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Five Ways an MBA Can Help You Advance Your Career
Key Points:
- An MBA helps professionals see how all parts of a business connect, beyond their specific role or specialty.
- The degree can open doors to leadership roles and career advancement where a master’s degree is preferred or required.
- LVC’s MBA offers specialized concentrations in accounting, healthcare management, human resources, marketing, project management, and supply chain and logistics.
- Stackable certificates allow students to build credentials while completing their degree.
- LVC’s fully online MBA is designed for working adults to advance their careers without pausing their professional lives.
“Get an MBA, get ahead” is a tidy slogan, but it skips the interesting part: How, exactly, does the degree move your career forward? The answer is less about the diploma on the wall and more about what you can do once you have earned it. Here are five ways it tends to pay off.
1. It pulls your view up from your function to the whole business
Most of us build a career by getting good at one thing—accounting, sales, nursing, operations. An MBA asks you to see how all those pieces fit together: how a marketing decision shows up on the balance sheet, why operations and finance sometimes pull in opposite directions, what a quarterly target really costs the team on the floor. That wider view is exactly what separates a strong specialist from someone ready to lead.
“My background has been primarily in sales, so the chance to learn alongside professionals from different parts of the business world was a major factor.” — Austin Lesher M’25, Strategic Accounts Manager, Carlisle Construction Materials
2. It is the credential that unlocks certain rooms
Like it or not, some roles list a master’s degree as a requirement or a strong preference, and some promotions quietly stall without one. An MBA will not hand you a title, but it can clear a hurdle that has been standing between you and the jobs you actually want. For people aiming at director-level and executive roles, it often functions as table stakes.
3. It builds a network you would not have found on your own
A good MBA cohort puts you in regular conversation with people who do not work where you work. You hear how a hospital administrator handles a budget crunch, how a project manager keeps a stalled launch moving, how someone in supply chain thinks about risk. Those relationships outlast the coursework and have a way of turning into references, partners, and job leads years down the road.
4. It gives you skills you can use on Monday
This is the practical heart of it. A working professional comes away more comfortable reading a financial statement, building a case with data, managing people through change, and planning a project that does not blow its timeline. At LVC, you can lean into the area that matters most to your goals by focusing your degree in accounting, healthcare management, human resources, marketing, project management, or supply chain and logistics—and earn a stackable certificate along the way that shows up on your resume right away.
5. It changes how you carry yourself
Confidence is hard to put on a transcript, but it is often the most noticeable change. When you have wrestled with real business problems alongside people who lead teams every day, you stop hanging back in meetings. You make the recommendation. You ask the sharper question. Managers notice that shift long before they notice the line on your resume.
None of this requires stepping away from your job or your life. LVC’s MBA is fully online, with six terms a year, and a per-credit cost built for working adults—so the advancement happens while you keep doing the work that got you here.
If you are ready to turn a strong specialty into real momentum, explore LVC’s online MBA.