19/02/2007 MBA Rankings, MBA News

B-School Rankings Lose their Lustre

With Wharton again coming top of the latest Financial Times (FT) rankings, and Chicago coming top of the latest Business Week (BW) rankings, their Deans should be popping champagne.

MBA rankings lose their lustre

Dipak Jain, Dean of Kellogg, which was deposed from the top perch of BW, should be suffering anxiety attacks. The reality however, is that Business School officials have become more sanguine about rankings in recent years, as the proliferation of rankings reinforces their skepticism and as they realize that rankings seem to be steadily losing their impact with MBA applicants around the world.

Although The Wharton School still tops rankings, Dean Pat Harker argues “Some people believe that if the rankings help us, who cares if they are flawed or give a limited view of the school? But we can’t have it both ways. We either endorse a defective, inconsistent practice, or we speak out and …work with the media to enable them to report with more useful, objective data.”

In addition, according to TopMBA.com, who conducted a 6000 strong survey of potential business school applicants who attended the QS World MBA Tour last year, business school rankings are no longer the major factor behind a student’s choice of MBA programme. The most important factor is a school’s reputation, followed by the success record of its career placement office, return on financial investment, the availability of scholarships and other financial aid and the range of subjects in which the school specialises. The survey asked ‘what are the key factors behind your choice of school’. The ranking of the school was only the sixth most important factor.

What should applicants make of rankings produced by the FT, Business Week, The Wall Street Journal - or the personalized ranking produced by TopMBA.com? Nunzio Quacquarelli of QS TopMBA says “First, do not rely on the final ranking to create your own order of preference for schools. Look at the numbers behind the rankings and decide if the criteria are important for you. If you compare the top schools in each survey, they are remarkably consistent. Schools move up and down from year to year, and from ranking to ranking, because there is no single, objective, ranking of the best MBAs.”

The FT ranking of full-time MBAs, published on the 29th January 2007 contains no input from recruiters in their survey, but places a heavy weighting on “Weighted Salary three years after graduation”, followed by “Research Rating” and a rating of the “Number of Doctoral students” produced by the school. Compared with Business Week and the Wall Street Journal, the FT is more global in scope, directly comparing American and international MBA programmes. Limitations of the FT methodology revolve around the validity of directly comparing one and two year programmes. In addition, the heavy emphasis on salary three years after graduation can bias results in favor of schools with strong ties to the investment banking industry (which tends to pay the most at this stage of alumni careers) – hence the resultant bias in US schools towards East-Coast rather than West-Coast or Mid-State schools.

This year, Judge Business School has risen 20 places to 15th in the FT, whilst Schulich – York University has fallen 31 places to 49th. Quacquarelli goes on to say, “Beyond a few top schools, there is a lack of consistency between the various rankings. What accounts for this lack of consistency? The answer is: the different methodologies employed by each ranking. Any informed attempt to make use of rankings must begin with a basic understanding of the methodologies employed.” Kim Keating at Tuck, 9th in this year’s FT survey, argues “the best way to approach the major rankings is to look at them as a whole and study the different aspects and attributes that each one is surveying.”

Joern Meissner, a professor of Decision Sciences at Lancaster University Management School agrees. ”Lancaster does well in several rankings, but not others. All rankings are of limited value because the factor weightings are applied by one decision maker – the ranker – and don’t necessarily reflect the needs of the majority of applicants.”

Table 1:Comparison of Latest Business School Rankings Research

TopMBA.com
Scorecard (4 Sept.’06)
Financial Times
(29 January ‘07)
Business Week
(23 October ‘06)
Wall Street Journal
(20 Sep. 2006)
“Top 20” – US
(Alphabetical)
“Top 20” – US
(Ranked)
“Top 20” – US
(Ranked)
“Top 20” – US
(Ranked)
BerkeleyWhartonChicagoMichigan
Carnegie-MellonColumbiaWhartonDartmouth - Tuck
ChicagoHarvardNorthwesternCarnegie-Mellon
ColumbiaStanfordHarvardColumbia
CornellChicagoMichiganBerkeley
Dartmouth - TuckNYUStanfordNorthwestern
DukeTuckMIT SloanWharton
GeorgetownYaleBerkeleyNorth Carolina
HarvardMITDukeYale
MichiganUCLAColumbiaMIT Sloan
MIT SloanNorthwesternDartmouth -TuckChicago
NorthwesternMichiganUCLADuke
NYUDukeCornellDarden
Penn. - WhartonBerkeleyNYUHarvard
StanfordVirginiaVirginiaSouthern California
Texas - AustinCornellCarnegie-MellonCornell
ThunderbirdMarylandNorth CarolinaNYU
TorontoNorth CarolinaIndianaStanford
Virginia -DardenEmoryYaleUCLA
YaleGeorgetownTexas - AustinThunderbird*
TopMBA.com
Scorecard (4 Sept.’06)
Financial Times
(29 January ‘07)
Business Week
(23 October ‘06)

Wall Street Journal

(20 Sep. 2006)
"Top 20" – Europe“Top 20” – Non-US“Top 10” – Non-US“Top 10” – Non-US
CambridgeLondon Bus. SchoolQueen’sESADE
CASSINSEADWestern OntarioIMD
CEUCEIBSTorontoIPADE
CranfieldIE Inst. De EmpresaIMDLondon Bus. School
ESADEIMDLondon Bus. SchoolTec de Monterrey
HEC ParisCambridgeINSEADW. Ontario
IE Inst. De EmpresaIESEESADEINCAE
IESEHEC ParisIESEIE Inst. De Empresa
IMDOxford - SaidYorkYork
Imperial - TanakaManchester Bus. SchoolHEC MontrealIESE
INSEADESADE
London Bus. SchoolToronto
Manchester Bus. SchoolLancaster
MIP Pol. Di MilanoRSM
Oxford - SaidWarwick
RotterdamCranfield
SDA BocconiWestern Ontario
SolvaySDA Bocconi

 

 

More information for applicants

MBA applicants can view results of TopMBA.com Recruiter and B-school Research at: www.topmba.com/scorecard/  or pick up reports at QS World MBA Tour venues during Spring and Fall 2007. (visit www.topmba.com for details).

Notes for Editors:
Nunzio Quacquarelli (MA Cambridge, Wharton MBA) has been editor of TopMBA.com since 1990 and writes on management education in over 20 journals and newspapers around the world. He is also the creator, in partnership with The Times Higher Education Supplement, of the THES – QS World University Rankings. Nunzio is also Managing Director of QS.


QS World MBA Tour 2007

The World MBA Tour is the foremost international meeting place for providers of business education and prospective MBA applicants. Now in its 13th year, over 300 business schools will travel with the Tour to 72 cities on 5 continents in 2007, between February and March and then again between August  and December, visiting Latin America, North America, Europe, Asia and Middle East. Venues and registration information is available at: www.topmba.com

TopMBA.com Scorecard

In Autumn 2007, at the QS World MBA Tour, TopMBA will unveil the 2007 results of TopMBA.com/Scorecard. Based entirely on 2007 research, Scorecard allows candidates to create their personalised rankings of business schools, based on employer evaluations and key facts and figures which allow direct comparison between schools –reputation with recruiters, faculty strength, quality and diversity of student intake, career placement strength, scholarship availability, specialisations and return on investment. The 2006 scorecard results are available at www.topmba.com/scorecard.

TopMBA.com Applicant Survey 2007

The largest survey of business school applicants in the world, TopMBA.com has surveyed over 6000 young professionals, all intent on attending business school. The results of this survey are published in a new report in March 2007, with early results available to journalists upon request on topics like: course preferences, country study destinations, salary objectives, career intentions, criteria for school and study selection, financing methods and much more.

To receive full copies of QS and TopMBA.com Research reports, or for more information, contact the following people at QS:

Jose Antonio Cruzado: Tel +44 20 7284 7244  jose@qsnetwork.com
Simona Bizzozzero: Tel+44 20 7284 7248  simona@qsnetwork.com
Biren Patel :  Tel +44 20 7284 7241   biren@qsnetwork.com


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