to cringe at the lost opportunity cost and am thinking that I should go back to school. I can't leave the immediate area due to family constraints - so I'm limited to local institutions. I can probably get into either an MBA, Masters in CS or Law degree program. Which do you all think is a better fit? Or is there something to be gained in a spectacular failure of the startup (i.e. maybe more likely to get venture next time around)?
A little more background - the programs are 'rated' around 50th or so in the country - and I will likely never work in a totally high tech industry - (working in IT now within another field (i.e. enterprise)).
I'd say weight the pros and cons of each and try to do what will feel the most fulfilling for yourself, rather than judge purely on merits. If you can afford to, you might go ahead on a startup, even if you fail you'll gain great experience. Just don't let it get you down.
I would recommend trying to figure out what kind of work you want to be doing or enjoy/think you enjoy and then picking the education that will be most appropriate to help you get there.
An MBA, MS in CS, and a Law degree will all be a great additions to your credentials, you will certainly learn a lot, and each will open up a lot of opportunities, but the opportunities will likely be very different.
If you want to be a VC, then combine all three. If you want to be a patent lawyer, then CS and Law are good. :)
To me, part of the value of a "proper" MBA seems to be meeting like-minded people and the potential to make some great connections. However, I don't have an MBA - neither personal nor the $100,000 variety - so it's just a hunch.
Any thoughts on that? Am I thinking too highly of MBA programs?
I haven't pursued an MBA, but know lots of people that have, including my siblings. All of them seem to have had great experiences with their programs; they learned a lot, met great people, experienced many things during the program that they probably wouldn't experience otherwise, and gotten a broader perspective than they had before.
Many of them have had lucrative career opportunities after their programs and these opportunities probably would not have come by or similar opportunities would come by only much later in their careers. This seems to be a great value of an MBA program, especially one at a top school.
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[ 467 ms ] story [ 1341 ms ] threadA little more background - the programs are 'rated' around 50th or so in the country - and I will likely never work in a totally high tech industry - (working in IT now within another field (i.e. enterprise)).
An MBA, MS in CS, and a Law degree will all be a great additions to your credentials, you will certainly learn a lot, and each will open up a lot of opportunities, but the opportunities will likely be very different.
If you want to be a VC, then combine all three. If you want to be a patent lawyer, then CS and Law are good. :)
Here is a list with the books from the Personal MBA list: http://www.bookhuddle.com/list/314/Personal-MBA-Reading-List
I'm working through Josh's list of books, and paying for an hour of coaching with Josh once per month...and I find it invaluable.
Any thoughts on that? Am I thinking too highly of MBA programs?
Many of them have had lucrative career opportunities after their programs and these opportunities probably would not have come by or similar opportunities would come by only much later in their careers. This seems to be a great value of an MBA program, especially one at a top school.
Could you have earned the equivalent of your undergrad degree if you would have just read and understood the books. Probably.
Would you have done it if you didn't have a test to push you?
That is one of the real reasons for school. It pushes you to focus and learn on a specific schedule.