I've been recommended by more than a few people that I seriously consider going to business school.
There are those who recommend it as an "insurance policy" against mid-30s career failure, those who recommend it "solely for the networking opportunity", and those who recommend it as a launching point into "great career track jobs". (Oh yeah, and those who recommend it for the education.)
None of these reasons are to be dismissed, including the education.
In thinking about a move to business school, one of the ideas that keeps coming back to me is the phrase to be "entrepreneurial" about what one does in life.
In my experience - working at one of the five largest i-banks in the world - the word "entrepreneurial" is used as an adjective in mostly non-entrepreneurial corporate situations to mean things like being creative, taking the initiative, or just not waiting to be told what to do.
In the corporate environment, saying that we are "entrepreneurial" is sort of like a bureaucratic way of paying homage to the true spirit of business, to fool ourselves into thinking that we in corporations (who are by and large following in someone else's footsteps) are kindred spirits with the explorers who blazed the trails for our companies.
So, when I think about going to business school, I inevitably run into the phrase "being entrepreneurial about my education."
I must have read this on a website featuring student testimonials while doing research - which leads me to this stumbling block:
When I think about what it means to be "entrepreneurial" about a business education, I inevitably come back to the idea that the only entrepreneurial approach to a business education is to take out student loans for the full amount I would expect to spend on a private degree (taking full advantage of government-subsidized interest rates), and investing the proceeds in startup businesses, while using 5-10% of the funds to take night classes in business and other areas that I want to brush up on.
I don't have a great solution for developing a professional network, although conferences and friends-of-friends in the same practice area would be a decent start.
I would read books on business and non-business areas that I thought would be useful.
And, to top it off, I would force myself to write essays (or a blog) to reinforce what I was learning.
I figure the courses could be taken for under ~$5k, and could be completed in parallel with whatever startup I was working on.
After two years, I would have some priceless business experience, and assuming I did not sink 100% of my capital into one failed opportunity, I would potentially be able to fund at least three ideas. And likely, one of them would lead to something.
Of course, this approach doesn't solve "the question" of what to do with one's life, nor does it offer the easy road map that going to school does, nor are there any guarantees of any successful outcome through this approach.
But looking at an MBA from this perspective allows me to place in better context the time, expense, risk, and generally-expected outcomes to be had from earning a traditional MBA.
So here's the question to ask as a check: am I really being "entrepreneurial" in my career - or just describing it that way to make myself feel better about making safe choices? - Ed