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Whether you have a degree or not (even if it's in basketweaving), every IT professional (even a Network Engineer) has to know the direction and nature of the business an IT Pro is supporting. Otherwise, you're stuck doing a same job forever. I don't disagree that with you that Network Engineers need MBAs, but if you're in Desktop Support with one, something went wrong... IT pros don't necessarily need a business degree, but one will help if he's looking for any IT management position. An IT pro going to work at a financial firm, for example needn't be an MBA or bust out a dissertation on what credit default swaps are. But he needs to have an idea of what's going both at that firm and the financial industry in general... In short, if all you want to do is put PCs together...you don't need a degree, business or otherwise. If you want to move away from that work at some point...a degree can only help.
ptilsen wrote: » If you want to move into a CIO, CTO, or similar role, ultimately you'll need a business degree, usually an MBA or DBA. Your undergrad won't ultimately matter, and even with a non-business, non-IT-related degree you will still have the potential to get management positions.
ptilsen wrote: Moreover, there is a difference between being in an IT management position and a business management position, as above (CTO, CIO are business positions more so than IT). While business knowledge is useful for, say, the head of an IT department, in the end that person needs technical skills and leadership. Leadership, in my opinion is a talent. While certain techniques can be taught, you either have it as a trait or you don't.
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