When candidates evaluate an MBA, they spend a lot of time on curriculum, teaching method, and ranking position. They spend less time asking the question that arguably matters most: does this school get people into the rooms I am trying to enter?
At the top of the market, the network effect is real. The leading schools have alumni networks that reach everywhere hiring decisions get made. The employers who recruit from them are paying for the filter, not the case study method. They are trusting a selection process that has already done the work.
In any field where hiring is relationship-driven and concentrated among a small number of firms, the school you attended shapes the conversations you are invited into before your CV does anything else. That is not a cynical observation. It is how networks actually function: through accumulated trust, shared experience, and the quiet signal that comes from having been selected by the same institution.
Where the access argument breaks down is when it becomes a rationalization for a school whose network does not justify the cost. Not every MBA delivers the same access, and the gap between the top of the market and the middle is wider than most candidates appreciate when they are making the decision. A school with a strong regional presence and deep relationships with employers in a specific sector may genuinely deliver for the right candidate with the right goals. The access argument works there too, it just works differently, and candidates need to understand the difference before they commit.
The mistake is assuming that proximity to the MBA brand opens the same doors as a program with a genuinely connected alumni network. The credential is not the network. The credential is the entry point to the network, and not all entry points lead to the same places.
The question worth asking before you apply is not whether the school has a strong network. It is whether that network reaches the specific rooms you are trying to enter. If the answer is yes and the numbers work, the access argument is one of the strongest cases for an MBA that exists.


