#1 Full-Time MBA · Stanford, California
Read the review →Texas A&M Mays Business School
Texas A&M University · College Station, Texas · Public
“The Aggie network doesn't just help — it hires.”
Reviewed by David Krug · July 2026
Data anchored to the 2026 U.S. News table, Poets&Quants reporting, and school-published class profiles
Our review
Mays compresses its MBA into roughly 18 months and points it at the Texas industrial economy: energy, construction, manufacturing, and the corporate operations of a state that keeps importing headquarters. The Aggie network does the rest — a culture of hiring one’s own that functions like a placement guarantee inside Texas.
Placement prints in the high 80s at costs Texans will find hard to argue with. The trade-offs are the classics of the category: a college-town setting, a class that skews homogeneous relative to coastal programs, and a brand whose gravity weakens outside the state’s borders.
What impressed us
- Aggie loyalty. An alumni base that treats hiring as tradition.
- Compressed format. About 18 months, less forgone salary.
What gave us pause
- Texas gravity. The degree's power fades at the state line.
- Culture fit. The Aggie identity is total; visit before committing.
The verdict
For a Texas career in energy, industrials, or operations, Mays may be the highest-percentage play in the state per dollar. The network is the product; buy it if you'll use it.
Compare with similar programs
Full ranking →The Wharton School
#2 Full-Time MBA · Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Read the review →#3 Full-Time MBA · Boston, Massachusetts
Read the review →