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  • stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    To: George


    $100K for total comp is really below the average. even for 1st yeat out of bschool.

    consultants make ~150K
    IB are making ~$150K+
    tech can make ~$120K

    most israelis fall between these three in the US

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    To: boaz1


    Regarding Whaton – it is almost like two degrees.
    they let you take only 15 credits for your MBA.. 4 less than the 19 requiered for MBA only student..

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    To: boaz1


    Many schools offer such programs..
    although i might warn you that is far of being a walk in the park.. and the costs are almost double. Check out Wharton for example

    http://mba.wharton.upenn.edu/mba/academics/curriculum/dual.php#listC

    good luck

    assaf

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    To: cmbaz


    i don't have the full info at the back of my head, but W alumi are more or less in line with the rest of the class.. maybe a little bit tend more towards MC in the past two/three years and probably more into banking before that.

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    To: cmbaz


    all the career related stats are on W's website..

    http://mba.wharton.upenn.edu/mba/professional/development/interns.php

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    To: cmbaz


    promise her that you wear a sweater and date only jewish girls..

    now seriously.. Whartom brand in Israel is probably only second to HBS'.. and probably better than most other b-schools.

    It is not true that there are no Wharton alumni in Israel. There are tens of them across many industries. It is true that it is harder to get the same recognition and paycheck as in the US, though, but this would be the rule for all other schools as well.

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to yaeltolub from February 20 2004 on 12:25


    Yael – are you an ex-253 by any chance ?

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to mbaq from February 19 2004 on 13:18


    try $120,000 + opportunity cost of lost salaries (~ $60K to $140K)

    and YES.. it is worth it (at least I hope so because payday is coming..)

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32
    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32
    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to mbaq from February 11 2004 on 14:03


    all interviewers do not read the application of the candidate that they are interviwing… even if they are members of adcomm.

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to mbaq from February 09 2004 on 22:45


    the adcomm doesn't care where you interview.
    you probably have better chances in israel.

    good luck

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to yoni s. from January 31 2004 on 22:24


    Sis you get in on your 1st try? >> second try. bad essays in first attempt

    What were your statistics? >> same as Wharton's average

    How has been the experiwnce for you so far? >> 12 out of 10.. too bad it is almost over

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to omri from January 31 2004 on 10:24


    first round.. but it was more than 2 years ago.
    i am a second year in Wharton these days.

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to omri from January 30 2004 on 20:57


    Omri.. relax..

    I waited for 10 weeks before receiving my invite.. which arrived couple of hours before the dealine

    take it easy.. there is really nothing you can do at this point

    AH

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to MBA applicant from December 21 2003 on 14:20


    4 made it in after R1.

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    Reminder: Wharton Reception. Please RSVP with Nir at NirB@wharton.upenn.edu

    ———-

    PLEASE JOIN CURRENT STUDENTS, FACULTY AND ALUMNI TO LEARN

    MORE ABOUT THE WHARTON MBA EXPERIENCE.

    D

    ATE: THURSDAY, DECEMBER 25TH, 2003 AT 19:00

    L

    OCATION: RECANATI HIGH TECH MANAGEMENT SCHOOL (HTMS) BUILDING,

    40 H

    AIM LEVANON ST., RAMAT-AVIV, TEL-AVIV (NOT INSIDE THE CAMPUS)

    P

    LEASE RSVP TO: NIRB@WHARTON.UPENN.EDU

    FOR DIRECTIONS PLEASE FOLLOW www2.tau.ac.il/mao/unimapl1.asp

    WE LOOK FORWARD TO MEETING YOU THERE

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to gbiron from December 04 2003


    thanks Gor.. we appreciate your feedback

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    please note change in location




    invitation




    Wharton Annual Reception for Prospective Students


    please join current students, faculty and alumni to learn
    more about the Wharton MBA experience.


    Date: Thursday, December 25th, 2003 at 19:00
    Location: Recanati High Tech Management School (HTMS) Building,
    40 Haim Levanon St., Ramat-Aviv, Tel-Aviv (Not inside the campus)

    for directions please follow http://www2.tau.ac.il./map/unimapl1.asp



    we look forward to meeting you there

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    Wharton Annual Reception for Prospective Students

    please join current students, faculty and alumni to learn more about the Wharton MBA experience.

    Date: Thursday, December 25th, 2003 at 19:00

    Location: Recanati Graduate School of Business, Tel-Aviv University (Auditorium)

    for directions please follow http://www2.tau.ac.il./map/unimapl1.asp

    we look forward to meeting you there

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to marco from November 18 2003


    about x3 harder..
    Wharton's last year's unofficial statistics:
    R1: 4 accepted (1/3 – 1/4 ratio)
    R2: 7 accepted (1/10 – 1/12 ratio)

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to marco from November 18 2003


    harder..

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    for all those who are waiting to hear Wharton..

    I know it is hard to wait.. and the speculations are staring to run back and forth.. I have few friends in Wharton adcomm and, from talking to them, I know that the bulk of the interview invitations is not out yet.

    Even when they are out.. there is always a chance you will receive an invitation right up to the last minute.. it happened to me two years ago.

    Try to relax and keep positive..

    Good luck

    Stam

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to IchiBan from August 28 2003


    I know few students in HBS and one in Chicago.. they all got very healthy scholarships. However.. I cannot disclose the numbers.. sorry.

    Internship was ok. I had a nice project to work on and the bay-area is just a great place to live in. still … internship means work.. and work means coming back to the 'real life'.
    There is nothing better then the 3-days-weekends that some schools allow.

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to daniel from August 24 2003


    I think that HBS and Chicago are very generous with scholarships for people with high credentials. In Wharton – the chances to getting a scholarship are very slim regardless of your statistics and even then it will most likely be much less of the 50% tuition.

    Good luck

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to HiddenGem from August 26 2003


    seems like someone is envy…

    please reconsider if you really want an MBA yourself because you might find yourself surrounded by people with high statistics and that will not appreciate attitude such as yours.

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    In reply to Anne from August 25 2003


    Anne,

    do yourself a favor and don't raise it… it adds nothing but questions to your application.

    stam

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32
    בתגובה ל: Post Admission Forum #520

    Does anyone have any executive contacts at El Al in marketing or biz dev? If so, please send me an email to g1267@netvision.net.il

    Thanks much for your help!

    Gad

    ——————————————————–

    Gad,

    I know that ELAL offered internships in Wharton for their BD / corporate strategy team. unfortuently I deleted the e-mail. If you know someone in McKinsey Israel, he can probably introduce you to this team.

    good luck,

    stam

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32
    an interesting article from CNET: http://news.com.com/2100-1022-1021549.html
    Please note that when it mentions that Microsoft takes 750 interns … it doesn't mean that they take 750 MBAs. MS took 5 guys from Wharton and probably less then 50 all together. IBM took only 7 MBA interns to their MBA program in San Jose … etc'.
    Is it still worth it … the answer (my answer) is YES, but you should come in with your eyes open and expectations set. It is tough out there.
    stam
    Are internships the new tech prize?

    By color=#0000ffLisa M. Bowman
    Staff Writer, CNET News.com
    July 4, 2003, 4:00 AM PT

    Former Solectron engineer Ram Santhanam was at a party recently when a woman sidled up to him and told him that she hated him.

    Santhanam, it seems, had been selected for a highly competitive position that the woman had also been seeking: an internship at Sun Microsystems.

    Although the woman was only kidding, the scene underscores the intense rivalry for jobs in Silicon Valley these days, where even lowly internships have become a career battleground for job-hungry geeks.

    "It's definitely competitive out there," said Santhanam, who was laid off from Solectron in 2001 and is color=#0000ffpursuing a master s degree in business in the hopes of landing a marketing position. "The employers have their choice from a whole set of experienced people."

    Once snubbed as a haven for those who couldn't find a real job at a dot-com or elsewhere, internships have become a coveted prize in the listless job market, attracting a bumper crop of overqualified candidates at a time when companies are slashing entry-level job programs.

    That's making it harder than ever for first-time graduates to get a foot in the door at major companies such as Microsoft or Sun Microsystems, where many new hires are drawn from the intern pool.

    The grim prospects for interns reflect broader trends in the technology employment market, which has color=#0000fflost more than half a million jobs in the United States in just two years. What's more, the unemployment rate in tech-heavy Santa Clara County, Calif., stood at 8 percent in May, outpacing the state's 6.6 percent rate.

    Traditionally, internships have been a bright spot for hiring in a down economy, as companies look to spread work among fewer employees.

    However, the programs are being hard hit this time around. Like many companies, Sun has trimmed its internship program from 1,000 positions during the heyday to about 600 this year, meaning there are more people than ever applying for fewer positions.

    The cutbacks come as the pool of intern applicants is swelling with ranks of experienced workers who have returned to school for additional training or a second degree. Lacking full-time offers, many of these people are happy to take whatever they can get, giving employers a steady stream of overqualified candidates.

    "I've heard people say, 'I just want a job,'" said Wendy Dow, who coordinates Sun's M.B.A. intern program. "A lot of the talent we're seeing on the resumes is just amazing."

    Internships were designed to let current students or recent graduates get a firsthand glimpse of corporate culture and get some work experience–however low-paying or menial–under their belts.

    But these days you have to have some experience to get some more. Students who have already worked at companies are edging out those who haven't–jumping at any opportunity that resembles employment.

    "Many people are graduating and just looking for something to do," said Bill Coleman, senior vice president for compensation at Salary.com. "If they're not going to get the full-time jobs they thought they were going to get, many are resorting to internships."

    Those trying to place interns said that students who once would have had multiple internship offers are now lucky to get just one.

    "This year has been the worst I have seen," said Judy Tsujimoto, who for more than 20 years has coordinated the engineering co-op program at the University of California at Berkeley, which places engineering students in six- to eight-month internships. "I think companies have reached a bare-bones budget," added Tsujimoto, who has many more applicants than positions to fill.

    And a lot rides on getting an internship, especially with color=#0000ffthe grim hiring scene. In a survey of 357 companies by the National Association of Colleges and Employers, hiring managers said nearly a third of their new hires came from their pool of interns.

    Resumes pile up
    At Microsoft, that rate is closer to two-thirds, according to Colleen Wheeler McCreary, a technical recruiter at the company.

    Although she doesn't have exact figures about the number of intern applicants, McCreary said the stack of resumes on her desk was twice as high this year as it was last year. And the experience is impressive.

    "A number of the intern applicants I interviewed had been CEOs or CTOs," McCreary said. "They had great titles at very small companies or very well known companies."

    About 750 interns are selected to participate in Microsoft's highly popular program. They're often assigned a product feature to handle during their stint, and this summer interns are working on projects ranging from extra games on smart phones to new features for Office 12 and the Longhorn operating system.

    McCreary said the interns benefit the company, too. "The interns bring new life and a fresh perspective," she said.

    Peter Vogt, president of Minneapolis-based Career Planning Resources, said smart companies work hard to keep their internship programs, even in a down economy. "It is going to bounce back at some point," he said. "The employers who maintain their internship programs are the ones who are going to land the best graduates."

    Meanwhile, on the Sun campus, even freshly minted M.B.A.s are clinging to their internships, hoping to parlay them into full-time jobs. Pamela Kong, a 29-year-old who just received her master's from Santa Clara University in June, has had her internship at Sun extended twice over the past year. It ends this month, but she's eager to stay on at the company. "I keep telling my manager, 'Help me find a job because I want to stay with Sun.'"

    Kong, who was laid off from an engineering position at another company two years ago, said she likes both her job and the company–especially because she's surrounded by so many smart people. "I don't think I've run into one person I would call an idiot," Kong chuckled, gazing around the Sun campus during a recent barbecue for interns.

    Plus, the work is challenging, partly because of the economic doldrums. "There's more work for an intern to do," Kong said. "We're getting pretty meaty projects."

    Santhanam, the former Solectron engineer, agreed. He said he participates in meetings and gives feedback about product strategy and pricing. He thinks his manager listens to him because of his experience in the engineering field. Occasionally, though, he does have to do some grunt work such as printing out slides for meetings.

    But the company makes up for it by treating interns like employees, giving them badges that are identical to other workers and letting them rub elbows with top executives. Last week, he said, jeans-clad CEO Scott McNealy was milling about on the Sun campus during lunch. "It's like meeting Barry Bonds," he said.

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    Stam

    Out of the 12+1, how many enrolled

    ——

    I know about 9 that emrolled. It doesn't say a thing about the others.

    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32
    סתםגאי, תודה על העצות המועילות שלך. זה תענוג לשמוע ממישהו שכבר עבר את זה. אתה יודע כמה אנשים התקבלו השנה לוורטון? איזה אחוז מתקבל לדעתך בלי הצטיינות בתואר הראשון?
    ————————-
    12 people were accepted + 1 defered. Most of the students I know (including myself) were far of being in the top of their class in undergrad. It is a plus, but definitly not a must.
    hope it helps.
    stamguy
    חבר
    מספר הפוסטים: 32

    Few tips for people on the thread
    (corresponds to few questions ask earlier + few tips from my personal experience)

    The adcomm let Israelis read few essays in rare occasions where something sounds little too much to be true. Otherwise, at least in Wharton, they make sure that Israelis do not read other Israelis’ applications. The same policy goes for all other nationalities. You have to realize that in general, Americans and Europeans do not think highly on army people unless they are in special units etc’. Their system works different where the typically people from weaker levels of society volunteer to their armed forces. Don’t shy your experience, but definitely try to build on other strengths you have.

    As for how much to ‘fix’ your story … please bear in mind that most people, and especially US citizens who went through application process for their undergrad, are very good in presenting themselves. You should do the same in the limit of reason BUT never tell a lie. If you are embarrassed by your own story when you tell it to a friend (Israeli) you probably went too far ahead with your story.

    Be very careful from where and whom you take your information / advise from. Some people, inside and outside this board – fellow applicants, prospective, people like me (students), essay consultant, may think they know how the process works and may give you, with good intentions, information, or worse, advises based on their sometime narrow / biased experience that may lead you to wrong decisions. I personaly took a very bad advise in the past from the Fulbright guys thinking they supposed to know. Take every advice you get (including my own) with a grain of salt.

    At the end of the day – it is all about you, your story… and your career.

    All the information you could probably want exists on the businessweek’s board. Please read through this board. 99% of your questions (current and future) were already answered there. The Q&A there will open your mind to questions / issues you haven’t realized yet that you have.
    The link to board is:
    color=#800080http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/index.html
    There is also a great book I used in the process that called ‘how to get into top MBA program’ (or something like that) with all the information you could possibly need to plan your application process (some essay examples, recomm etc’)

    Apply as early as you can. It is not a fair game across all rounds. Just look at this year’s statistics of Israelis accepted at Wharton / HBS this year (probably available on BW thread) to see what I mean.

    Last but most important advise – do yourself a favor and do not underestimate the process and the competition … it is tough and sometimes painful getting in … but, from personal perspective, it is so much worth it.

    If there are any specific questions on Wharton – I will be happy to answer.

    Good luck to you all – and enjoy you summer.

    Stam

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