by StaceyKoprince Sat Mar 15, 2014 6:46 pm
A tutor can help you with very targeted skills, yes, particularly for those areas where you just can't get over the hump yourself. Of course, hitting a 760 is really tough (only 1% of people ever score 760+), so there are no guarantees no matter what you do.
I have another bit of advice for you. You mention that you're planning to stay in your field. Can you identify anyone in your company or your field who is doing the job that you would like to be doing 10 or 15 years from now? Can you approach that person for a networking conversation and ask him / her what (in that person's opinion) are the most important skills for advancement and success, and also how that person views an MBA - a necessity, a nice-to-have, etc.
Also, ask that person: if you were hiring someone right now for a post-MBA position, what would matter to you most? The school? The GPA? The person's work experience?
It's sometimes the case that, in certain industries, they value the degree in general but don't really care whether it comes from Harvard. In that case, a part-time program might be way more practical (lower cost, don't have to stop working for 2 years, etc).
Would your company be interested in sponsoring you and even subsidizing part of the degree? If so, that could be a major boon. You'd pay even less, your company would be aware and giving you time to study, and you could tell future employers that your company invested in you in this way. And that would be a very good reason why you went to a local school instead of the top 3 - well, my company paid for me to do this and I kept working. I'm a go-getter, and they were really happy to invest in me. :)
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep