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Jobs are back in 2011, reveals survey

Last updated on: October 20, 2011 07:00 IST

A recently announced Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC) survey revealed that placement figures for 2011 graduates have increased considerably since last year and that graduates who did an internship stood a better chance of being employed. Read on.

Recently, the Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC) revealed the findings of its annual Global Management Education Graduate survey which not only revealed that jobs have rebound by a considerable number in 2011 (54 percent) from last year (32 percent) but it also pointed out that internships are important in securing a full-time job after graduation.

The survey that explores the responses of 4,794 recent or soon-to-be graduates at 156 business schools worldwide allows students to express their opinions about their education, the value of their degrees, and what they intend to do with their degrees after graduation, among other topics.

In the survey, GMAC also captures some post-graduation employment information from respondents, although a complete jobs picture is not possible due to many respondents who reported that they were continuing with a current employer, starting up their own businesses, or not yet searching for a job.

Click NEXT to read about the findings of the GMAC report.

Jobs rebound in 2011

Last updated on: October 20, 2011 07:00 IST
The survey states that 2011 job market for business school graduates has rebounded from 2010 levels.

Programme trends

Last updated on: October 20, 2011 07:00 IST

Internships help graduates find employment

Last updated on: October 20, 2011 07:00 IST
  • Students in executive MBA programs were the only group to experience a decrease in the number of job offers per student this year compared with 2010; however, they were twice as likely as last year's graduates to receive a job offer. Executive MBA programs also had the highest reported percentage of self-employed graduates (15.5 percent).
  • Forty-two percent of MBA and specialised master's graduates said they participated in an internship while in school. Further, this year's graduates who did an internship were 26 percent more likely to have a job offer upon graduation than their classmates without an internship.
  • As per the Corporate Recruiters Survey findings, demand for MBA graduates in the United States is expected to be strongest in the finance, accounting, health care, pharmaceutical, consulting, and high-tech sectors; in Europe, energy and utilities; and in Asia, high technology, products and services, finance, and accounting.
  • Salary and career enhancements

    Last updated on: October 20, 2011 07:00 IST