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What’s an Online MBA Worth?

Tags: School, MBA, Student, Degree, Kelley, JWMI, Tags TK, Maggie Overfelt

You’ve seen the ads in pop-up windows and in the borders around your e-mail inbox: “Earn an MBA online for $7,000, no GMAT required!” If you’ve ever been tempted to apply for an online MBA or hire someone who had one, come-ons like these are enough to squelch the urge on the spot.

But then there are stories like that of Jim LeMere, 39, an insurance-company executive who earned an online MBA from Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business. The institution (No. 15 in Business Week’s B-school rankings) held him to the same admission and grading standards as its full-time MBA candidates, taught him with the same curriculum and same teachers, yet allowed him to attend class on his schedule. Oh, and he got to keep his job. “I traveled a lot, was relocated to Atlanta, and was eventually moved back to Indiana. Kelley moved with me the entire time,” LeMere says. When he graduated in 2004, a rival firm poached him, promoted him to vice president, and doubled his salary.

In addition to the Kelley School, Carnegie Mellon’s Tepper School of Business (No. 19 on Business Week’s ranking) now offers an online MBA, and Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business (No. 8) offers a hybrid course that combines online and classroom learning. The online MBA neighborhood is gentrifying even at the mass-market end, dominated by for-profit B-schools like University of Phoenix and Kaplan University. In January, Jack Welch lends his name and prestige to the new Jack Welch Management Institute, a $21,600 MBA track that doesn’t require test scores for admission or on-campus attendance.

In short, the lingering image of online business schools as diploma mills is oversimplified, to say the least. True, no virtual MBA can make a recruiter’s heart race the way a Harvard or Wharton sheepskin can, but that’s an exceedingly high hurdle. The real point is this: In the right circumstances, an online MBA can indeed boost your career (and hiring someone bearing one can indeed help your company). It’s all a matter of matching your skills with the right program at the right stage of your career.

Not All Online MBAs Are the Same

In the hierarchy of virtual MBA programs, there is one key caste distinction. On the mass-market end are online-only schools like University of Phoenix — for-profit businesses that admit anyone who can pay the tuition of $20,000 to $30,000. On the elite end are online programs at brick-and-mortar educational institutions, including Duke’s Fuqua and Indiana’s Kelley, which have equally stringent entrance requirements for their online tracks as for their residential ones, including GMAT scores and minimum years of work experience. Their programs cost anywhere from $7,065 (Chadron State College in Nebraska) to $135,500 (Duke’s Fuqua School). Note that online MBAs at brick-and-mortar schools aren’t any cheaper than full-time programs at the same school; in fact many are more expensive because of technology, lodging costs during campus visits, and extra hours required of faculty.

As resume-polishing credentials, the Kaplans and Phoenixes have two crucial drawbacks. The first is their lack of selectivity — with all that implies about the quality of the student body. Recruiters assume that candidates who could ace the GMATs, deliver a straight-A undergraduate transcript, and produce a sheaf of glowing recommendations don’t go to schools that ask for none of these. Add to that the online-only schools’ inability to win accreditation from AACSB International — the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, the gold standard of business-school endorsements. These schools consistently come up short on their investment in recruiting and developing faculty, according to John Fernandes, president of AACSB. “They spend a lot less on faculty than a traditional, AACSB-accredited school,” he says. “They’re trying to manage volumes of students, and top programs are about the opposite. They’re about limiting access to a few potentially outstanding students and placing them with outstanding faculty.” (Some for-profit schools are accredited by regional boards, but those agencies are not specific to business programs. For more on accreditation, see “Choosing an Online MBA Program.”)

The online MBA tracks at brand-name business schools are a different story. In order for a school to be AACSB accredited, every business program it offers — including online degrees — must adhere to the board’s standards. To keep their accreditation, these schools must make sure their online curricula mirror that of their brick-and-mortar programs and are taught by the same faculty. Most of the programs also require students to spend a few days on campus every year. Such schools now account for nearly one in three online MBAs awarded, but their market share is growing: The number of AACSB-accredited business schools offering some kind of online MBA track has grown from 19 in 2002 to 68 today.

Why would a respected business school go online? Because that’s where the money is. Corporate middle managers who would rather not leave their jobs to attend a full-time MBA program are a huge, barely tapped market. Kelley launched its online MBA 10 years ago, according to Eric Richards, chair of the school’s online MBA unit. “Since then,” he says, “we’ve grown from 139 students to more than 1,500.” And those 1,500 are a rewarding addition to the student body: They pay roughly $54,000 for their online degrees while Kelley’s 470 residential students pay $51,000 (in state) or $89,000 (out of state) for theirs.

Can You Really Learn This Way?

Some time in 2011, the Stanford Graduate School of Business hopes to complete the construction of its new headquarters, the $350 million Knight Management Center. Bristling with communications technology, the facility is designed to further the school’s mission of collaboration, including more “team-oriented space” and wireless projection technology that will bring business leaders from far-flung locations into the classroom. What’s not included: Plans to integrate any sort of online learning. The same goes for the MBA programs at Harvard, MIT’s Sloan School, and University of Chicago’s Booth School.

The ultra-elite’s resistance to distance learning makes intuitive sense. How can sitting in front of a computer compare, say, to the intense, 90-minute case-study lectures at Harvard Business School, in which students do 80 percent of the talking and well-known business leaders often show up in person to spur conversation? Technology like digital blackboards, Web conferencing, and Skype make collaboration and class participation easier for students in online programs, but the experience is not the same.

Moreover, one of the biggest career benefits of a full-time MBA program isn’t the time spent in the classroom but the personal network you create. Would Sergey Brin and Larry Page have bonded over Skype the way they did in their Stanford dorm room? Would Alex Rigopulos and Eran Egozy have dreamed up Guitar Hero and Rock Band had they been teleconferencing rather than sharing ideas at the MIT Media Lab?

That said, the notion that online study is inferior study is not borne out by the evidence. “There is a growing body of evidence that suggest that the quality of online learning outcomes — how students test — is actually better than that of face-to-face instruction,” says Peter Shea, former head of the online education system for the State University of New York. Shea points to a Department of Education report released in August. Examining a 12-year span of studies completed mostly in college and adult-education programs, the report shows that students in online-learning conditions performed better on tests and earned higher grades than those who received face-to-face instruction.

Kelley’s Richards says that’s because an online environment creates more opportunity to digest the material, and students don’t have to fight to communicate. (In class, the one who raises his hand first gets to answer. Online, everyone gets time to formulate and post an answer.) “Deep learning — if it’s long-term learning — has to be with material you’ve wrestled and grappled with, where you reframe it in your own words,” he says. “There’s a very limited opportunity to do that in [the classroom].” He adds that because online courses are so new, many professors develop them with course consultants, which means they are often more rigorously designed.

John Gallagher, associate dean for executive MBA programs at Duke’s Fuqua School of Business, points out that the demographics of online students may also account for some of the difference in outcomes. Like many online students, Duke’s Global MBA candidates tend to be more senior and experienced. “A 40-year-old manager brings a lot more to the table than a 28-year-old,” he says, “so, the nature of the work they do is different.”

Besides, for most of those 40-year-old managers, taking two years off from family and work to hang out on campus simply isn’t an option. If that’s where you are in your life, the real question isn’t whether an online MBA is better than a residential one; it’s whether an online MBA from an accredited program is better than none at all. The answer will depend on circumstances. But whether you would learn anything in getting the MBA should not be an issue.

Can an Online MBA Help You Get Ahead?

Despite the research supporting online education, recruiters and hiring managers still see an online MBA as a second-class credential. In its 2009 Corporate Recruiters Survey, the Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC), the nonprofit organization that administers the GMAT, reported that only 9 percent of companies surveyed actively recruit candidates from online MBA programs, as opposed to the 77 percent that pursue full-time MBA grads. Gail Dundas, a spokesperson for Intel Corp., captures the prejudice in an e-mail: “We target hiring from top-tier MBA universities, and online degrees do not tend to be in the top tier.”

Still, how recruiters and hiring managers might view your MBA depends a lot on the job move you’re trying to pull off and how the degree fits into your resume. If a business-school degree is most of what you have to offer as a job candidate, and you need one that tags you as among the best and the brightest, then an online MBA may indeed be the wrong choice. You’re best off seeking a brick-and-mortar institution, preferably one with plenty of ivy on the bricks.

If you’re instead looking to advance in an already-established career, as most online MBA candidates are, a degree from an accredited business school can only help. “An advanced degree from the big-name business schools will always get you into the interview,” admits Barry Shulman, founder of Shulman Associates, an executive search firm in San Francisco that works with GM, MetLife, and Oracle, among others. But, Shulman adds, it won’t by itself get you the job. He doesn’t hesitate to recommend executives with online MBAs for positions, and he points out that hiring managers usually place more emphasis on experience than on the brand of MBA — an equation that benefits the typical online degree holder.

As online MBAs become mainstream, recruiters’ prejudices will erode further. Indeed, Bernard van der Lande, a director at executive search firm Stanton Chase International, goes so far as to say online MBAs in some cases may have an advantage over their full-time competitors, thanks to their pool of international classmates. “You’re sitting in Michigan and you have to work a case study with someone in the Middle East and someone from China — that’s fantastic,” says the Fortune 500 recruiter. “Corporations that do international business want folks who can see the world from a global point of view.”

Should You Ever Consider a Nonaccredited MBA?

By and large, a degree from a for-profit online-only institution won’t do much for your resume. But depending on your job goals, that may not matter.

Heather Fenstermaker, a 27-year-old administrative assistant at an investment firm in Bellingham, Washington, chose Kaplan University’s for-profit MBA program to help her launch her side business, Swell, an eco-friendly clothing store. Kaplan helped her create a business plan, which she needed to obtain funding from her local bank. Today, Swell is eight months old and has seen a steady increase in monthly sales. Fenstermaker recently augmented her brick-and-mortar flagship store with an online store using customer-retention concepts from Kaplan’s online marketing course. “Kaplan helped turn the concept in my mind into a solid business plan,” she says.

The value proposition in outfits like Kaplan and University of Phoenix is to swap prestige for convenience. The average tuition — $20,500 — is less than half that of top brick-and-mortar institutions. You can start at almost any time, since both offer rolling admissions roughly every six weeks. And academic qualifications — or lack thereof — are no barrier to enrollment. “The most frequently asked question on my site is, ‘Where can I get an online degree where I don’t have to take the GMAT?’” says Vicky Phillips, founder of GetEducated.com, which ranks online colleges. “The Internet is all about convenience, and folks want their education — fast.”

It’s not clear how much the new Jack Welch Management Institute will lift the image of schools at this end of the market. JWMI’s two-year curriculum, designed for corporate middle managers around the globe, will be modeled after GE’s Management Development Institute at Crotonville, New York, which emphasizes learning as doing. Rather than poring over Harvard case studies, students will work under emeritus professors from Harvard and will be dispatched to companies around the world to help managers solve real problems. Welch, who helped design each course, will deliver a weekly podcast lecture. He has also tapped Noel Tichy, the director of the global leadership program at the University of Michigan, to run the school. The goals, as Tichy describes them, are pretty ambitious. “What Welch and I are focused on,” he says, “is developing leaders who can drive growth and change and figure out what it takes to lead a 21-century organization.”

Still, the turning point for the online MBA’s reputation probably won’t arrive until graduates of the programs start to land prominent leadership roles at the nation’s biggest firms. Until then, the online MBA is likely to remain a good springboard for a mid-career job change or salary boost, but an otherwise underappreciated asset, fighting an image problem with recruiters and ignored even by the organizations that rate schools. Kim Clark, a senior education writer with U.S. News and World Report, says her publication has no plans to rank online MBA programs. It’s an omission that Clark admits might one day seem shortsighted. “It’s certainly, true,” she says, “that the perception of online MBAs might lag the reality.”

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  •  
    1

    jimli75

    09/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What?s an Online MBA Worth?

    While I was attending Baruch College's Zicklin MBA program, where I had to go through the traditional admissions process, I had a friend who was attending another MBA program where she didn't have to take the GMAT. Later, I discovered that it was a non-accredited program. It was quite surprising to me that those programs existed and called it a MBA.

    Now, with all the online programs, it seems that there is an over abundance of people with MBAs. The dilution of the quality individuals with MBAs may have taken its value away. There was a time, not too long ago, that when you heard MBA, you knew there was value in it. I'm not so sure anymore.

    The value in my MBA program (as I saw it) were the interactions and group work that were required, in addition to the "textbook" learning. How can an online program replace that?

    Like any valuable asset, as it becomes more commoditized, it loses its shine. The vehicle and catalyst for this commoditization are the online MBAs. Does it have value? Of course it does. But is it worth the $50,000?

  •  
    2

    Maharishi

    09/16/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What?s an Online MBA Worth?

    I guess the recruiters are biased towards the regular MBAs,
    they want experience yet they are not willing to accept the
    part-time MBAs. The working professional have no other option
    but to enroll themselves either with the on-line or part-time
    courses. But out in the market no one wants to touch these
    guys even with a barge pole. This has to change and sooner it
    does the better it is for the industry!

  •  
    3

    toddwilkinson@...

    09/16/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What?s an Online MBA Worth?

    The MBA question should always be about how you want the finished product to be perceived. For example, do you want to stand out, or just get a leg up on the competition? Each answer has associated costs.

    As a personal example, I finished up my MBA at Kaplan about two years ago. I wanted a full-time program with flexibility (online) and an acceptable cost-benefit relationship. The online feature would allow me to continue my current full-time job, which was necessary to pay the bills. I knew this MBA would not be looked upon in the same class as most, but for a $20k program that allowed me to finish in just over 1.5yrs, my MBA is still better than not having one at all, which was one of my goals.

    My Kaplan colleagues showcased of a wide range of aptitudes, as one would expect given the liberal acceptance guidelines. However, the curriculum provided an opportunity for strong learning and development. I put in more energy and effort than most and in turn received more out of the program. Could I have devoted less time to the program and still graduated? Sure, but I would only have sold myself short then.

    In reference to Post #1 above, that MBAs are being commoditized; if they are, then it is the hiring manager's fault. I don't have a problem with employers putting my MBA at a lower level than other MBAs. I wasn't willing to pony up a ton of cash, quit my job, or lose more hair from a stress-ridden competitive program, so my hat is off to those that do.

  •  
    4

    Raj196

    09/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What?s an Online MBA Worth?

    I myself am an Online MBA degree holder from Universitas 21 global, Singapore (u21global.com). I have not seen my career really taking off since. However the program was very exhaustive & relevant.

  •  
    5

    trekolo53

    09/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What?s an Online MBA Worth?

    I also am attending an online university. The school has a brick and mortar university in Colorado, since I am in Ohio it would be hard to attend. At the time I started my educational pursuits; I was working full time and raising a family. I chose to attend a technical college because it fit in with my goals. I could not quit my job at the time. When I wanted to earn by BA and then my MBA, I found the brick and mortar schools would not take the credits from my Associate or Bachelors Degree. The school was accredited and did not skimp on the learning. I graduated with highest honors.

    My choices were to start completely over or attend a for-profit school. I almost gave up until I found a university who would accept my credits and allow the flexibility of an online program. We have two classes with the instructor a week via web conference and individual research. The instructors not only have their credentials but have spent years working in their profession. I find this more valuable than someone who has spent their life in books and theory.

    I think academia has failed society in not providing what is needed to succeed outside a traditional setting. I have tried traditional schools and the professors did not care whether you attended. They have your money whether or not a student attends.

    I put the effort in and my grade shows it. This is not recognized by the traditional establishment. Look around, the traditional establishment has put us in this financial mess. It is time they step aside and let real people run the show.

  •  
    6

    Joe E S

    09/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What?s an Online MBA Worth?

    So the questions is, why do we have so many bogus degree programs that deceive use into thinking they are certified and quality degree programs? The answer is in the refusal of the college and university system to re-think its delivery system and to re-think who its customers are. As a result, these bogus programs come along and offer an alternative to the adult learner for a great financial cost to get a degree in two years that is nothing more than becoming a commodity degree system for a great price.

    As a director of many organizational learning and tuition reimbursement programs for the past 20 years, I have been trying to explain to the local universities and colleges that they have to break their paradigm of how they provide degree programs to the adult working student. They refuse to do this. They refuse to acknowledge that five or ten years of working experience is worth something in the education experience... maybe more than a course and a few credits. They refuse to design a reasonable college degree program that combines working experience with classroom experience so that it is not necessary to drag along a traditional degree program over 6 years. Realistically, full time working students have only evenings and weekends free if even that when raising a family. That is the customer... so, universities... get out of the cloud of providing only to traditional students who don't have a professional full time job yet.

    I say that it is time for universities to wake up and look at who their customers really are and stop sticking to an educational paradigm that provides no options for corporations to partner with them in an effort to upgrade their employees thinking skills with a good quality degree program at a reasonable cost, with a reasonable delivery system and time to completion.

    If they would step up to the plate and redesign their business model, as they teach corporations to do, then it would make it easier for us to use their services and provide our employees with the quality education they need.

    We don't need the training-only based discount degree programs, (referring to quality not the high cost of these pseudo-degree services). What we need is the university/college to take the lead and offer a degree program system for working adult learners that recognizes that real-life work experience is far more valuable than fictitious and invented classroom case studies and simulations. In that respect, I think universities will realize a far greater role in corporate education because we can work with their programs to make this a real combined training and education based development program to build talented employees.

  •  
    7

    chidiv

    09/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What?s an Online MBA Worth?

    Hi, Im currently thinking of doing University of Liverpool MBA by
    distance learning? Will this be a good option for me? Im an ACCA
    member. How will prospective employers regard this?

  •  
    8

    Vickifa

    09/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What?s an Online MBA Worth?

    The interesting thing in reading this article is that the focus was exclusively about what it was worth to have those 3 letters on your resume (and the relative value of having the credential from one institution vs. another). What about what you actually LEARN though the curriculum, and the value that knowledge would bring to your career/life? When did that become irrelevant?

    There are plenty of people with MBAs out there who are both ignorant and arrogant (a really bad combination). Having the credential on your resume, in and of itself, means nothing. Sure, all things being equal it's better to have it than not. And it's harder to get it from Wharton than the University of Phoenix, so it has more value. But any company or recruiter who hires on the basis of the MBA alone, and does not quantify how the MBA degree brings value to the position, or require the candidate to demonstrate that value, is short sighted.

  •  
    9

    kishpai

    09/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What?s an Online MBA Worth?

    I am at present enrolled for online MBA program of U21 Global University, Singapore for the following reasons which a brick and mortar college cannot offer:

    a) It gives flexibility i.e one can log-on at any time and post on the discussion board.
    b) You can take one subject at a time or more than one depending on your workload and ability.
    c) Most important exams are conducted online during the weekends. The exam window is open from Friday to Monday and one has to download the question paper and upload within a span of 24 hours.

    On has to read and comprehend the topics and also read what your peers have posted on the discussion board and give your views and comments.

    At the end of the day you get a qualification which may help you in your career progression down the line.

    But, the course is intense and one needs to devote considerable time and energy to do justice to the topics/subjects in the process you gain knowledge.

    These type of online courses are useful for those who do not have a fixed office schedule or travel frequently or have other commitments which do not have a fixed time or schedule.

    I do not think one can get job offers or get a good job only because he or she has an MBA. One needs to have the right attitude and substance and an MBA can add extra flavour to it.

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