Something has shifted in how MBA graduates are thinking about what comes next, and the reasons are less romantic than they might appear.
For years, the post-MBA playbook was well-worn: consulting, finance, a structured rotation program at a company large enough to have one. Entrepreneurship was always an option, but it was the choice of a particular kind of graduate: the one with an idea so consuming that the traditional path simply didn’t calculate.
That calculus has changed. Fourteen per cent of Harvard’s class of ’25 launched their own companies after graduating. That’s not a rounding error.
Part of what’s driving this is a labor market in genuine structural flux. AI is not just changing how companies operate; it’s eliminating the entry-level positions that newly minted (full-time) MBA graduates have historically relied upon to build the experience that leads to senior leadership. This isn’t a quiet revision happening at the margins.
In this environment, building something of your own starts to look less like a risk and more like a rational response to a market that has shifted underneath you.
The structural conditions are also more favorable than ever. AI tools have compressed the time between idea and execution. Distribution channels that once required significant capital – reaching customers, testing a product, building an audience – are now accessible to almost anyone. The cost of starting has dropped to the point where the question is no longer whether you can afford to try, but whether you have something worth building.
What this means for business schools is a genuine curriculum reckoning. Teaching entrepreneurship as a standalone elective is no longer sufficient. The schools responding well are embedding entrepreneurial thinking across disciplines – finance, operations, marketing – because the graduates entering this market need to think like founders, whether they launch a company or not.
For prospective students, the question is sharper than it’s ever been: In a market where the traditional path is narrowing, what do you want to build? Increasingly, the most compelling answer to that question is something entirely your own.


