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MBAs have the People-Skills Edge. Employers Still Struggle to Measure You

While business schools are scrambling to fold productive AI into every corner of the MBA — from admissions essays to event courses to capstones — a new survey suggests that a stubborn barrier to landing a career in leadership hasn’t budged much in years: Human skills, not AI skills.

And the employers say they are bad at their rating.

The findings come from a survey of US hiring managers and 500 business leaders, conducted on behalf of Eastern Washington University to inform the marketing of its online MBA in Organizational Leadership – and come amid an ongoing conversation in business schools about where AI fits into management education.

THE PROBLEM IS THE PEOPLE AT THE TOP OF THE FALLS

In the middle of the survey: 60 percent of employers say they rejected a candidate because there are weak people or communication skills, and 53% say they promoted someone last year because of people skills rather than technical skills. In leadership roles in particular, 79% say that those human-centered skills now outweigh the small differences in AI or technical ability, an interesting number given how much attention B-schools have given to AI positivity over the past two years.

Elsewhere in the study the same employers admit that they are not equipped to find these “people skills” before they hire. 75 percent say soft skills are more difficult to assess reliably than technical ones, and 13% admit they don’t assess people-oriented leadership skills at all during hiring. To their credit, 66% say they evaluate these skills more rigorously than two years ago, while 23% say they increased spending on soft skills development last year.

WHERE THE MBA ADVANTAGE REALLY LIES

The most striking finding of the B-school survey may be this: The biggest advantage MBA students have over bachelor’s degrees is not in AI or data skills but in people skills that employers say they can’t measure.

MBA grads scored nearly 10 percent higher than bachelor’s degrees in all skills tested overall, a gap that exploded to 22 points in training and coaching and 19 points in conflict resolution. The gain is small but still significant in emotional intelligence (14 points), strategic thinking (11 points), adaptability under change (10 points), verbal communication or presentation (9 points), written communication (7 points) and ethical decision-making (7 points).

Contrast that with AI collaboration and data literacy, skills most associated with the AI ​​arms race in business education, where MBA grads hold just 2 points and 1 point, respectively, above a bachelor’s degree. In other words, the calling card of an MBA with employers is not that it produces better AI users, that it produces better trainers, communicators, and conflict solvers – qualities that employers say are decisive and very difficult to prove on a resume or in an interview.

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