Friday, December 13, 2019

The MBA Hiring Climate According to Recruiters

The master of business administration Hiring Climate According to RecruitersThe master of business administration Hiring Climate According to RecruitersThe GMAC corporate recruiter survey is out. What did the recruiters say about the MBA hiring climate? Looks pretty good In the Asia Pacific, even better.In general, mora companies are planning to hire MBAs this year than last, and MBA starting salaries are expected to increase overall, though half of companies expect no change.Heres a roundup of some of the reports more interesting finds.The traits and skills of in-demand MBAsAll the talk of late wanting the managers of today and tomorrow to embody leaders who are creative, innovative and socially intelligent seems to have been missed by many recruiters. The traits recruiters say they are looking for in MBA grads are initiative, professionalism, motivation and integrity, ability to deal with pressure/obstacles and goal orientation. Fewer than half say they desire MBAs who can listen, be persuasive or culturally sensitive, are tactful, can delegate well, or are empathetic.Given that, communications skills are, somewhat contradictorily, by far the most desirable skill recruiters look for (Does that mean they know they should be looking for strong communication skills, but just dont know what that entails?).Regarding technical/quantitative skills and a proven ability to perform, companies in the U.S., more than European or Asian companies, seek these things.Getting good grades was only considered desirable by 45 percent of recruiters. Even less valued prior work experience in similar or occupations or industries.What recruiters find important in a school One of the more interesting things to come out of the recruiter survey is how much heed recruiters continue to pay to the much-loathed and ravenously-observed MBA rankings when choosing which schools to recruit at. The rankings are becoming an increasingly important criterion to recruitersalmost as important as the ir existing school relationships, their prior experiences with the school, and the quality of the students.John Byrne offers one possible explanationOne explanation for the importance of rankings is that more companies are recruiting MBAs and they are often recruiting at more schools than they had in the past. If companies are increasing the number of campuses where they recruit, they use rankings to help identify schools theyre less familar with, says Michele Sparkman Renz, director of research communications for GMAC. The Financial Times ranking in particular has a much greater non-U.S. mix with two Indian schools in the top 25. Companies hiring employees for their operations in India may use that ranking and others to decide which schools in India would provide them with the best Indian talent.Only a quarter of the recruiters said a schools curriculum or location factored into where they recruited, and only one of ten said the quality of the faculty or the quality of the career s ervices office mattered.MBA hires with the highest starting salariesConsulting gigs are tops in average starting salaries at $93K for MBA hires, $90K for experienced direct-industry hires, and $49K for hires with only a bachelors.New hire salaries in the technology sector are expected to average around $89K and virtually the same with experienced direct-industry hires.Grads who go to work for healthcare/pharmaceutical firms can expect an average yearly take of around $88K.Grads who take positions in the energy/utilities industries are slated to earn an average starting salary of $87K, about $10K more than experienced direct-industry hires.How companies are hiringThe best chance of finding a job is still through someone you knowmore than three-quarters of recruiters said they relied on employee referrals. Nearly as many said they use their companys website as a hiring strategy. The number of companies recruiting on campus increased this year to 68 percent. Only 35 percent reported so cial media as a hiring tool.What positions are in demandIn the U.S., finance (other than investment banking) jobs are the most in demand (42 percent), followed by marketing/sales positions (39 percent), then business development jobs, then consulting gigs.Are companies sponsoring?Only 15 percent of employers said they were planning to sponsor employees for full-time MBA programs, 25 percent for part-time and 21 percent for executive MBAs.Europe likes MBAs European companies are poised to exceed by $260 the average annual starting salary that US employers plan to offer MBA graduates. In fact, European employers place a higher premium on MBA graduate hires compared to the salaries they extend to other new hires.GMAC Corporate Recruiter SurveyPhoto Flickr/ Radiant Guy Like us on Facebook

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