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IT Pros with MBAs Earn 46% More, Says Management Insights
HANOVER, MD, March 10, 2008 – IT
professional with MBAs earn 46% more than IT professionals
with bachelors’ degrees and 37% more than IT professionals
with masters’ degrees other than an MBA, according to the
Management Insights feature in the current issue of Management
Science, the flagship journal of the Institute for Operations
Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS®).
Management Insights, a regular feature of the journal, is a
digest of important research in business, management,
operations research, and management science. It appears in
every issue of the monthly journal.
“Human Capital and Institutional Effects in the
Compensation of Information Technology Professionals in the
United States” is by Sunil Mithas of the University of
Maryland and M. S. Krishnan of the University of Michigan.
The researchers asked if information technology (IT)
professionals should pursue an MBA degree or acquire more IT
experience. The paper answers this question by studying
economic returns on an MBA degree and IT-related experience
for IT professionals.
The authors use data on the demographics, salary,
education, and experience of over 50,000 IT professionals in
the United States for the 1999–2002 time period. The results
show that an IT professional with an MBA earns 46% more than
an IT professional with a bachelor’s degree and 37% more than
an IT professional with a master’s degree other than MBA. This
finding is contrary to prior research that questions the
economic benefits of an MBA degree.
The authors find that firms value IT experience more than
non-IT experience for IT professionals, and that firms
compensate for IT experience at other firms more highly (3.2%
per year) than they compensate for IT experience within the
firm (2% per year). Given these findings, if firm-specific IT
experience is more valuable to the firm, the authors write
that these firms should consider subsidizing investments in
MBA education to help retain their IT professionals.
The authors add that IT professionals are better off
investing in MBA education because the economic returns on an
MBA degree are significantly higher than the returns on IT
experience.
The current issue of Management Insights is available at
http://mansci.journal.informs.org/cgi/reprint/54/3/iv. The
full papers associated with the Insights are available to
Management Science subscribers. Individual papers can be
purchased at
http://institutions.informs.org. Additional issues
of Management Insights can be accessed at
http://mansci.pubs/informs/org/.
The Insights in the current issue are:
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Managerial Expertise, Private Information, and
Pay-Performance Sensitivity by Sunil Dutta
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Foreign Investments of U.S. Individual Investors: Causes
and Consequences by Warren Bailey, Alok Kumar, David Ng
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The Sound of Silence in Online Feedback: Estimating
Trading Risks in the Presence of Reporting Bias by
Chrysanthos Dellarocas, Charles A. Wood
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Online Consumer Review: Word-of-Mouth as a New Element of
Marketing Communication Mix by Yubo Chen, Jinhong Xie
-
The Predictive Power of Three Prominent Tournament Formats
by Dmitry Ryvkin, Adreas Ortmann
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Corporate Venturing, Allocation of Talent, and Competition
for Star Managers by Jean-Etienne de Bettignies, Gilles H.
Chemla
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Pricing and Operational Recourse in Coproduction Systems
by Brian Tomlin, Yimin Wang
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A Simultaneous Model of Consumer Brand Choice and
Negotiated Price by Yuxin Chen, Sha Yang, Ying Zhao
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Revenue Management of Callable Products by Guillermo
Gallego, S. G. Kou, Robert Phillips
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Scheduling Arrivals to Queues: a Single-Server Model with
No-Shows by Refael Hassin, Sharon Mendel
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Incorporating Asymmetric Distributional Information in
Robust Value-at-Risk Optimization by Karthik Natarajan,
Dessislava A. Pachamanova, Melvyn Sim
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Mean Variance Vulnerability by Thomas Eichner
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Allocation Models and Heuristics for the Outsourcing of
Repairs for a Dynamic Warranty Population by Li Ding,
Kevin D. Glazebrook, Christopher Kirkbride
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Customized Bundle Pricing for Information Goods: A
Nonlinear Mixed Integer Programming Approach by Shin-yi
Wu, Lorin M. Hitt, Pei-yu Chen, G. Anandalingam
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Revisiting “Retailer- vs. Vendor-Managed Inventory and
Brand Competition” by Hag-Soo Kim
INFORMS journals are strongly cited in Journal Citation
Reports, an industry source. In the JCR subject category
“operations research and management science,” Management
Science ranked in the top 10 along with two other INFORMS
journals.
The special MBA issue published by Business Week
includes Management Science and two other INFORMS
journals in its list of 20 top academic journals that are used
to evaluate business school programs. Financial Times
includes Management Science and four other INFORMS
journals in its list of academic journals used to evaluate MBA
programs.
About INFORMS
The Institute for Operations Research and the Management
Sciences (INFORMS®) is an international scientific
society with 10,000 members, including Nobel Prize laureates,
dedicated to applying scientific methods to help improve
decision-making, management, and operations. Members of
INFORMS work in business, government, and academia. They are
represented in fields as diverse as airlines, health care, law
enforcement, the military, financial engineering, and
telecommunications. The INFORMS website is
www.informs.org. More
information about operations research is at
www.scienceofbetter.org.
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