Hello all,
I am a student from Singapore, and i have been admitted to a local university, and will be studying business management later this year. I recently got accepted into Rotterdam School of Management, studying the BSc in intl business administration. I would like to pursue a career in IB after graduation.
Firstly more on both programmes i am accepted into.
1) Singapore management university
- pretty new university, started out in 2000.
- apparently is branded as "the" business school (up & coming, so on and so forth)
- heavily competitive
- 4 year programme in business management
2) Rotterdam school of management
- located in the Netherlands
- good credentials/accreditations/rankings
- 3 year programme in INTL business (could possibly be followed with 1 year MBA/MSc programme)
Which uni should i choose? Would going all the way to Netherlands for an undergrad business school education be well worth it?
4 years at SMU vs 4 years at RSM, i could get a master's at RSM. However will i gain less than a normal 4 year programme?
Also, which programme would better suit my desired career path in IB? Or rather, what would be the careers i would be looking at with an intl business degree?
Thank you!
help in choosing bachelor program
Posted Mar 21, 2013 16:10
Hello all,
I am a student from Singapore, and i have been admitted to a local university, and will be studying business management later this year. I recently got accepted into Rotterdam School of Management, studying the BSc in intl business administration. I would like to pursue a career in IB after graduation.
Firstly more on both programmes i am accepted into.
1) Singapore management university
- pretty new university, started out in 2000.
- apparently is branded as "the" business school (up & coming, so on and so forth)
- heavily competitive
- 4 year programme in business management
2) Rotterdam school of management
- located in the Netherlands
- good credentials/accreditations/rankings
- 3 year programme in INTL business (could possibly be followed with 1 year MBA/MSc programme)
Which uni should i choose? Would going all the way to Netherlands for an undergrad business school education be well worth it?
4 years at SMU vs 4 years at RSM, i could get a master's at RSM. However will i gain less than a normal 4 year programme?
Also, which programme would better suit my desired career path in IB? Or rather, what would be the careers i would be looking at with an intl business degree?
Thank you!
I am a student from Singapore, and i have been admitted to a local university, and will be studying business management later this year. I recently got accepted into Rotterdam School of Management, studying the BSc in intl business administration. I would like to pursue a career in IB after graduation.
Firstly more on both programmes i am accepted into.
1) Singapore management university
- pretty new university, started out in 2000.
- apparently is branded as "the" business school (up & coming, so on and so forth)
- heavily competitive
- 4 year programme in business management
2) Rotterdam school of management
- located in the Netherlands
- good credentials/accreditations/rankings
- 3 year programme in INTL business (could possibly be followed with 1 year MBA/MSc programme)
Which uni should i choose? Would going all the way to Netherlands for an undergrad business school education be well worth it?
4 years at SMU vs 4 years at RSM, i could get a master's at RSM. However will i gain less than a normal 4 year programme?
Also, which programme would better suit my desired career path in IB? Or rather, what would be the careers i would be looking at with an intl business degree?
Thank you!
Posted Mar 25, 2013 16:38
Since this forum is for MBA programs and other master's-level business courses, it might be sort of difficult to find this kind of feedback from the forum members here.
Either way you go, for a career in investment banking, I would consider planning to work for a few years between your bachelor's and an MBA - this will give you more of a practical basis from which to build on with a higher-level degree.
Since this forum is for MBA programs and other master's-level business courses, it might be sort of difficult to find this kind of feedback from the forum members here.
Either way you go, for a career in investment banking, I would consider planning to work for a few years between your bachelor's and an MBA - this will give you more of a practical basis from which to build on with a higher-level degree.
Either way you go, for a career in investment banking, I would consider planning to work for a few years between your bachelor's and an MBA - this will give you more of a practical basis from which to build on with a higher-level degree.
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