<p>Which school is more impressive in the business field? Which has better name recognition?</p>
<p>Hello Friend,</p>
<p>University of Arizona is more impressive in the business field, Arizona State University (ASU). Our placement rate after graduation places us among the top ten MBA programs in North America. Consider the Full-time Program if you seek to build broad business skills in conjunction with a functional emphasis in one of many areas of specialization.</p>
<p>Thanks a lot again
Baldric Wells</p>
<p>It depends on what you want to be. Arizona and ASU are good schools if you want to be a good corporate employee. DePaul is known for producing top business owners and CEOs. Their business students spend four years interning for the top corporations in America. That is why DePaul students earn 4K more a year than the University of Illinois (A Top 50 school) students right out of college. DePaul alumni are all over Chicago. A school in Arizona cannot offer the internships and job opportunities of a school in the third largest city in America. DePaul will help you get a lot of job offers right out of college. Go to DePaul.edu and go to the bottom of the page, then click on student spotlight, then click on College of Commerce. You will be amaze by the students stories. I am pasting some of the school rankings. DePaul will teach you how to run a business.
DePaul’s undergrad business school is ranked 40th in the nation by Business week.</p>
<p>Entrepreneurship Program Honors
• 2010 Ranked in the Top 10 by the Princeton Review and Entrepreneur Magazine
• 2009 Ranked in the Top 10 by Princeton Review and Entrepreneur Magazine
• 2008 Ranked # 2 in the nation by Princeton Review and Entrepreneur Magazine
• 2007 Ranked in the Top Five by Princeton Review and Entrepreneur Magazine
• 2006 Ranked # 2 in the nation by Princeton Review and Entrepreneur Magazine
• 2005 Ranked Top 1st Tier Program Nationally by Entrepreneur Magazine
• 2004 Ranked Top 1st Tier Program Nationally by Entrepreneur Magazine
• 2003 Ranked Top 1st Tier Program Nationally by Entrepreneur Magazine
• 2001 Top 10 Entrepreneurship Program by Success Magazine
• 1998 # 2 Entrepreneurship Program by Success Magazine
• 1997 Top 25 Entrepreneurship Program Success Magazine
• 1996 Ranked # 2 nationally in Vesper’s Entrepreneurship Education Survey
• 1996 Top 25 Entrepreneurship Program Success Magazine
• 1995 Top 5 Entrepreneurship Program in U.S. Success Magazine
• 1994 Top 25 Entrepreneurship Program Success Magazine
• 1993 Top 20 Entrepreneurship Program Business Week
• 1990 Best in U.S. National Model Program Award by USASBE</p>
<p>Some Business Leaders from DePaul
. ‘’‘Business Leaders’‘’
- Richard Driehaus, CEO, Driehaus Capital Management
- Jack Greenberg, former CEO, McDonald’s Corporation
- James M. Jenness, CEO, Kellogg Corporation
- Edward J. Joyce, President and COO, Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE)
- Greg Silich, Entrepreneur, former Leo Burnett CFO
- Laura Thrall, President and Chief Executive Officer, United Way of Metropolitan Chicago, Inc
- Bertram L. Scott, President, U.S. Commercial, CIGNA
- Peggy Troy, President and CEO, Children’s Hospital and Health System
- Frank M.Clark, Chairman and CEO, ComEd
- Jeffrey S.Aronin, President and CEO, Ovation Pharmaceuticals<br>
- Brooks Boyer, Senior Vice President, Marketing, Chicago White Sox<br>
- Leticia Peralta Davis, CEO, Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority </p>
<p>Other DePaul Business Leaders:</p>
<p>Thomas Briatico<br>
President of Maytag Corporation </p>
<p>Robert E. Goldberg<br>
Former Chairman, Chicago Board of Trade </p>
<p>Victor Faraci<br>
Former Senior VP Marketing, Warner Bros. </p>
<p>Kerrie L. Holley<br>
Chief Architect of IBM Global Services and IBM Distinguished Engineer; IBM Black Engineer of the Year Award Recipient 2003 </p>
<p>John W. Martin, Jr.
Former Vice President and General Counsel Ford Motor Co. </p>
<p>William W. Moreton
President and CFO, Potbelly Sandwich Works </p>
<p>Diane M. Pearse
CFO, Crate and Barrel </p>
<p>Peter Pesce
Executive Vice President, Fifth Third Bank </p>
<p>Richard Rosenfield
Co-Chairman, California Pizza Kitchen </p>
<p>William M. Rudolphsen
Senior Vice President and CFO, Walgreens Co. </p>
<p>Daniel Ustian
CEO and President, Navistar International Corp. </p>
<p>rnest R. Wish
Chairman of Wish Enterprises; Former Managing Partner, Coopers & Lybrand</p>
<p>Is their business program your sole determinant of which school you want to go to? Why not try to visit the schools, look at their viewbooks, and use those to help you decide which one you like better? Also, why not wait to see what each school will cost? There are also a lot of other good business schools in the country and you should look at those too.</p>