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3 answers

no age bar. just an undergraduate degree and at least 2-5 years of work experience.

2007-12-22 16:21:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Some universities will not allow you to begin an MBA unless you have 2-3 years of work experience and a very good idea of why you want/need an MBA. Those are the good ones. Then there are the ones which just want to pack their programs and stuff the coffers.

It's generally considered a good idea not to get your MBA until you've worked for a few years and until you need it.

2007-12-23 00:11:08 · answer #2 · answered by Defunct 5 · 1 0

Are you worrying about being too young or too old?

I started my MBA at Duke at age 43. There are usually one to three students per year in their 40s.

The youngest student in my class was 21. He was in a combined BS-MBA program that he entered in his fourth year as an undergraduate. The top schools will usually only accept one or two students per year who have no work experience. Most of those students come from top undergraduate schools.

The average starting age at the top schools is 27 or 28.

The top schools want their students to have at least three to five years of work experience. Getting an MBA from a school where most of the students do not have work experience is not a great idea. MBAs from those schools won't do much more for you than an undergraduate degree.

2007-12-23 00:23:56 · answer #3 · answered by Ranto 7 · 2 1

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