Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Where the Fortune 500 CEOs Went to College - US News and World Report

Where the Fortune 500 CEOs Went to College - US News and World Report

U.S. News & World Report


Where the Fortune 500 CEOs Went to College


The leaders of America's largest companies come from Ivy League and large public colleges.



Posted January 3, 2011




Ivy League schools produce a disproportionate amount of corporate leaders, according to a U.S. News study of the educational backgrounds of 2010's Fortune 500 CEOs (the magazine's annual ranking of American corporations based on gross revenue).






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[See where the CEOs of the top 10 Fortune 500 companies went to school.]

Harvard University, Columbia University, and the University of Pennsylvania topped the list—the three schools cumulatively awarded 99 degrees to the executives. Large state institutions like the University of Wisconsin—Madison, the University of Michigan—Ann Arbor, and Ohio State University ranked highly as well, as each awarded at least 10 degrees to CEOs on Fortune's list. Wisconsin stood out among its state school peers, granting 17 degrees to the CEOs, which put the school fourth overall, despite having an average U.S. News rank of 33 for the school's undergraduate, business, and law programs. In the Fortune analysis, Wisconsin finished ahead of highly ranked schools like Stanford University, Dartmouth College, and Northwestern University.

[See where members of congress went to college.]

Last November, U.S. News took a look at the backgrounds of the CEOs of the top 100 companies on Fortune's list. The new analysis of the larger pool weeded out some of the lower ranked schools like Auburn University (five degrees) and Southern Methodist University (seven degrees), which ranked highly in the Fortune 100 study.

Of the 500 CEOs in question, 174 have M.B.A.s and 59 have law degrees. Nearly 200 of the CEOs have no graduate-level degree. Nineteen of the 500 CEOs attained no college degree, and many were college dropouts turned visionaries in the technology sector, like Oracle Corp.'s top executive and now billionaire Lawrence J. Ellison. A few retail executives also worked their way to the corner office by way of humble beginnings on the sales floor, like James A. Skinner of McDonald's, who started as a restaurant manager, and Brian J. Dunn of Best Buy Co., who was once a store associate.

[Learn how to get into top business schools.]

Below is a table highlighting the 16 schools that awarded at least nine degrees to Fortune 500 CEOs. The rank of their undergraduate program, graduate business school, and law school are also included. The table is sorted by total number of degrees awarded per institution:

InstitutionTotal degreesUndergraduate degreesM.B.A.sOther graduate degreesU.S. News undergraduate rankU.S. News business school rankU.S. News law school rank
Harvard University58113314112
Columbia University21399494
University of Pennsylvania20695557
University of Wisconsin--Madison171133452728
Dartmouth College16124097N/A*
Stanford University16763513
University of Michigan--Ann Arbor1457229129
University of Notre Dame11902193122
University of Texas--Austin11830451615
Cornell University10730151813
Northwestern University1026212411
Ohio State University10523562134
University of California--Los Angeles10433251515
University of Virginia10442251310
Indiana University--Bloomington9351752327
Princeton University99002N/AN/A

Sources: Company websites, Fortune, Bloomberg BusinessWeek

*N/A indicates no program offered

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http://dreamlearndobecome.blogspot.com This posting was made my Jim Jacobs, President & CEO of Jacobs Executive Advisors. Jim also serves as Leader of Jacobs Advisors' Insurance Practice.

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