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by snowbird122
5855 days ago
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I am an entrepreneur, a hacker, and an MBA. I am intelligent enough not to apply big-company processes to a start-up and vice versa. An MBA is an education in business. That can't be a bad thing if you operate a business, large or small. |
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So some people claim. Other people think it isn't that clear cut. On another discussion (http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1330878), someone asked
"I presume you get an MBA to give you a better understanding about business. And startups are in essence businesses. Then how come having a better understanding not impact your startup?"
pg replied,
"The cause of the apparent paradox is that "business" spans a huge range. MBAs train you to be junior officers in the armies of managerial capitalism. But there is almost zero overlap between that sort of work and what startups do."
and later
"Actually I would say it's a slight net minus to have an MBA when doing a startup. You learn nothing of use to you, but investors discriminate against you slightly.
Almost all investors are looking for founders who match past stars. So what they're looking for at this point is hackers.
I have to say I agree with them. I can't imagine Bill Gates or Larry & Sergey enduring B School."
So there are intelligent people with differing viewpoints on whether "An MBA is an education in business." is a valid premise.