[quote=“Datadatum,post:25,topic:5244”]
The absolute b e n e f i t s in my opinion:
- Opens doors to new opportunities where you wouldn’t otherwise have been considered due to your competition having Business Masters degrees, or opportunities because your competition doesn’t have those and you do.
- Opens doors due to creating a new network of other senior management or soon to be senior management people
Relative b e n e f i t s:
- Depending on your work experience, some concepts you may not have had exposure to. Be it financial management, leadership training, risk management, etc. (many different facets). For those concepts that you’re not as strong in or just have limited experience in, you can get some good education out of it and learn very useful stuff.
Personally, I’ve been around the block quite a bit and although I do think I’ll be learning some things, I don’t think I’ll be learning as much as the average EMBA student.
That said, the biggest difference between an EMBA and an MBA is that EMBAs are geared to people who already have established careers and can bring their personal experience to the table and share it with you through the 30-50% group work (percentage depends on the school) in addition to the professor led classes and course work. So ultimately, I will most likely learn about other people’s industries. Which for me is actually quite useful as IT spans all industries.
Also, EMBAs are not easy to say the least. Lots of reading and essay/project writing and presenting with very short deadlines (sometimes only a couple days). Everyone I’ve spoken to that has finished their EMBA has said it was tough (including the ones I know are super hard workers). MBAs aren’t easy either so I’m not saying EMBAs are tougher, they’re just different. And remember, you’ll most likely be working at the same time. I don’t know how tough your job is but mine is mentally exhausting so time management is a huge priority. Everyone I’ve spoken to had to pick some activities to remove from their daily lives to make time for the program.
For students that have spouses, they typically ask for the spouse to attend the briefing sessions to make sure they understand the heavy toll it has on a relationship and family life.
That said, if your workplace is offering to pay for it on your behalf, I’d jump on the opportunity. The younger you are, the more energy you’ll have and the more use you’ll get out of it (both at your current job and any future jobs). I wish I had done mine sooner but I needed to come up with the money first. It pains me to spend $100k on it but that’s life (can you imagine the mods for that kind of money lol).