MBA Resources and Links
BusinessWeek Online MBA Rankings & Profiles, Best Business Schools: BusinessWeek's expanded 2005 profiles of full-time MBA programs introduce you to more than 320 MBA programs around the globe.
College Profiles and University Program Reviews: College-Profiles.com will help you decide which undergraduate university college to attend. They provide answers to almost all of the most frequently asked undergraduate questions. This directory will help you locate the best university to meet your academic, personal, and professional goals.
Graduate Management Admissions Council: In 1953, the organization now called the Graduate Management Admission Council® (GMAC®) began as an association of nine business schools whose goal was to develop a standardized test to help business schools select qualified applicants. In the first year it was offered, the assessment GMAC® sponsored, now known as the Graduate Management Admission Test®, or GMAT®, was taken just over 2,000 times; in recent years, it has been taken more than 200,000 times annually.
MBA.com: MBA.com is the official website for the Graduate Management Admissions Council. Register to take the Graduate Management Amplitude Test® (GMAT ®) and use provided tools to help you ace the test required to get into most business schools.
MBA Profiles - Graduate Admission Articles: About.com is a great resource for graduate admission articles. We have compiled a list of their most helpful 10 articles over the past three months.
Papercheck - Academic Editing: Provides proofreading and editing to students via our vast network of highly qualified editors. Clients can submit their documents with confidence, knowing that an editing specialist has proofread their text.
Proof-Reading.com - Business Editing: Provides professional document editing and proofreading services specializing in large projects and documents over 200 pages. Editors proofread daily correspondence, emails, PowerPoint presentations, proposals and business memos.
Finance Concepts: P/E Ratio: The P/E ratio of a stock (also called its “earnings multiple”, or simply “multiple” or “PE”) is used to measure how cheap or expensive share prices are. It is probably the single most consistent red flag to excessive optimism and over-investment.
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Using the P/E Ratio to Evaluate Stocks - P/E Ratio Blog:
Investors look for stocks that will generate the highest returns on their investment (ROI). One method of determining the value of a firm's common stock is to calculate its Price/Earnings (P/E) ratio and then compare it to the P/E ratio of the market (S&P 500) and/or its peers.
U.S. News - Top Business Schools:
U.S. News expanded 2007 profiles of full-time MBA programs introduce you to more than 320 business schools programs around the globe.
Kaplan Test Preparation Articles
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