Did We Waste $500K on MBAs? Our Honest Take. EP 6 - podcast episode cover

Did We Waste $500K on MBAs? Our Honest Take. EP 6

Aug 26, 202418 minSeason 1Ep. 6
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Episode description

In this episode, we’re diving into whether dropping $500K on Harvard and Stanford MBAs was worth it. Cherie shares how the MBA boosted her confidence as we break down how knowing "enough to be dangerous” gives you an edge in life. We chat about the value of knowing the lingo in any field, how real estate classes could turn us into future Tiger Tycoons, and how improv skills apply to business. Plus, Jean reflects on whether she should’ve gone to startup school instead. Was the $500K investment really worth it? Tune in to find out! 💸🎓 ------------------------------------------------------------------ 🐯👯‍♀️ Tiger Sisters Podcast | Career, Tech, and Life Welcome to Tiger Sisters, your go-to podcast for career mentorship and life guidance! Hosted by Cherie Brooke Luo and Jean Luo, we’re your internet big sisters here to demystify the ups and downs of navigating careers, tech, and entrepreneurship—while keeping it real about staying healthy, stylish, and joyful along the way. Cherie is an influencer who has broken down the complexities of big tech, finance, and MBA programs for millions of viewers, with over 100M+ views across platforms. Jean is a tech product executive and investor, holding over 50 AI patents, who has built an impressive career in product management and institutional investment at companies like Goldman Sachs and Snapchat. Between the two of us, we’ve survived stints at top investment banks and big tech firms, founded startups, and earned four Ivy League degrees—if we’re counting Stanford! Yet, we still find time to focus on wellness, friendships, fashion, and skincare, while sharing the lessons we've learned along the way. Join us for candid conversations where we spill the tea on careers, technology, entrepreneurship, school, and life. Whether you’re here for career advice, stories about balancing life’s challenges, or just to hear our honest takes on what it means to pursue fun, wealth, and joy in all areas of life, we’ve got you covered. 🍿 WATCH NEXT: - Are Our Standards Too High? EP 5 [Tiger Sisters] https://youtu.be/V2gOF7NC6BI?si=tKo6WcK7u6URYQ0J - Finance and Consulting to MBA | How to Get in From Any Industry: EP 4 [Tiger Sisters] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuZD6_Z11Xo&t=1107s - 3 Planning Hacks to Get Into HBS & Stanford MBA: EP 3 [Tiger Sisters] https://youtu.be/MbHnwiOF8hA?si=-HPQPrby3tlum8ej - Best Age For Business School | Workaholic Tendencies and Feeling Lonely: EP 2 [Tiger Sisters] https://youtu.be/zGuTX6a53LI?si=fI5eGG1sZn6QpUyQ - Spilling the Tea: Harvard Business School (HBS) vs. Stanford Business School (GSB): EP 1 [Tiger Sisters] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GAr7mNJpPk 💛 LET'S CONNECT: ~ CHERIE ~ 🤳🏻 Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/cherie.brooke 📱 TikTok – https://www.tiktok.com/@cherie.brooke ✍🏻 My Substack – https://cherieluo.substack.com/ 👩🏻‍💻 LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/cherie-luo/ ~ JEAN ~ 🤳🏻 Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/jean.ventures/ 👩🏻‍💻 LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeanluo Music produced by Sammy Signal https://open.spotify.com/artist/2HsyknHuxhT8RoZfn5rqMS ⌚️ Timestamps: 00:00 $500K MBAs: Worth It or Nah? 💸 00:26 MAILBAG: How did the MBA change us? ✉️ 00:43 Cherie’s Glow-Up: Post-MBA confidence boost 🌟 01:47 Leveling Up: How the MBA expanded our knowledge 💡 02:42 “Enough to be dangerous” – Knowing a bit about everything 🎯 04:17 Talk the Talk: Why jargon matters 🗣️ 05:00 Real Estate Vibes: Future Tiger Tycoons? 🏢💰 06:20 Improv Skills: Quick thinking in biz 🎭💼 08:17 “More Tools for my Tool Belt” – Adding to our skill set 🔧✨ 09:01 Social Flex: Cherie’s growth beyond books 🎓🤝 10:00 MBA vs. Other Grad Schools: What’s the difference? 🏫 11:30 Solo Dinners: Jean’s take on eating alone 🍽️ 12:07 Jean’s Dilemma: Startup school or MBA? 🤔🚀 14:18 Startup Lessons: Launching while in school 💥📚 16:00 Final Verdict: $500K well spent? 🤷‍♀️💸 16:46 Outro: Love y’all! ❤️👋

Transcript

Hi everyone, welcome to this episode of Tiger Sisters. In this episode we're going to be talking about how we spent half $1,000,000 in total on our education getting our MBA S Was it worth it? So we've gotten a lot of questions about this topic, actually multiple mailbag entries, so I'll start with reading just one of them.

Vinod asks. As someone who hasn't been to a Business School for an MBA, I'm curious to know what are some things that change for you as a person before and after MBA, personally for you both. This is something I think we'll dive into a little bit more, but just to tee it up, was Business School worth it? For me, Business School was a very like meaningful life experience.

And just like when I talked to you on the phone with some of my like best friends who didn't go to Business School with me, they're like, wow, I can really hear in your voice like how grounded you are. You just sound so different before Business School and after Business School. And like, I can feel it in myself a little bit, but I think just getting a third party to be able to say that, like I talked to one of my best friends before Business School and we hadn't

spoken in a long time. And she's like, Oh my God. I can kind of tell in this conversation you just like sound way more confident, way more self assured and just like way more confident in who you are and what you want to do. And I was like, yeah, I feel very aligned coming out of Business School now, having done that reflection and spent the time, like, figuring out what I want to do, what's important to me. I know I'm not alone in this.

I've also talked to other classmates of mine who when they talk to their like former bosses, their bosses are just like wow you sound. Different. And is that because of the classes? Is that because of the people you meet? Like is it because of what you're learning? Like why specifically do you think that is? I think it's a mix of all of those things. It was just like the life experience of two years. Like I feel way more confident now that I've taken those

classes. Like the wide variety of like finance, like econ, entertainment, accounting. That's true. Like I have such a wider breadth of knowledge and topic areas that I can speak to. Like I just feel more confident and knowledgeable as a person and I feel very grounded at GSP. There is so much emphasis on like, who are you and what do you care about and how do you want to leave your impression in this world?

So that I spent two years basically like figuring that out so that I could, you know, once I was released in June, go out, go forth and and do. Yeah. I think what a lot of people say about Business School, or like a common phrase is they say that you learn enough to be dangerous in every field, right? So that's like something where I think about like accounting. Am I ever going to be an accountant? No. Am I ever going to myself, like apply the skills of accounting,

like pen to paper? Hopefully not. But I do feel like because I took accounting in Business School, I know enough to know if something is going to be like totally off. I know if something is going to be totally wrong. And I think it's true for just like a lot of fields, like for you, I know you would never for example, like you took a real estate class, right? That was very eye opening for you because you had never had any sort of an exposure. To a real estate?

Not at all. It was real estate investing, talking about commercial real estate. Right. And you're only investing experience was in venture capital which is super early stage and usually you know like pixels like a lot of it is zeros and ones as opposed to like hard assets, which is like commercial real estate is like the total opposite of that.

Complete 180 and it was fascinating because commercial real estate or I just real estate in its in it of itself is just like a vertical that's so different from any other type of investing. And like the vocabulary used, like how you go about a deal, how people make money from real estate is just like so different from like software, which I've been, you know, in the world of for over 5. Years exactly and I think you touched on a really good point

there. You literally just said the word the vocabulary used cuz like think about it, if you know the vocabulary of a certain field or an industry like you're already light years ahead of someone who has never like been expert. Of the term. Yeah, never been exposed to it. So that way, like let's say Sheree goes to, you know, she has a meeting where somehow like real estate is a relevant topic.

Or like let's say we're building our company and we end up wanting to do something with like a commercial footprint. Like that's already somewhere where like you're going to go into that meeting knowing the terms, right? Like what are some of the terms that people would say? Totally. Or like for example, let's say Jean and I open up like a cafe or something and it's like. Let's say we open up a retail spot.

Let's say we open up a retail spot like a cafe that would be like an amazing, like dream of mine. But like, what do you need to ask? And like, who are your competitors? And like, for example, if our cafe were like within a mall versus within like a strip mall, like, or, you know, on just like a really busy St. What are the different things to consider? Like what is the, is it near a hotel? Like is there a lot of foot traffic there? What are the vacancy rates?

Like is this a happening spot? How close is the airport? Like, whoa, all this stuff that I've never even thought about. And that's not to say that we wouldn't work with like a, you know, commercial real estate lawyer or like an Asian or someone who's an actual like expert who does a day in and day out. But once again, like, we know enough to be dangerous. Like we go into those conversations having some base level of understanding and

feeling, I guess, unafraid. Like unafraid, well equipped and like just knowing what are the right things to ask so that like if there are people who we're working with who are like trying to pull one over us or like, I don't know, take advantage because like, and we're, I don't know, whatever. Like yeah, no. Because we look weak. No one kidding. And then on the flip side, you also took some classes such as like stand up, right? Then you take improv. You took an improv?

Class Yes, I took a theater class at Stanford. It was incredible. It was called the Spirit of Play and it was all about how do you bring play and playfulness and back into the everyday? How do you bring it into work and to teams, and how does that make them more productive? Like, I've never taken a series of improv classes like this before. And one, it was very fun. Two, it was just like a way to broaden my horizons and also my skill set in a way that I wouldn't have done otherwise.

Yeah. And, and one thing I really admire about you is I think you're an incredible public speaker and like you can just like speak on anything, like off the cuff. Extemporaneously. Extemporaneously so like is this something that you think does it? Did this improv class, like, help you or gave you an opportunity to, like, practice it more? Like, I know you did the class before your Ted Talk. Yeah, your Ted talk was amazing. Oh, the Ted Talk was so unlike anything I've ever done in my

life. I was so incredibly hard. But I just imagine that the fact that you did this improv class before it like it must have helped. Yes, I think so more subconsciously than like a one to one link. But the improv class, like we just played games every single class and honestly it was a way for me to do cringe things and then not feel cringe about it. Like the class, the games were so silly they'd be like.

I need that they'd be like. You would just do weird things with your body and we'd play it with different scenes and kind of act, play, act with each other. But it was just a way for me to get more comfortable with my body in space and like, using the space around me. Whereas, like, I didn't realize how uncomfortable I felt before then, like with my body. Yeah. If that makes sense. Yes.

I feel like one way I would summarize what you said and one and what you've told me before is that for you, like Business School was just a way to really like expand your horizons and like fill in the gaps of all the different areas where you thought you could sort of like up level your knowledge, right? Because like you had a very specific knowledge base going in. You had been a product manager at LinkedIn for a long time. So like that was your expertise.

You were an amazing, like really high performing product manager and you briefly worked in VC investing. Yeah, but you were like, these are all the other areas. I guess people say like I want more tools for my tool belt or something like that. Yeah. I that's a really good way to summarize it. I would say also that like Business School, because I was so intentional going in about it, I was like, these are the places where I feel that I could really work on.

I could really grow. What were they? One example, just like this is not even like an interest area or an academic area. It's like socially, like I wanted to grow socially and I wanted to. What does that mean? I applied after the pandemic, and I was really sad during the pandemic because I was living with my mom for a year, which was an amazing experience. But I didn't meet anyone new and I felt really lonely, really sad. That's why she was making so

many Tik toks and videos online. I was like, these are my friends, my online friends. Well, so I just felt super mom, I'm talking to my Internet friend. I'm talking. To my friend's mom. So yes. So like the gaps that I had in my life. Interest area based socially meeting professors. Like, I don't know how I quite quantify that, but I identified there were gaps in my life and it felt like Business School could fill in those gaps and like add to my tool belt in that way.

Yeah, that is one thing that I do think Business School is very different from other grad schools is that there is a very intentional aspect of going in to meet new people, of going in to learn from your classmates, learn from your professors, build out like this sort of new community and really grow from that. The reason why it's different is because everybody recognizes that going in, everyone going in knows that that's such a valuable part of your Business

School experience. It's that local aspect. Yeah, that everyone's really like, bought into it. As opposed to when I was attending HBS, one of my best friends was at Harvard Law School at the same time, and then one of my other best friends was at the Harvard Ed School at the same time, and like the three of us just had like such different experiences. Other grad schools are often much more like academically oriented.

Totally. Well, I mean, there's a reason why people joke that, like Business School students are partying all the time. It's like, yeah, we're hanging out with each other. And it's very normal and expected that like every night of the week, you're not eating dinner alone. You're like supposed to eat dinner with someone else and hang out with other people. Whereas just like it's the personnel, it's the type of people it attracts. It's also the vibe.

But like if you're going into like APHD program, for example, like it's very academic. It's like I'm very research focused and like it doesn't emphasize the social as much so it's just different vibes. I mean, to that point, though, I ate many dinners alone because I felt like after an entire day of socializing and I and I knew that I would have like a whole like, evening of socializing, I needed some time to myself.

So I do think if you're thinking about Business School, it's a good like area of self reflection. Yeah. I mean, this is a whole nother topic. Like, how can you survive Business School if you want to go, but you're also an introvert? And you totally can. I have like so many friends who are actually introverts and then like figure out ways that they can balance their like emotional capacity and their like, mental capacity to be as social as

possible. For me, going into Business School, I had a very specific plan. So the reason that I went to Business School is because I had always wanted to start a company of my own. And oh, and also just to preface this, I graduated from Business School seven years ago, so that means I applied over 10 years ago. So 10 years ago I was like, I want to start a company and I just, they didn't really have like the hutzpah or the balls to just quit my job at the time and

just do it on my own. That felt way too scary for me. So and at the same time my GMAT score was expiring because I took my GMAT when I was a senior in undergrad. So it was five years after that. I had five years of work experience and it was the last year I could use my GMAT score. So I was like, you know what, I am just going to apply. I'll see if I get in. And because I really don't want to take the GMAT again. And I had always wanted to go to

some grad school of some sort. And so then after I got in, it kind of just like I was able to sort of form my plan from there because I was like, if I go to Business School, it basically gives me these two risk free years where I can actually just work on my startup on the side. I knew that Harvard in general had a very strong focus on entrepreneurship. And it was very much, I think, a reaction to the strength of

Stanford's entrepreneur program. They had this area called the Harvard Innovation Lab and they were really investing in that. So I was like, I'm going to go, I'm going to build my startup at school. If it all goes to plan, then I'm going to work my full time over the summer, I'm going to get customers, I'm going to fundraise right as I graduate, and then I'll be off to the races.

And then the downside case would be, let's say I decide this is not for me, then I can just graduate and I'll have an HBS degree. Yeah, that was my intention going in. So for me it was very much worth it because I did follow that path. I worked on the startup a lot during the first year, so other parts of my experience did suffer, for example, like the social aspects or you know, I didn't invest in classes as much as I could have, but that was intentional.

That whole experience helped me realize that you know what, I actually am very excited about starting company, but this is not the right company for me. Like this thing that I've been working on for the last year and a half is not going to be what I'm spending the next, you know, 5-7, ten years on. But I've had this experience of entrepreneurship.

I've had this experience of working on my own company full time and I know kind of what are some things that I need to work on and what I'm looking for for the next time that I do. This Yeah. So for you, Business School is worth it because you were able to try something completely new that you wouldn't have done otherwise and, like, see if it's something that you wanted to continue and ultimately you didn't. But like, you were smarter for it. And you have another thing in

your tool belt. Yes. And I was able to do it in this very kind of supportive atmosphere where there are a lot of different programs at HBS and many other business schools that are designed to help you build a company while you're at Business School. Yeah. I mean, also like you're a part of, I guess, like a program where it was like a cohort experience, so that like while you're building your startup, you could also be with other people who are building as well.

Exactly. And so like, I feel like there are other places, like other incubator programs that happen outside of Business School now, like Y Combinator, South Park Commons. It's amazing that like, you can do that as well while you're a student. I would say for me, that's my personal experience. Like that was why I decided to go. That was a very intentional sort of like hypothesis of mine that I wanted to explore and try to see what the results were. Do you think it was worth $250,000?

Oh, and also don't forget the opportunity cost of the money that we were making at the time. Yeah, I don't like to think about it that way. It's just depressing. Yeah, it's worth it. I think if you believe in yourself, then you will be able to recoup that money and make it in the future. Yeah, your life is long. Your career can be very long, but being in an environment where your only job is to learn is so special and like. I love these students. So few times, yeah, in your

life. So like anyone who you know, a lot of people ask me like people who are like, oh, should I do, you know, Business School? I almost always say yes. Yeah, that, that could be another interesting topic next time, like who shouldn't do Business School that. Wraps up our episode. Thank you guys for being here. This is a new format we're trying where we're trying to do a really short and sweet episode. This time we didn't have any of our segments, but don't worry,

they're not gone. I know you guys like roses and Thorns. It's coming back. If you guys like this episode, Please remember to like, comment, and subscribe, and we'd so appreciate it if you could share this episode with someone who might find it helpful. Thanks, Bye. Maybe we'll save you half $1,000,000. I've had so many people, especially my former Co workers, come to me and be like, was it worth it? I'm like, yeah, I built some confidence. And they're like, oh,

confidence. Yeah, they're like that doesn't sound like it's worth half $1,000,000. Yeah, they're like a quarter $1,000,000 for confidence. I don't think so.

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