Thunderbird School of Global Management 150% Graduation Rates by Start Term by Program Incoming Fall 2009 2010 2011 Incoming # 150% rate Incoming # 150% rate Incoming # 150% rate 1 yr MBA (MBA_FT) ACMBA TRMBA Dual Degree (Campus) DM Post MBA (Campus) MB 2012 2013 Incoming # 150% rate Incoming # 150% rate 103 0% 55 176 2 3 80% 85% 100% 67% 35 167 6 7 67% 81% 67% 43% 34 125 6 3 53% 94% 83% 67% 25 97 2 2 80% 88% 0% 0% 4 2 25% 50% MA in Global Affairs and Mgmt MS in Global Mgmt MS in Global Mkt (MSMKT) MS in Global Fin (MSGF) 22 36 78% 86% 19 42 89% 88% 14 49 100% 82% 12 36 92% 86% 11 37 0% 3% 16 69% 12 0% GMBA On Demand (GMBAOD) IU‐DD (with IU) (IU) Post MBA (On Demand) (PMOD) GMBA LatAm (LAMBA) 49 19 7 133 88% 95% 57% 89% 46 15 8 158 93% 93% 50% 91% 30 25 3 115 83% 92% 67% 93% 42 28 7 141 33% 0% 71% 86% 46 14 0% 0% EMBA ‐ Glendale/Europe (EMBAIM) EMBA ‐ SABIC (MBA_SB) 43 84% 57 82% 65 65% 58 29 62% 90% 36 0% Table 1.A ‐ The Graduating Class (A) -2014 Employment Data Categories Seeking Employment Not Seeking Employment Company‐sponsored; already employed Continuing Education Postponing Job Search Starting a new business Not seeking for other reasons Total Not Seeking No Information Available Total Graduates Permanent Work Authorization FT PT Other Total 82 82 0 1 2 6 2 11 6 99 0 1 2 6 2 11 6 99 FT 80 Non‐Permanent Work PT Other Total 80 5 0 1 4 1 11 10 101 5 0 1 4 1 11 10 101 FT 162 Total MBA Graduates PT Other Total 162 5 1 3 10 3 22 16 200 5 1 3 10 3 22 16 200 Notes: 1. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 2. Includes students based on actual graduation date, not based on original projected graduation class. 3. Permanent Work Authorization is defined as the student being a citizen or permanent resident of the country where attending school. 4. Students who have not reported a work authorization are included in the totals, but not in the breakdowns. Table 1.B ‐ The Graduating Class (B) Categories Seeking Employment Not Seeking Employment Company‐sponsored; already employed Continuing Education Postponing Job Search Starting a new business Not seeking for other reasons Total Not Seeking No Information Available Total Graduates Permanent Work Authorization 82 Non‐Permanent Work Authorization 80 Total MBA Graduates 162 0 1 2 6 2 11 6 99 5 0 1 4 1 11 10 101 5 1 3 10 3 22 16 200 Notes: 1. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 2. Includes students based on actual graduation date, not based on original projected graduation class. 3. Permanent Work Authorization is defined as the student being a citizen or permanent resident of the country where attending school. 4. Students who have not reported a work authorization are included in the totals, but not in the breakdowns. Table 2.A ‐ Timing of First Job Offers Total Seeking First offer by graduation Employment Permanent Work Authorization Non‐Permanent Work Authorization Total Graduates Seeking Employment Summerim 2014 Spring 2014 Winterim 2014 Fall 2013 Summer 2013 Complete Academic Year 82 80 162 Number 39 23 62 Percent 47.6% 28.8% 38.3% Total Seeking First offer by graduation Employment Number Percent 0 0 ‐‐ 100 44 44.0% 9 2 22.2% 27 6 22.2% 26 10 38.5% 162 62 38.3% First offer by three months after graduation Number Percent 17 20.7% 32 40.0% 49 30.2% First offer by three months after Number Percent 0 ‐‐ 26 26.0% 5 55.6% 11 40.7% 7 26.9% 49 30.2% Have not reported receiving an offer by three months a er gradua on Number 26 25 51 Percent 31.7% 31.2% 31.5% Have not reported receiving an offer by three months a er gradua on Number Percent 0 ‐‐ 30 30.0% 2 22.2% 10 37.0% 9 34.6% 51 31.5% Notes: 1. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 2. Includes students based on actual graduation date, not based on original projected graduation class. 3. The number of students listed under Total Seeking Employment does not include students which are company‐sponsored, continuing education, postponing job search, starting a new business, or not seeking for other reasons. 4. Permanent Work Authorization is defined as the student being a citizen or permanent resident of the country where attending school. 5. Students who have not reported a work authorization are included in the totals, but not in the breakdowns. 6. Students who an accepted offer with an unknown acceptance date are counted as having not reported by three months after graduation. Table 2.B ‐ Timing of Job Acceptances Total Seeking Employment Permanent Work Authorization Non‐Permanent Work Authorization Total Graduates Seeking Employment 82 80 162 Total Seeking Employment Summerim 2014 Spring 2014 Winterim 2014 Fall 2013 Summer 2013 Complete Academic Year 0 100 9 27 26 162 First acceptance First acceptance by three Have not reported accepting an offer by graduation months after graduation by three months after graduation Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent 30 36.6% 21 25.6% 31 37.8% 20 25.0% 32 40.0% 28 35.0% 50 30.9% 53 32.7% 59 36.4% First acceptance First acceptance by three Have not reported accepting an offer by graduation months after graduation by three months after graduation Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent 0 ‐‐ 0 ‐‐ 0 ‐‐ 37 37.0% 30 30.0% 33 33.0% 1 11.1% 5 55.6% 3 33.3% 3 11.1% 12 44.4% 12 44.4% 9 34.6% 6 23.1% 11 42.3% 50 30.9% 53 32.7% 59 36.4% Notes: 1. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 2. Includes students based on actual graduation date, not based on original projected graduation class. 3. The number of students listed under Total Seeking Employment does not include students which are company‐sponsored, continuing education, postponing job search, starting a new business, or not seeking for other reasons. 4. Permanent Work Authorization is defined as the student being a citizen or permanent resident of the country where attending school. 5. Students who have not reported a work authorization are included in the totals, but not in the breakdowns. 6. Students who an accepted offer with an unknown acceptance date are counted as having not reported by three months after graduation. Table 3.A ‐ Primary Source of Full‐Time Job Acceptances NUMBER SCHOOL‐FACILITATED‐ACTIVITIES Scheduled interviews on and off campus Consortia events Video and telephone interviews School‐Facilitated Internships Off‐campus activities supported by the career center Job fairs Employer information meetings/dinners Resume books, resume referrals, Web resumes Job postings Faculty referrals Alumni referrals Other school‐facilitated activity TOTAL SCHOOL‐FACILITATED ACTIVITIES GRADUATE‐FACILITATED‐ACTIVITIES Previous employer Graduate‐Facilitated Internships Family, friends outside School Internet Third‐party sources, e.g., executive recruiters, etc. Direct mail campaign Newspaper, magazine and other advertisements Other graduate‐facilitated TOTAL GRADUATE‐FACILITATED ACTIVITIES NO RESPONSE BY GRADUATE TOTAL JOB ACCEPTING GRADUATES 10 1 ‐‐ 1 1 11 3 1 9 1 9 ‐‐ PERCENT 11.6% 1.2% ‐‐ 1.2% 1.2% 12.8% 3.5% 1.2% 10.5% 1.2% 10.5% ‐‐ 47 7 2 8 14 5 ‐‐ ‐‐ 3 44.8% 8.1% 2.3% 9.3% 16.3% 5.8% ‐‐ ‐‐ 3.5% 39 19 105 Notes: 1. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 2. Includes students based on actual graduation date, not based on original projected graduation class. 3. Only includes data for accepted jobs within three months of the student's graduation date. 37.1% 18.1% 100% Table 4.A ‐ Compensation Report Base Salary Permanent Work Authorization Non‐Permanent Work Authorization Total Reporting Number Reporting Base Salary 42 38 80 Percent Reporting Base Salary 82.4% 71.7% 76.9% Mean $78,177 $78,064 $78,123 Median $79,200 $78,845 $79,200 Low $36,000 $17,500 $17,500 High $125,000 $198,000 $198,000 Mean $11,942 $10,909 $11,426 Median $12,000 $10,000 $10,500 Low $2,500 $5,000 $2,500 High $22,800 $22,000 $22,800 Mean $19,978 $12,425 $15,662 Median $10,000 $9,250 $10,000 Low $3,500 $3,000 $3,000 High $88,400 $31,000 $88,400 Signing Bonus Permanent Work Authorization Non‐Permanent Work Authorization Total Reporting Number Reporting Signing Bonus 11 11 22 Percent Reporting Signing Bonus 26.2% 28.9% 27.5% Other Guaranteed Compensation Permanent Work Authorization Non‐Permanent Work Authorization Total Reporting Number Reporting Other Guaranteed 9 12 21 Percent Reporting Other Guaranteed 21.4% 31.6% 26.2% Notes: 1. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 2. Includes students based on actual graduation date, not based on original projected graduation class. 3. Only includes data for accepted jobs within three months of the student's graduation date. 4. All compensation statistics do not include values where the student entered $0. 5. Other guaranteed compensation as reported in this table (Table 4.A) is the sum of the guaranteed annual bonus and other guaranteed compensation as entered by the student. 6. Permanent Work Authorization is defined as the student being a citizen or permanent resident of the country where attending school. Table 4.B ‐ Compensation by Professional Functions Function Consulting Financial/Accounting General Management Human Resources Information Technology Marketing/Sales Operations/Logistics Other Graduates Accepting New Employment Number Percent 14 13.5% 16 15.4% 14 13.5% I/D I/D 5 4.8% 36 34.6% 10 9.6% 9 8.7% Mean Base Salary Median Base Salary Low Base Salary High Base Salary $76,222 $83,843 $71,408 I/D $79,000 $78,200 $77,498 $78,833 $80,000 $82,500 $76,000 ‐‐ $85,000 $75,000 $78,750 $83,500 $36,000 $53,400 $40,000 I/D $60,000 $24,000 $41,000 $17,500 $110,000 $117,000 $85,000 I/D $92,000 $198,000 $105,000 $130,000 Notes: 1. Includes compensation information only for those graduates seeking employment who accepted employment by three months after graduation. 2. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 3. Only includes data for accepted jobs within three months of the student's graduation date. 4. All compensation statistics do not include values where the student entered $0. 5. Graduates Accepting New Employment includes all students from the specified graduation year who accepted non‐sponsored jobs. 6. I/D refers to instances with insufficient data. MBA CSC guidelines require a minimum of three data points for each category and that the number of data points is equal to or greater than one percent of full‐time graduates seeking employment . Data points not meeting both requirements were included in the Other category. For tables with no Other category (or I/D for Other), the data points are not reported but are still considered in the total. Table 4.D ‐ World Regions Breakdown Region Asia European Free Trade Zone Middle East and North Africa (MENA) North America South America Total Reporting Graduates Accepting New Employment Number 18 6 1 76 2 103 Percent 17.5% 5.8% 1.0% 73.8% 1.9% 100% Mean Base Salary Median Base Salary Low Base Salary High Base Salary $58,726 $81,000 I/D $80,231 I/D $78,123 $60,000 $83,000 ‐‐ $80,002 ‐‐ $79,200 $17,500 $40,000 I/D $41,000 I/D $17,500 $105,000 $130,000 I/D $125,000 I/D $198,000 Notes: 1. Includes compensation information only for those graduates seeking employment who accepted employment by three months after graduation. 2. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 3. Only includes data for accepted jobs within three months of the student's graduation date. 4. All compensation statistics do not include values where the student entered $0. 5. Graduates Accepting New Employment includes all students from the specified graduation year who accepted non‐sponsored jobs. 6. I/D refers to instances with insufficient data. MBA CSC guidelines require a minimum of three data points for each category and that the number of data points is equal to or greater than one percent of full‐time graduates seeking employment . Data points not meeting both requirements were included in the Other category. For tables with no Other category (or I/D for Other), the data points are not reported but are still considered in the total. 7.Africa – sub Saharan: Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad,Comoros, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Cote d'Ivoire, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea,Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea‐Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar,Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sao Tome and Principe,Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, South Africa, South Sudan, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia,Zimbabwe Asia: Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Kazakhstan, North Korea, South Korea,Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Taiwan,Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam Australia and Oceania: Australia, East Timor, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, New Zealand, Palau,Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu Central America and the Caribbean: Antigua and Barbuda, The Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican, Republic, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago Europe ‐ Free Trade Area Countries: Andorra, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary,Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal,Romania, San Marino, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom , Vatican Non Europe ‐ Free Trade Area Countries: Albania, Armenia, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Georgia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Russia, Serbia, Ukraine Middle East and North Africa: Afghanistan, Algeria, Azerbaijan*, Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Yemen North America : Canada, United States of America South America : Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay, Venezuela Table 4.E ‐ Compensation by North American Geographic Region Region Mid‐Atlantic Midwest Northeast South Southwest West Total Reporting Graduates Accepting New Employment Number Percent 8 7.8% 16 15.5% 13 12.6% 2 1.9% 20 19.4% 17 16.5% 103 73.8% Mean Base Salary Median Base Salary Low Base Salary High Base Salary $93,801 $75,077 $88,176 I/D $81,531 $74,313 $80,231 $92,000 $75,000 $94,880 ‐‐ $83,000 $75,000 $80,002 $80,004 $41,000 $60,000 I/D $53,400 $45,000 $41,000 $117,000 $92,000 $114,000 I/D $105,000 $125,000 $125,000 Notes: 1. Includes compensation information only for those graduates seeking employment who accepted employment by three months after graduation. 2. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 3. Only includes data for accepted jobs within three months of the student's graduation date. 4. All compensation statistics do not include values where the student entered $0. 5. Graduates Accepting New Employment includes all students from the specified graduation year who accepted non‐sponsored jobs. 6. I/D refers to instances with insufficient data. MBA CSC guidelines require a minimum of three data points for each category and that the number of data points is equal to or greater than one percent of full‐time graduates seeking employment . Data points not meeting both requirements were included in the Other category. For tables with no Other category (or I/D for Other), the data points are not reported but are still considered in the total. 7.Mid‐Atlantic: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia Midwest: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin Northeast: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont Possessions and Territories: American Samoa, Palau, Guam, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands South: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee Southwest: Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas West: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming Table 4.G ‐ Compensation by Professional Experience Years Professional Experience Graduates Accepting New Employment Number Percent 2 1.9% 27 26.2% 38 36.9% 36 35.0% Mean Base Salary Median Base Salary Low Base Salary High Base Salary I/D ‐‐ I/D I/D One year or less $64,588 $62,000 $17,500 $100,000 More than one year, up to three years $77,751 $75,000 $36,000 $125,000 More than three years, up to five years $84,986 $85,000 $24,000 $198,000 More than five years Notes: 1. Includes compensation information only for those graduates seeking employment who accepted employment by three months after graduation. 2. Includes all data collected before 120 days after graduation 3. Only includes data for accepted jobs within three months of the student's graduation date. 4. All compensation statistics do not include values where the student entered $0. 5. Graduates Accepting New Employment includes all students from the specified graduation year who accepted non‐sponsored jobs. 6. I/D refers to instances with insufficient data. MBA CSC guidelines require a minimum of three data points for each category and that the number of data points is equal to or greater than one percent of full‐ time graduates seeking employment . Data points not meeting both requirements were included in the Other category. For tables with no Other category (or I/D for Other), the data points are not reported but are still considered in the total.