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I ask you one question. Do you pay $100k for reputation or for placements? Perhaps you should read the thread about NYU student having $100k in student loans. Putting placement stats on your website != advertising. In fact, not putting placements stats == spreading misinformation. What's funny is that NYU's website actually brags about its placements on its website, but provides little to no stats. It's funny that you say that statements are joke with substantiating your own statements. These are but excuses for placements that are NOT as good as those of Baruch/Princeton/UCB. On the contrary, even if what you said were true, it means that the placement department couldn't provide the jobs what the candidates were seeking - another downside.Nowhere, I repeat nowhere on the website it is written that students got $200k and that too straight out of school, and all got job offers ( class of 2010). These are your own statements, with no facts to back them. Also, there is no point is giving lame excuse that so many students in NYU's program are fresh out of school. This statement applies even more to Baruch.Once again, provide hard facts to back your statements. I cannot find any info on the students (including the updated resume): Benjamin Altman, Karun Aulakh, Nirav Bansal to name a few.
I ask you one question. Do you pay $100k for reputation or for placements? Perhaps you should read the thread about NYU student having $100k in student loans. Putting placement stats on your website != advertising. In fact, not putting placements stats == spreading misinformation. What's funny is that NYU's website actually brags about its placements on its website, but provides little to no stats.
It's funny that you say that statements are joke with substantiating your own statements. These are but excuses for placements that are NOT as good as those of Baruch/Princeton/UCB. On the contrary, even if what you said were true, it means that the placement department couldn't provide the jobs what the candidates were seeking - another downside.
Nowhere, I repeat nowhere on the website it is written that students got $200k and that too straight out of school, and all got job offers ( class of 2010). These are your own statements, with no facts to back them. Also, there is no point is giving lame excuse that so many students in NYU's program are fresh out of school. This statement applies even more to Baruch.
Once again, provide hard facts to back your statements. I cannot find any info on the students (including the updated resume): Benjamin Altman, Karun Aulakh, Nirav Bansal to name a few.