Financial
Times
Places Smiths MBA Program Among
Worlds Best
The
MBA program at the Robert H. Smith
School of Business at the University of
Maryland is ranked #18 among all U.S.
MBA programs in the Financial Times
MBA 2004 rankings, published Jan. 26.
The influential rankings place Smiths
MBA program #4 among those of all U.S.
public business schools and #27 in the
world. The rankings are consistent with
the findings of other leading business
publications such as The Wall Street
Journal, which placed the Smith
Schools MBA program #19 worldwide in its
most recent rankings.
An extraordinary appetite for
innovation characterizes the school, be
it in course construction, career
development or technology, noted the
Financial Times in a Smith School
profile article accompanying its 2004
MBA rankings. The building at the Smith
school is probably the most
technology-intensive of any business
school, the Times reported.
The Robert H. Smith School of
business is clearly among an elite group
of business schools, said Howard Frank,
dean of the Smith School. With a
world-class faculty and superb academic
programs, we provide MBA students with
the deep knowledge and skills they need
to lead 21st-century organizations, and
the rankings reflect that.
In the value for the money category,
the Smith School was ranked the highest
among the top-25 U.S. business schools.
The Financial Times
survey found that three years after
graduating, Smith MBAs saw their
salaries increase an average of 175
percent, the 9th highest increase among
all U.S. business schools in the survey.
The report also compared the percentage
of 2003 MBA graduates who had accepted
jobs three months after graduation. The
Smith Schools placement rate of 85
percent was the 9th best among the
top-30 business schools in the survey.
We give our students a first-class
return on investment for their time and
expense, said Dean Frank. Our impressive
placement rate validates the innovative
strategies employed by our office of
career management, and the 175 percent
salary growth realized by our graduates
demonstrates the success of our MBAs
after graduation.
The Financial Times rankings
are compiled from two questionnaires one
for the business schools and the other
for the MBA class of 2000. The value for
the money criterion is calculated using
the salary earned by alumni three years
after graduation and course costs. The
salary percentage increase is a weighted
average, using alumni salary data from
the 2004, 2003 and 2002 surveys.
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