Why This 62-Year-Old Is Going To Business School

At time when most people are winding down – snatching up property in Florida, signing up for wine clubs, and burnishing their five irons for a nine-hole afternoon – Jim Schmitz, 62, is starting all over.

As the former director of the Cardiology Clinic at Scott & White Healthcare in Central Texas, Schmitz had made it in typical terms. He’d successfully treated patients in their 50s and 60s for heart disease, giving them a new stake at life. At the end of treatment, he’d ask: “Well, what are you going to do with the second half?” At 60, Schmitz turned the question on himself.

Searching for an answer, he Googled the best business schools in the world; London Business School (LBS) popped up in the top three.

As Lauren Everitt writes in PoetsandQuantsforExecs.com, Schmitz fired off a three-line email to the dean of LBS asking about admissions. “The email basically said, ‘Dear Andrew, I’ve done cardiology for 30 years. I’m really thinking about switching gears – attached pleased find my curriculum vitae, and oh, by the way, what do you think?’” Schmitz recalls. “Within 24 hours [the dean] responded and said, ‘We have a program designed for people like you called the Sloan Masters in Leadership and Strategy, and you should come to London.’ So that was the beginning.”

Schmitz filled in the application, interviewed with an alum and crammed for the GMAT. “I got my score back and it scared me to death,” he recalls. He sold his house and gave his car and dog away. In January 2013, Schmitz arrived for his first day of class in LBS’ elite, one-year Sloan program (which awards an MS in Leadership and Strategy instead of an MBA).

While Schmitz may be an extreme example, his experience illustrates a larger shift: B-schools are increasingly targeting older, seasoned students, primarily through executive MBA and Sloan programs. While the average age for an executive MBA student has hovered around 37 years old for the past decade (it was 36 in 2003), the sheer number of executive MBA programs popping up all over the world attests to the growing demand for education among older, nontraditional students.

Unlike most two-year MBA degree paths, which tend to target students in their late 20s, executive MBA programs look for seasoned managers with more than 13 years of work experience – that figure jumps up to 16 years in LBS’ Sloan program (an executive MBA on steroids). Beyond that, B-schools across the world accept students years, and sometimes decades, older than the median age of their cohorts. European schools, in particular, are known to admit students over 40.

While an exact count of the age outliers across all EMBA programs doesn’t exist, anecdotal evidence suggests that their ranks are growing, particularly after the recession, according to Michael Desiderio, executive director of the Executive MBA Council. “In today’s market where more people are working longer – whether they have to or they choose to – it’s not just, ‘Well, I’m 65, it’s time to go sit in a rocking chair,’” he points out. “I just don’t think that mentality for the most part exists anymore.”

To read the rest of this story, check out PoetsandQuantsforExecs.com:

Never Too Old For Business School?

Jon Gruett - MBA

We have the only fast charger that uses either 208V or 480V supply and uses solar to charge the battery. The result? No Demand charges when connected to the grid. Message me.

10 年

Good for him! I decided to start my MBA education at 50. It was a challenge but I finished it with flying colors!! I loved to learn and help the younger students understand the concepts with seasoned examples from my past. Everyone should do it and help the younger generation get better! After all, what else are we going to do? Sit in a rocker and rot!

Jerry Johnston

CEO at Mega Clean Corporation

10 年

I started back to college after I retired. It was because I had launched a new venture. I had been in business at another time in my life. I thought then that a formal education would help me. I now manage my own company armed with my new bachelor at age 72 and,I am happy,happy,happy.

Well that is true leadership... the pursuit of knowledge and really "modelling the way"!

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If older or should I say senior citizen can still be this active in education then I guess we the young ones have got no excuses...

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J.G. Y.

Transforming Businesses’ Digital & Augmented Intelligence | Pioneering Innovations in Digital Health | Advancing Business Data Analytics & Organizational-Management Strategy | Educator, Consultant, and Author

10 年

" Is never to late learn and never too early to start" (Yinat, 2014).

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