Part Time/EMBA Options for NYC Lawyer
Hi All,
I am a mid-level (3 years of experience) corporate associate focusing on M&A, with an emphasis on LBOs, at a top NYC firm (think Simpson Thacher, Kirkland, Latham, Debevoise, if that helps). I am considering pursuing an MBA in order to help move over to the buy side in a business role. I have already had some discussions about it with people in the industry, and they have indicated that with a couple more years of of deal experience, and the MBA credential, they would consider me a competitive applicant. However, I still have some Law School debt (~$50k), and would rather not wait two more years to gain experience and pay that off, only to put my career on hold and forego income in a full-time MBA program. At that point I'd be in my early 30s (29 now) and would really prefer to still be earning. I am therefore considering EMBAs and part-time options. I have already taken the GMAT with a score of 730, my UG GPA is a 3.3 from a respected but not elite state school, and I received my JD Magna Cum Laude from a T14 Law School (sort of like law's version of M7). I was hoping to gain some insight from this thread regarding my best options. Here is what I have so far:
1) Columbia Saturday-only EMBA: I like the sound of the program. It seems really intensive and I think I'd come away with a lot. However, it is expensive, and would demand that I give all day every Saturday, which I doubt my firm would support - fire drills demand my entire weekend with some regularity.
2) Cornell Metro NY EMBA: similar concerns to the Columbia EMBA, but my physical presence is only every other weekend, and so it would likely be an easier sell to my firm
3) Stern Langone Part Time: I like the flexibility of the program, but wonder if that will cause me to crawl through in 6 years rather than finishing in 2-3. I also like that it seems that the average Langone student is closer to my age than in the typical EMBA program.
4) Fuqua Global EMBA: Although this program is not based in NY, I am inclined to think it will be the easiest to sell to my firm. I could use my vacation time to attend the residential weeks - my firm is respectful of vacation, and I think they would support this. Outside of residential weeks, my physical presence is not required, and I can do work on my own time. The cost isn't as high as Columbia.
Are there any other programs I should be looking at? Am I aiming too high for my profile? Any help would be appreciated.
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