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by tixocloud
2843 days ago
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Personally, for me, I found it useful but not for the reasons of knowledge. The knowledge was good but the program helped to sharpen my speaking and thinking skills. It also broadened my mind to different perspectives - that the tech world that I come from is quite different to people outside of industry. The classes and sessions have also made me think further and deeper about business, culture and management beyond the usual. It also made me more disciplined - focus on the business not the product and technology. Used to waste countless hours building, researching with not much to show for. It’s also given some confidence to speak to business types and connect with them at a deeper level while introducing technology to them. You can most definitely fallback as an engineer but why are you thinking of an MBA in the first place? What’s your goal for pursuing one? |
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Right now, I don’t believe what would make me happy is to be a principal/staff engineer somewhere necessarily.
Don’t get me wrong, I love programming, but I see it as me getting paid to solve problems, and not getting paid to write good code, and I think there are other ways to solve those problems. For example, I think the biggest problems in my organization are managerial and organizational rather than technical, and I feel like the type of training that would come with an MBA can help one solve those issues, including communication, planning, product validation, people management, etc.
That said, my entire reporting chain up to and including the CEO doesn’t have an MBA, so it’s not like it’s a prerequisite.
The other path I’m considering is an MS in CS/SE because while I’ve been an engineer for a few years, my undergrad is in Mathematics, and I’m worried it’ll be a limiter later on to not have a CS degree, but also only a BS.