What should I learn before business school?
From Sharran:
One of the most valuable skills that you can develop before/through business school is the ability to speed read. By this I don't mean that you have to read War and Peace in one afternoon, but to have the ability to rapidly scan through a conceptually dense document and quickly grasp the big picture will do wonders for you.
Business School does a good job of giving you relevant material to read... you will never find professors just assigning chapters of textbooks for you to read. A typical reading assignment out of a text book will look like:
Chapter 2: Read pp. 14-17, skim 17-25, read case on 26.
So if you were half-way smart, you would understand that you need to pay specific attention to the just three pages and skim the rest/look at the pictures, whatever.
There is no shortage of information for someone interested in working in the financial world. This summer, I have been reading everything from technical manuals on the Volatility of Options to Freakonomics, and I can see my speed and comprehension improve everyday. By the end of the summer I am confident that I will have read/skimmed at least 15-20 of the business best-sellers.
So a few pieces of advice, especially if you are an incoming MBA student:
- Take a speed reading class if possible, I can guarantee that it will be worth every penny
- Start reading "technical" stuff outside your area of expertise, especially if you have an engineering background (yes, engineers don't read much).
- Pick a newspaper and read it everyday, skim another (to work on your skimming)
- Read before you go to bed; even if it is a few pages
- Read digg.com
Learn to use a highlighter. I will write about the Four Wise Men Highlighting strategy sometime, because that's definitely the rhythm of the samba...






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