Top 10 Mba Schools

MBA Training is Instrumental in Shaping the Career of a Would-be Manager
The students nowadays have been more cognizant about their career. They nourish the ambitious dreams and wholeheartedly want to fulfill them once they grow up. They are meticulous and prudent in choosing their career options. Among the vast options of the lucrative professions, the MBA program plays the leading role due to its appealing career prospective.
Can the management program make a skillful manager out of a nincompoop person or is a managerial skill a god-gifted quality? Well, the critics have raised storms over the tea cups regarding this issue and seem to do the same in the years to come. But it is undeniable a fact one must have profound interest in pursuing the MBA program to savor the success in this field. They should have to prepare themselves to get through the tests conducted by several institutes on both the national and international level.
The MBA course is offered in the undergraduate as well as the postgraduate level. While the basic requirement to study the bachelor degree program in management is just a 10+2 qualification, one must have a bachelor degree to appear for the screening tests conducted by the MBA schools.
Even one is highly talented; he or she needs to undergo an immense training session to hone up the skill. Such training facilities can only be accessed by getting admitted into the professional MBA institutes. The premier schools undoubtedly offer the best management program. But it is very tough to pass the entrance tests in these top-tier institutions. The cost of earning degrees from these top-ranked institutes is not a paltry amount that can be easily borne by the poor students. The meritorious students who belong to the poor section of the society are not in luck in availing these high-end MBA training. For them thedistance learning program is an amazing alternative to rekindle the hopes of making their dreams come real.
The management program is diversified such as system management, human resource management, finance management, travel management, hospital management, event management to name a few among a myriad of sections of the management study program. Needless to say, all of them do not fit for everybody. The career aspirants have to choose the MBA programs in keeping with their previous qualifications, competence and future goals.
Both the brick and mortar classrooms as well as the off-campus program offer an extensive training facility for the grooming of the registered students. The students find it easy to chew on the theoretical lectures if there are a lot of scopes to avail the industry-specific hands-on experiences.
 The 10-day MBA: A Step-by-step Guide to Mastering the Skills Taught in Top Business Schools Sale Price: $51.57 Average Rating: 
DescriptionSummarises the essentials of top American business school education. ReviewsSolid, But Needs An Update  by E. Song from New York, NY on 2010-08-21 I just finished reading this book. While I can't tell you how it compares to an MBA education (ask me in 2 years), or how well it prepares you for earning your MBA (again, 2 years), I can tell you that it does cover a pretty wide range of MBA-esque topics in a fairly concise and well presented manner. I can't imagine it will hurt to read before diving head first into an MBA program, and it will probably help a bit, especially if you don't come from a traditional business background like me. But I wouldn't equate it to an MBA.On other thing: This book badly needs a new edition! It was last updated in 2005, which leaves out a whole lot (market crash, recession, social networking boom, general technological advances, etc etc). The passages about the "internet" usually made me chuckle out loud (the section on information gathering and online research mentions AltaVista as a resource!). Granted, many of the lessons remain relevant, but it was odd to read a whole chapters on finance and ethics without any mention of subprime lending.Overall, I think it's worth the money. I wouldn't go try to run a Fortune 500 company afterwards, but it may set you off in the right direction.
Lacks Indepth coverage & is no alternative to an MBA  by N. A. Nasar Ahmed from Knoxville, TN, USA on 2010-08-01 Of the 10 core subjects covered I have taken courses in at least a few and what I see is that this book might mislead someone to believe that they know all that is needed to function in the real world.The real usefulness of the book will be if you were to read the more on the content covered from other books. This way the book could specifically tel you what subjects to focus on
Valuable content, very well organized, high density  by Eric van der Meulen from Wixom, MI on 2010-04-11 OK, I'm done with it, and it took 10 weeks. I probably shouldn't have used it for bedtime reading...
The writer present practical working knowledge of nine major and a handful minor topics in this concise format, and demystifies a lot of MBA lingo along the way. Definitely a step up from "The Complete Idiot's Guide to MBA Basics", which I read last year. Written in down to earth style, which makes it easily accessible. Ends with "mini courses" on day ten, which is a collection of short topics presented at a higher level. Anywhere from "public speaking" to "business law" to "leadership coach". Valuable content, very well organized, high density.
Pretty decent reference  by Amit Sharma from California, USA on 2009-08-08 I have this book on my bookshelf, and I've used it as reference once in a while. Not the best in terms of quality, but for basics of what we learn in business school or a quick refresher on some of the concepts not bad. You'll definitely find better stuff with research on internet but it's not bad if you need to quickly check something.
forgotten gift  by John Anthony Mosby from on 2009-06-26 This item was given as a gift to a friend, who specifically requested it, and expressed great satisfaction on receiving it. Pricing, delivery and product integrity were all satisfactory. My rating it a 4 out of a possible 5 reflects only the fact that I lack first hand experience with the purchased item, and can only reflect the limited information conveyed to me by its recipient.
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