What about Cornell (Johnson School of Business)???

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Why is it that Cornell's MBA program is rarely mentioned or brought up on the BTG forums. I see that it is a top B-School (11th place in Businessweek rankings and 18th place in US News rankings) but applicants don't consider this school in their prospects for B-School.

Is there a specific reason why this school is not mentioned by applicants? Could it be that ROI is not as good as other schools? Or maybe that they don't specialize in popular concentrations (such as finance, consulting, marketing, etc)?
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by DanaJ » Fri Sep 24, 2010 3:13 pm
Cornell has a very strong program. However, it's not (yet?) part of the super tag team of Harvard and Stanford, for instance. It's still an Ivy League school though with awesome resources and reputation and definitely worth checking out. Other than that, I don't know much unfortunately - just that a very smart Italian that I know is a 1st year MBA student there :)

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by hman768 » Tue Sep 28, 2010 11:38 am
I have wondered this same question myself several times. My best guess is that Cornell and Yale's rankings have suffered because they are not in major cities. I think most people (myself included) would rather go to school in a city rather than in a small New England town. My guess would be that the students who have their choice of top schools would likely select one in a city. Just a guess though.

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by acaba007 » Tue Sep 28, 2010 12:49 pm
Thanks for your responses, guys.

Hman, you bring up a good point. The school being in a not-so-urban area would probably be the most logical conclusion I can draw as to why its not considered much by applicants.

And maybe the fact that its not located in a large city leads to most financially appealing positions with good companies being filled first by candidates from state schools (or top schools near large cities). Thus making the school (Johnson SOM) a lower return on investment.

If anyone else has any insight on this, please let me know.