Jump directly to main content
239d9fd6-65db-435d-971b-981ba041f9b5537ed986-3cb4-44e0-9cc0-8b3b6d2c9927Career

How to Ensure That Your MBA Will Be a Real Career Booster

The role of strategy, networking, and personal growth in turning an MBA into a true career accelerator.

Andreas Landgrebe Portrait - WU Executive Academy
Wrtitten by

How to use your MBA the right way

An MBA can help you make that long-desired career step, increase your responsibilities and take home a bigger paycheck. Provided you know how to tap into its career-boosting potential. In the following, Kerstin Knapp, Chief Human Resources Officer at oil company Puma Energy and a graduate of the Global Executive MBA, and Andreas Landgrebe, Managing Partner of Boyden Executive Search, explain what really matters when it comes to ensuring that your MBA will give your career that desired boost.

From the president of a Kazakh energy business to the general manager of a paper-processing industrial group to the cancer researcher of a pharmaceutical company in Austria: The résumés of the students of the current class of the WU Executive Academy's Global Executive MBA are as varied as their provenances. Participants attend the program for various motives—because they want to deepen their understanding of business administration and management, because they are eager to foster their personal development, because they hope to be able to use the MBA as a career booster.

“The WU Executive Academy's Global Executive MBA has provided me with the necessary backbone,” explains Kerstin Knapp, Executive Vice President, People & Culture at Vestas, a wind power provider, on the sidelines of a recent event. The panel discussion was on the topic of “MBA & Career” and was held at the WU Executive Academy. According to Knapp, she is well-suited for a career in HR given that she is a university-trained psychologist, but “the higher up you get in the corporate hierarchy, the more you are required to understand how your company works as far as the business-administration side of things is concerned.” She says that studying for her MBA degree has helped her gain a holistic appreciation of the big corporate picture: “I now have a better understanding of many of the interconnections in my company.”

Exaggerated Expectations

However: Those who think they are in with an excellent chance of getting a senior management job or a breathtaking pay raise just because they have earned an MBA degree often end up being proved wrong.

She goes on to explain that, as an HR specialist, she generally regards an MBA degree as indicative of other, more important assets: “As an MBA participant, you benefit from so many things, including, above all else, personal development and a priceless professional network. In my opinion, an MBA degree shows that you are full of stamina and determination. And: that you want to make change happen.” According to Kerstin Knapp, it is always the overall package that matters from an HR point of view: “When interviewing candidates, I want to know from them: What drives them, what are they passionate about and what are their visions? Candidates should know what they want.”

Trend Scouting for Your Career

Andreas Landgrebe, Managing Partner of Boyden Executive Search, has a similar take on this. “An MBA degree is a nice extra but no guarantee that an employer will pay you an additional 10,000 or 20,000 euro annually. Your MBA has to be a real asset to your company, for instance when it comes to its innovative potential. The main motivation for attending an MBA program should never be to get a degree but to “broaden your horizons”.

Kerstin Knapp, too, recommends that students take conscious advantage of the MBA experience to foster their personal development, to reflect, to gain greater clarity regarding career-related questions, to work on their behavior patterns and, not least, to collect feedback - both as individuals and as executives - from their peers.

In front of a window with blinds, three people in formal dress are talking with glasses in their hands. A small plant can be seen on the left. The light creates a strong contrast and obscures their facial features.-WU Executive Academy ©WU Executive Academy
The MBA program should also be used for personality development and reflection.

The best way to take immediate advantage of the know-how acquired in the course of an MBA program is to apply it to your job while still studying. And that’s not the only benefit to look forward to: The unique international network and the exciting career contacts that MBA participants build up in the course of their training are immensely valuable long-term assets, as another Global Executive MBA graduate, Andreas Huber, Chief Operating Officer at 3TS Capital Partners, confirms by saying: “In the first year after graduating, I still knew what we had learned during the statistics module. In the second year, I knew there had been a statistics module. But today, what matters to me is with whom I attended the statistics module.”

For more information about the MBA programs of the WU Executive Academy, please click here.

Update for Leaders

Join 15,000 + professionals and get regular updates on leadership and management topics. Learn something new every time. 

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Interesting Topics

Our Key Topics provide inspiration on the big questions of our time: How can responsible leadership succeed? What role does sustainability play in business? And how do you develop a career with purpose? Discover forward-looking perspectives and practical insights for a changing world.

Start your Global Executive MBA journey with us! Learn about our triple-accredited program, the GEMBA peer group, and alumni benefits. Save €5000 with the Early Bird bonus by applying before September 30, 2025.

Find your ideal program with our AI chatbot Brainiac

Let's go!