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MBA Students Seek ‘Sexy’ Tech Jobs, and Silicon Valley Is Hiring

“The tech industry has a ton of really creative, young individuals who think about the world in different ways and those are the type of people I want to be surrounded by every day,” MBA student Conor Farese said. “People want to work with other young people. People want to work in places where they can grow -- MBAs especially want that.”

(Bloomberg) --Conor Farese, a second-year MBA student in the San Francisco Bay Area, has a simple explanation for why he expects to bypass the finance industry for a career in technology.

“Tech is sexy,” Farese, a student at the University of California-Berkeley Haas School of Business, said in an interview. “You know all the companies, you see these apps on your phone. That’s a big piece of it.”

Luckily for him and many other MBAs, Silicon Valley is hiring. A new study by the Graduate Management Admission Council found that 89 percent of tech companies expect to hire such graduates this year, compared with 76 percent of finance and accounting firms. Demand is strongest among health care, technology, and energy companies -- followed by financial firms.

“We hire MBA talent because we know that they have a degree of functional excellence and bring a diverse set of experiences and perspectives,” said Priya Priyadarshini, senior human-resources director at Microsoft Corp. “We find MBA students to be data-driven and passionate about technology and what it can do to better the world.”

Of all employers, 81 percent plan to add MBAs this year, up from a 70 percent hire rate last year, the study found. The biggest increase came from the smallest of firms, as 77 percent of startups said they are looking for MBAs, compared with the 2017 hire rate of 55 percent.

Nearly 200,000 people attain MBAs each year in the U.S., making it the top graduate degree, according to a 2018 higher education report by the Department of Education. To be sure, the finance industry is still hiring. A spot check on nine large U.S. schools that offer MBA programs showed that about 25 percent of 2017 graduates went into finance.

“In technology, MBAs can have the best of all worlds, with the flexibility to try roles in different parts of the business, from HR to finance to more technical departments,” Priyadarshini said. “The global nature of technology and the ability to solve problems at a global scale can also be a large draw to future talent.”

Farese, the MBA student, said that financial firms and consultants don’t seem to offer the corporate culture he’s seeking.

“The tech industry has a ton of really creative, young individuals who think about the world in different ways and those are the type of people I want to be surrounded by every day,” he said. “People want to work with other young people. People want to work in places where they can grow -- MBAs especially want that.”

Read more: Scandals soured MBAs on working at banks, Fed’s Dudley says

MBAs flock to tech because it is so embedded in the culture, said Regina Resnick, senior managing director at Columbia Business School’s Career Management Center.

“Five years ago we had a sales and trading club, then it became the fintech club,” Resnick said. “We see technology at the intersection of all these other industries. It’s almost like it would be a little bit hard to separate out that technology from pure-tech companies. Technology is impacting opportunities in every field.”

The graduate admission council is a non-profit association of graduate business schools. For the study released last month, it surveyed more than 1,000 employers in 42 countries during February and March.

 

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