Archive for April, 2009

HBS Dating guru strikes out 2nd time at bat, IMHO

Friday, April 24th, 2009

I will address the HSW+ K issues and other impt matters over the week-end, for some comic relief we have this report fr. HBS’s own dating guru, Rachel Greenwald, who seems to have fallen into Sequel-itis.  Her first book, FINDING A HUSBAND AFTER 35 USING WHAT I LEARNED AT HBS WAS  niche-y and timely,  follow up, WHY HE DIDN’T CALL YOU BACK  is catch-up ( viz. He’s not into you et al) and judging fr. this interview about Meltdown Dating, blather. Her Nostrums about dating in hard times notwithstanding, to wit, good looks are out, as is glam accessories,  my guess is, not too many guys neglect to CALL BROOKE WAGNER, the aerosol bombshell TV interveiwer photo’d below,  back. Or front.  

Recession Changes The Rules Of Dating

Looks, Luxury Are Taking A Backseat To Love

Written By Brooke Wagner

DENVER (CBS4) ?

Click to enlarge

CBS4

Harvard Business School may not seem like an obvious training ground for matchmaking, but it worked for Denver’s Rachel Greenwald, author of Find a Husband After 35: Using What I learned at Harvard Business School and the just-released book, Why He Didn’t Call You Back.

Her business background gave her a unique perspective on how the recession impacts dating.

“I’ve been doing this research with single men for 10 years, and I can tell you that the mood of dating has really changed,” said Greenwald.

For starters, Greenwald found that the most desirable qualities in a date have changed drastically. She said looks are not as high on the list as they used to be.

“You’re going to find out if the person you may end up spending the rest of your life with is good in adversity and has humility and can rebound and have a positive attitude,” said Greenwald. “It’s nice people are really getting to know each other for who they are deep down, instead of what’s on the surface.”

That translates into “recession proofing” your online profile, too.

“Say, ‘I’m looking for a guy who has a kind heart’ instead of ‘I’m looking for a guy who’s financially stable,’” said Greenwald. “Talk about something that portrays you as a woman of substance. Tthat’s what the focus is these days — everyone wants substance instead of sizzle.”

Date-appropriate conversation also has changed with the times.

“One of the most popular questions in dating is, ‘What do you do?’ and you can’t ask that anymore because he may not do it anymore,” said Greenwald. “One out of 11 people is unemployed these days, so he’s not a loser if he doesn’t have a job anymore.”

The next time you dress for a date, Greenwald said you should consider the definition of “tasteful” has become more conservative in the recession.

“Tone down your accessories. Don’t wear those diamond stud earrings or carry bags with fancy labels like Gucci or Prada anymore – it’s just considered tacky,” said Greenwald.

When it comes to choosing a location, Greenwald said where we live makes scheduling a date easy.

“It’s very imortant to suggest low-key date ideas, if a man calls and asks you out, don’t suggest dinner, suggest a picnic or a hike. Living in Colorado, it’s a beautiful place to have an outdoor date. Even suggest renting a DVD from the library,” said Greenwald, “The girl who is just as comfortable going bowling or going on a bike ride is going to be very popular these days.”

Then, there’s the biggest recession dating question of all: Who should pay?

Greenwald says 84 percent of men want to pay for the first date.

“But they want to feel that the woman doesn’t expect it,” she says. ”He just wants to feel appreciated, so when the check comes, grab for your purse and chances are, he’s not going to let you pay.

“Maybe you can pay the valet parking or for ice cream or a drink later,” said Greenwald, “Chivalry is not dead, even in these economic times. That’s the good news.”

(© MMIX CBS Television Stations, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

US NEWS B SCHOOL RANKINGS

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

usnews-rankings-2009.pdf

2009 US SNOOZE AND WORLD REPORT RANKINGS

PRESS LINK TO GET FULL PDF.

AS TO HBS BEING 1 AND STANFORD 2, AND WHARTON AND KELLOGG TIED FOR THREE, THE DIFFERENCE IN EACH CASE, E.G. HBS AND STAN, AND WHY WHARTON IS NOT NUMBER 3 AND KELLOGG NUMBER 4, IS THE BOGUS CATEGORY ABOUT PERCENT OF GRADS EMPLOYED AT GRADUATION AND 3 MONTHS AFTER GRADUATION. THESE FIGURES DO NOT INCLUDE JOB QUALITY, OR THE FACT THAT LOTS OF STANFORD KIDS EITHER TAKE TIME OFF, OR DO JOBS THAT ARE NOT FORMALIZED IN THAT PERIOD. THE REAL RANKINGS IN MY MIND, EVEN USING THIS DATA, IS HBS AND STAN TIED FOR NUMBER ONE, AND WHARTON CLEARLY NUMBER 3. WITH KELLOGG FOUR.

Harvard panel on how to accept REJECTION, duh, how about three words: suck it up.

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Harvard “rejection” panel. More silly B.S. in BOSTON GLOBE STORY BELOW ABOUT HARVARD PANEL ADVISING THE BOO-HOO CROWD ON HOW TO HANDLE REJECTION, LOSS OF CHILDHOOD HAMSTER, RAINY DAYS, AND CRAMPS.  JEEPERS FOLKS, DO WE REALLY NEED A SEMINAR ABOUT THIS.

THIS TIDBIT IS MILDLY INTERESTING, AND CURIOUS MINDS ACTUALLY WANT TO KNOW MORE–THOSE WHO CAN, DO; THOSE WHO CANNOT TRY TO BE CONSULTANTS, AND THOSE WHO CANNOT EVEN BE CONSULTANTS GET PHD’S FROM HBS???

Panelist Pat Hernandez knows a thing or two about setbacks. The 2004 Harvard graduate was rejected by all three graduate schools she applied to two years ago, after losing out on numerous consulting jobs.

“It’s something many people are ashamed or reluctant to talk about,” said Hernandez, who serves as a resident tutor for Harvard undergraduates. “Those who deal with rejection more frequently take it in stride and bounce back better.”

Hernandez spent the last two years conducting academic research and applied to graduate schools again. She plans to attend Harvard Business School in the fall for a doctorate in organizational behavior and management.

full story below

(more…)

Bugging deans works for Waitlisters at college, what about business school?

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

COLLEGE ADCOMS ADMIT BUGGING THEM HELPS GET OFF WAITLIST ACCORDING TO BOSTON GLOBE STORY: APPLICABILITY TO B SCHOOLS, HMMMMMM….DEPENDS ON THE SCHOOL, BUT AS I HAVE SAID A MILLION TIMES, HAVING BIGFOOT CALL CAN SOMETIMES BE HELPFUL, AT B SCHOOL.  ANY B SCHOOL. 

“It’s too bad if students don’t know to follow up,” said Tom Parker, dean of admission and financial aid at Amherst College, which expects to take about 35 students from its list of 1,000. “If you’re going to get off the wait list, you’re really going to have to demonstrate a significant interest.”

FULL BOSTON GLOBE STORY BELOW

(more…)

shoecam photo of HRH Leopold

Friday, April 17th, 2009

HRH Leopold smiling at her Balmoral Estate while secretly disregarding pleas of a bigwig to get some mildly titled nonentity off the WL–photo taken in Scotland, Easter, 2009.  

dleopold-queen3.jpg

Will HBS 2+2 increased applications dim chances of Harvard College applicants? Kinda has to since program last year was semi-state secret.

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Harvard Business School

HARVARD CRIMSON STORY ON 2+2 –COULD BE BAD NEWS FOR HARVARD COLLEGE APPLICANTS, EASY ADMITS ARE COMING TO AN END?  

2+2 REMAINS FAV OR HER MAJESTY: INTEREST UP, AFTER TUB THUMPING FOR IT  AT SCHOOLS ALL OVER (JUNKET!!!) BUT ADMITS WILL BE ~100 LIKE LAST YEAR (106 ACCORDING TO OFFICIAL STATS), EVEN IF APPLICATIONS ARE UP. SO ADMIT RATE WILL BE DOWN.  OTHER THAN THAT, NOTHING NEW. ALTHO IF 2,200 WANNABES HAVE ATTENDED FORUMS, THAT IN ITSELF DOES NOT DEF. LEAD TO 600 SUBMITTED APPS. BUT OF COURSE, MANY APPLY WHO DONT GO TO FORUMS. FACT THAT PROGRAM HAS HAD A YEAR LONGER TO ESTABLISH ITSELF, ETC. WILL LEAD TO MORE APPS.  ONE IMPACTED GROUP COULD BE THE 22 (OF OUT 106 ADMITS) WHO GOT IN FROM HARVARD COLLEGE LAST YEAR, I JUST DONT SEE THAT MANY HARVARD COLLEGE KIDS GETTING IN THIS YEAR, B.C. LAST YEAR 2+2 WAS SOMETHING OF A SECRET.  FULL CRIMSON STORY BELOW (more…)

HRH Leopold’s blog updates on Round 1 deadline for next year and WL notice dates and numbers for later this Spring.

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Dee’s recent WL and Round 1 2010 post

http://www.hbs.edu/mba/admissions/blog.html#post-2009-04-09

 THE WORDS OF HER MAJESTY  THE COMMENTS OF RABBI KREISBERG                                             

A Few Miscellaneous Updates

…in no particular order:

  • Our Round 1 deadline for the next application season will be earlier in October, BEFORE fall class visits are open. We encourage those of you who are thinking of applying in Round 1 to consider a class visit this spring - class visits are available until May 8. Visiting an HBS class has absolutely no impact on the application process - we just want everyone to know that you are welcome.
  • We will be making more offers from the waitlist this year, and we hope to make the majority of these decisions as soon as we can - definitely before the end of May.
  • International students will have access to loans without needing a U.S. co-signer. We will release details/terms on specific programs as they are finalized.
As to Round 1 HBS application deadline being earlier in October next year , well, for the record it was Oct 15th this year (Oct 2008) BUT OCTOBER 2ND FOR 2007, soooooooooooooooooo, my guess is, Her Madge and her court had a little coffee klatch and figured out real early Oct 2nd etc. was better for lots fo reasons, including Xmas shopping, interview junkets, etc, etc. Thus,  I’m saying its going to be first week in October for 2009.  Like anyone reading this forum now really cares. Well, re’app’ers care. As to WL ‘update’ –spec. this text:

  • We will be making more offers from the waitlist this year, and we hope to make the majority of these decisions as soon as we can - definitely before the end of May.

    As to above, well, get out your tweezers.  I do not think it means, “we will be making more WL offers this year VERSUS LAST YEAR, altho that may in fact be true, it just means, in some casual one-glass-of-wine way, that they will still be accepting some kids off WL (right we already sorta knew that fr. Chang-O-grams) in a maternal, resassuring way, lese majesterial way. For all you suckers still on WL, some of you are going to win the lottery, and we plan to have that drawing before the end of May (keep in mind that r3 decisions go out May 13th, so by that time they got a pretty good idea of the class, altho not sure when R3 kids have to give deposits. etc.) It also seems to my ear, that majority of decisions will be made by end of May means that about 80 percent of remaining WL decisions will be made end of May, and after that you are talking about another 5 or WL accepts in June, July, etc. til they kill the thing off.  SO that is how Rabbi Kreisberg interprets this particular piece of Talmud, feel free to chime in, WLers are a very responsive and attentive group. As Dr. Johnson ~~ said, “When a man knows he is about to get dinged in a fortnight,  it concentrates the mind……”

    As to international students and loans next year, HBS has issued a press release covering that–

    Harvard University Secures New Source of Funding for International Graduate and Professional Students

    http://www.hbs.edu/news/releases/creditunionloans

  • New York Times asks which career is now “king” after meltdown and suggests some very stupid answers. Fact is it is still B school for do-gooders, patriots,and 90 percent of most science wannabes

    Sunday, April 12th, 2009

    NEW CAREER KING: TEACHING, SCIENCE, PUBLIC SERVICE? DONT BET ON IT. EVEN SILLY NEW YORK TIMES STORY BELOW DID NOT SUGGEST LAW.

    AFTER ALL THE SO-CALLED PUNDITS AND DUMB JOURNOS WEIGH IN, IT
    IS STILL B SCHOOL FOR THE PATRIOTIC, THE TEACHY, AND THE SCIENCE WASH-OUTS

    excerpts fr. this NYT story below — the bottom line, after the usual journo throat clearing and exaggerations is that while there may be some temporary migration away fr. b school, to say public service, teaching, and science, well, plus ce change, plus ce le blah blah if you read story closely, that kid who is joining TEACH FOR AMERICA  is just burnishing a resume for HSW in 2 or 3 years, the Marine at the Kennedy School is ALSO at HBS (so much for theory of this story, journos are SOOOOO LAME) and as science guy says, it might be good to have 1000 kids enroll in science stuff and then flush out the 950 who dont belong, but those 950 will be applying to B school down the road.

    April 12, 2009
    With Finance Disgraced, Which Career Will Be King?
    By STEVE LOHR
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/12/weekinreview/12lohr.html?hpw
    ….

    [blah blah intro] but based on graduate school applications this spring, enrollment in undergraduate courses, preliminary job-placement results at schools, and the anecdotal accounts of students and professors, a new pattern of occupational choice seems to be emerging. Public service, government, the sciences and even teaching look to be winners, while fewer shiny, young minds are embarking on careers in finance and business consulting.

    At Harvard, for example, about 40 percent of undergraduates in recent years went into the most lucrative corporate arenas like finance and consulting, based on surveys at the school year’s end. “That certainly won’t be the case this year,” observed Lawrence Katz, a professor and labor economist who has studied undergraduate career choices at Harvard going back to the 1960s. “We’re seeing students who would have been part of the Ivy League pipeline to Wall Street in the past considering very different career paths.”

    Kedamai Fisseha, a 21-year-old senior, is one of them. An economics major, Mr. Fisseha says he always assumed he would go into finance, and his summer internship last year was at the investment bank Morgan Stanley. Yet after Wall Street’s meltdown, job prospects there have withered. Instead, he is interviewing with Teach for America, a nonprofit group that recruits college graduates to teach in hard-to-staff schools for two-year stints. (After that, only one-third stay in the classrooms, though two-thirds remain in education.)

    Mr. Fisseha regards the turn of events as an opportunity to broaden his horizons. “It’s been liberating, and lucky for me,” he said. “But your situation does dictate your preferences.”

    Graduate schools of government and public policy are seeing a surge of applications. In a survey of its members released last week, the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration found that 82 percent reported an increase in applications this year, and many saw the largest percentage jumps in several years, or ever. The most-cited reason was the expectation by students that government will be hiring.

    Still, the appeal of public sector careers extends beyond job openings, say school officials. The laissez-faire presumption that government is not the solution but the problem, dating back to the Reagan era, has been cast aside, they say.

    The government’s need to step in with financial bailouts and recovery programs to steady the economy is seen as the immediate proof, they say, but not the only one. The environment, energy and health care also pose huge, complex challenges. “Young people today understand that government has a powerful role to play in solving these problems,” said Sandra Archibald, dean of the Evans School of Public Affairs at the University of Washington, where applications this year are up 26 percent.

    Government school officials also point to an Obama effect: his election as an endorsement of government activism.

    The economy, other long-range policy issues and the new administration, according to David Ellwood, dean of Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, add up to a “benevolent perfect storm,” which could lure talented people to public service in a way not seen in decades.

    Yet even before the economic crisis, Mr. Ellwood said, there were signs of a drift among young people toward trying to work on public problems, influenced by everything from the 9/11 attacks to climate change.

    Matthew McKnight attended Phillips Exeter Academy and was a freshman at Dartmouth College during the 9/11 attacks. The event and its aftermath, he recalled, left him with a conviction that he should serve his country “because of the opportunities I’d been given.” After graduating from college, Mr. McKnight joined the Marines. His four years in the military included a stint at the State Department in a counterterrorism unit, and he recently returned from 13 months in the field in Iraq.

    This fall, Mr. McKnight, 25, is headed to the Kennedy School for a joint-degree program with the Harvard Business School. He may work in the private sector for a couple of years at some point, he said, but he plans to make his career in government service. Mr. McKnight’s particular experience, to be sure, is unusual. But, he said, “There is a big crop of people, like me, who grew up in a different time when public policy and public issues have been at the center of things.”

    At leading business schools, too, a shift in career patterns is evident. Last year, 64 percent of the graduating class from the Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia went into finance or consulting. Graduation is still a couple of months away, but that percentage will be well down this year, especially in finance, said Jack Oakes, director of the career development center. Jobs in investment banking, for example, are running at less than half the level of last year, while more students are showing an interest in government jobs.

    Patricia Foglesong, a second-year student at Darden, turned down a job offer from a major consulting firm. Instead, she is considering two government jobs, one with the Secret Service and another with the Park Service.

    “Am I going to be a federal employee for the next 30 years? Probably not,” Ms. Foglesong said. “But public-private partnerships are going to be increasingly important in almost any field. And the timing is right to do this.”

    The sciences could well rise in the new pecking order of career status. The Obama administration wants to double federal spending in basic research over 10 years and triple the number of graduate fellowships in science.

    There are already signs of a renewed interest among students in science and technology. For the first time in six years, enrollment in computer science programs in the United States increased last year, according to a university survey last month. At Stanford University, the number of students taking the introductory computer science course increased 20 percent this year, said Eric Roberts, a professor of computer science.

    “What we need to do is to broadly educate as many people as possible in science, so the most talented people find their way into the field,” Mr. Roberts said. “That’s what happened in the Sputnik era.”

    Don Chamberlin, a professor of computer science at the University of California at Santa Cruz, was a member of the “Sputnik generation,” when American schoolchildren were encouraged to pursue careers in science, after the launch of a tiny satellite in 1957 appeared to give the Soviets a lead in missile technology used in nuclear strikes. As a teenager, he endangered his family garage in California with his rocket kits and later went into the fledgling field of computer science. He was a leading scientist in a team of IBM researchers that created the SQL database, an unseen technology that nonetheless animates every credit card purchase and A.T.M. banking transaction.

    In the early 1960s when he was choosing a career, Professor Chamberlin recalled, technical people were respected and well paid. Money, he said, was part of the equation. “But the bigger part of the motivation for me,” he said, “was that I would be doing exciting and important work and that my contributions would be appreciated.”

    Euro Dean Says US Schools take babes, shovel them to finance, all to crank up rankings. Result, global meltdown

    Thursday, April 9th, 2009

    Hmmmm Euro dean blames US B schools for crisis: how come? They took younger and younger kids, impressionable and easily molded (yup!) and funneled them into finance, where they could earn big $$$, and INCREASE SCHOOL RANKINGS   (which are partially based on salary of graduating kids). Say it aint true, Your Majesty!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! BTW, average age at Cranfield, story says, is 33.  Dunno man, that is EMBA turf in USA.

      Are business schools to blame for the credit crisis?

    By Chris Green

    http://www.independent.co.uk/student/postgraduate/mbas-guide/are-business-schools-to-blame-for-the-credit-crisis-1665871.html

    Séan Rickard, director of the full-time MBA programme at Cranfield School of Management, was one of the first to admit that business schools should admit to a degree of culpability . . .He argues that many institutions, especially those in the US, have lost sight of what MBAs were created for: teaching advanced business techniques to mature individuals with plenty of experience. Instead, many now focus on channelling increasingly young students into high-earning careers in finance, a practice that has come at a price.

    “There’s no doubt at all that, in much the same way as the financial sector lost its sense of judgement and proportion, many business schools didn’t ask, ‘Is this really what an MBA is meant to be about?’,” he says. “By taking people who are relatively inexperienced and encouraging them to study so they can move into the financial sector, we are overlooking some of the more subtle learning that was supposed to be associated with an MBA, such as ethics and how to build the value of a business over the long term.”

    So what drove business schools to adopt this approach? According to Rickard, the reason that many institutions unquestioningly swallowed the culture of risk-it-all capitalism created by the financial sector was because they knew it would boost their positions in global rankings.

    NYT Puff Piece about Larry Summers and DE Shaw debunked in Richard Bradley blog

    Monday, April 6th, 2009

    PUFF PIECE ABOUT LARRY SUMMERS IN NEW YORK TIMES TODAY EVISCERATED BY MOST EXCELLENT RICHARD BRADLEY BLOG

    http://www.richardbradley.net/shotsinthedark/2009/04/06/the-times-sucks-up/

    FOR ALL HARVARD FANATICS, ONE GREAT SOURCE OF HARVARD GOSSIP, MOSTLY ABOUT THE COLLEGE AND THE PRESIDENT AND DEANS, IS THE SHOTS IN THE DARK BLOG OF RICHARD BRADLEY, WHO ALSO WROTE A GREAT BOOK ABOUT HARVARD– Harvard Rules-Lawrence Summers and the Battle for the World’s Most Powerful University   THE TIMES TODAY WROTE AN AMAZING AND IMPORTANT PUFF PIECE ABOUT EX HAR.  PRES LARRY SUMMERS AND HIS ROLE AT HEDGE FUND D.E. SHAW. AMONG THE MORE PREPOSTEROUS CLAIMS WAS THAT SUMMERS HAD TO PASS A MATH TEST IN ORDER TO GET HIRED, ETC. ETC. ALL THIS AND MORE IS DEBUNKED IN THE BRADLEY POST CITED ABOVE, MUST READING FOR ANYONE INTERESTED IN HOW SUMMERS, GEITHNER ET AL. ARE SERVING WALL ST IN THE BAIL OUT.