Does anyone have feedback on Central Michigan U?
Does anyone have feedback on Central Michigan U?
Rex! You can do it!
I say go for it. I'm actually going back myself but am choosing the full-time route since I want to change careers. Have you taken the GMAT or GRE yet? Some programs don't require either test, but I believe Temple does (I was looking into their fast track international program, but since I got in somewhere else before I even sent the application out, I never applied).
I'm on the fence. Frankly, all the really successful people I know in marketing (who demand major salaries and benefits) do NOT have marketing degrees. They all told me that a marketing degree is a dime a dozen these days. I was considering going to back to school for it too and they said it wasn't necessary.
In my spare time, I like to interview figure skating legends.
None of the people in my marketing department majored in marketing for their bachelors degree, but all have MBAs, and many of them did marketing for their concentration in their MBA.
My coworker's undergrad degrees are in: fine art, history, food science, business, print technology, Russian, engineering, etc. Only one person majored in business. None majored in marketing. In classical consumer goods marketing, your undergrad can be in any subject - it teaches you how to think and learn, write and reason. Your MBA gets you hired.
Today is Doomsday. Alternate side of the street parking will be in effect.
CMU has a graduate program where I work. They have online and traditional graduate programs with classes that meet only on weekends. I don't know anything about their other programs, but I know something about the weekend program, if that would help you.
They do have both regional and AACSB accreditation.
“In the hour of adversity, be not without hope; for crystal rain falls from black clouds.”.
Actually I was referring to where Rex said this in his first post:
So I assumed he was looking for a marketing degree. My mistake.I currently have a Bachelors in Communications from Cabrini College, but my experience in marketing/PR/journalism is pretty limited, unless you count the four years I supported the director of marketing in my old firm, and my current job which includes doing the weekly newsletter...
But yes, I was looking at it myself as well, and that was what I was told by the most successful people in marketing I know. And none of the three of them have MBAs either.
In my spare time, I like to interview figure skating legends.
At 42 now 43, I decided to go back to school as a freshman at Penn State. It was/is the best decision I have ever made. Enjoy the experience, Rex.
Carol
What falls under the umbrella of marketing can vary from company to company.
In my experience, creative types and business development (sales) types do not really need MBAs, though any kind of advanced degree is usually helpful in breaking through to the upper-level positions more quickly.
Strategists and product/line managers usually do need a MBA or an advanced degree.
The people who can really command the big bucks are marketers with a finance background. If you can marry the two, your paycheck will be fat in no time.![]()
One of the best doctors I've met started medical school at 42. Go for it, Rex!![]()
"Nature is a damp, inconvenient sort of place where birds and animals wander about uncooked."
from Speedy Death
Good on you Rex and good luck with it all, whether it be marketing or not.
What the hell is a Ninja Twizzle? Does it have anything to do with hard shelled aquatic life forms that live in the sewer?
The weekend program is a BEAR. That's what I know. Each term lasts for six weeks with two terms every calendar quarter, and this is the general class schedule: Fri 6:00PM-10:00PM; Sat 8:00AM-4:30PM
Sometimes they have classes on Sunday, too. The programs move very quickly; you can get done in about half the usual time. But you will bleed for it.
The students at my CMU branch are all military or civil service; I don't believe that they accept anyone else here. That means all their grad programs are very government-focused. The students seem to think the workload is very heavy during a term; I don't know anything about that, as I don't work in CMU programs. My general impression is that the students are very focused and competitive; none of my CMU referrals have ever been slackers--although I do wish the CMU people would do a better job of cleaning up my classroom after pizza parties.
I will say that CMU tries very hard to make students feel like they are in a real CMU program rather than just taking classes somewhere (a real problem where I work); it isn't easy, but they try.
“In the hour of adversity, be not without hope; for crystal rain falls from black clouds.”.
The speeded up coursesI did Multi-Cultural Ed in two weeks. I did nothing but read, write, research.
I would NOT do it again.