Employers Prefer Hiring From State Schools???????????

I'm guilty. Undergrad private education was in Philosopy ,Politcal and Economic Theory....

Never finished the "Theory" intensive UofC.

Best education I ever had....was in liberal arts. I learned all my "Financial World" traits OJC baby! (on the job cost: meaning fucking up and loosing million dollar deals as a rookie.)

You can't teach a person how to raise millions in capital. You can teach the basic idea of "sales". But in the end, you need to have the ability to speak knowledgeable about 1000s of topics other than Numbers. You have to build trust and relationships through communication and sincere understanding.

The numbers crunching can be accomplished by some backroom "EDUCATED" business major. You just have to understand how he got his numbers.

That is the game of making millions in the M&A and Capital Rasing Business.
 
Quote from The Big D:

That's ridiculous. Generally speaking ivy league students command about a 20% premium in terms of mid-career salary with the same degree when compared to the flagship state schools.

On the contrary, there was a well-publicized study that when they checked males after 10+ years in industry, there was almost no difference in earnings between those educated at Ivy League vs. other universities
 
Quote from JoePaterno:

On the contrary, there was a well-publicized study that when they checked males after 10+ years in industry, there was almost no difference in earnings between those educated at Ivy League vs. other universities

These guys suggest about 20%:

http://www.payscale.com/best-colleges/top-us-colleges-graduate-salary-statistics.asp

That's comparing a middle-of-the-pack state school like University of Michigan to a middle of the pack ivy like Yale.

Of course, how much of that is industry bias and cost-of-living compensation is difficult to tease out. In any case, whether it's 0%, 10%, or 20% the point is that any company that wants ivy leaguers can get them at fairly small premium. It's just that companies outside of the east coast don't particularly want them.
 
Quote from peilthetraveler:

Speaking of education...whatever happened to that "permanent record" that my 2nd grade teacher told me was going to follow me around for the rest of my life? No employer has ever brought up that time I hit the kid in the head with the rubber dodge ball, or jumped off the swings when I was 7.

Schools cannot give you a permanent official record, but your experience in them can affect the rest of your life - for better or worse.

http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/underground/prologue2.htm
 
Is not just about money. It is lifetime prestige and the gateway entrance into the new overclass.

Top jobs in federal government departments, The right legal clerkships that guarantee a career, the glamor industries like entertainment, the top editorial jobs, Wall Street Access. In other words Ivy league gets you into the game with regards to POWER and for many power is much more important than money.
 
Illinios, Purdue, Georgia Tech, Carnegie Mellon in the top 10 - these are top-flight engineering schools. I suspect that has something to do with the results, as the Ivies are rather under-represented in that area.
 
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