<p>On page 8 of that link, it says 27.2% of graduates in New York responded with a mean salary of $57,817 ($58k).</p>
<p>On page 35 of the Ross link, it says that 33.2% of graduates in the Northeast responded with a mean salary of $59,858 ($60k).</p>
<p>I realize that Ross does not release salary information pertaining directly to New York, but if you ask me, this is simply too close a margin for comparisons to be valid. You cannot claim that McIntire “easily has the biggest network for job opportunities in NYC” based on placement figures, and if you still believe that, then there’s something I missed in those reports that
I’d like you to directly point out.</p>
<p>Just FYI, it seems like Ross has a slight edge overall. 78% of McIntire graduates in 2009 accepted a full-time position as opposed to Ross’s 82% (pages 3 and 34 of each respective report) and a mean base salary of $55,254 as opposed to Ross’s $56,210 (page 3 and [Employment</a> Profile - University of Michigan Business School](<a href=“http://www.bus.umich.edu/EmploymentProfile/EmploymentOverview.htm?StudentType=BBAGrads]Employment”>http://www.bus.umich.edu/EmploymentProfile/EmploymentOverview.htm?StudentType=BBAGrads)).</p>