An MBA is exactly what it sounds like. It teaches you how to administer a business. Not how to found one (it’s often counterproductive for that), not how to have good ideas, not how to spot product cycles, but to take an existing business and make economically rational, not entirely stupid decisions for it.
Curriculum usually includes things like pricing; applied microeconomics; power & politics (ie how to get the org to do what you want), business ethics, some intro to corporate law, oftentimes electives that are deeper dives on how specific industries are structured.
My wife got an MBA at the same time I was working on founding a startup and they are basically completely disjoint skillsets. If you treat the MBA as training for how to be the hired Director/VP in an established organization and not the person who wills it into existence in the first place, it can be a pretty interesting curriculum.
Curriculum usually includes things like pricing; applied microeconomics; power & politics (ie how to get the org to do what you want), business ethics, some intro to corporate law, oftentimes electives that are deeper dives on how specific industries are structured.
My wife got an MBA at the same time I was working on founding a startup and they are basically completely disjoint skillsets. If you treat the MBA as training for how to be the hired Director/VP in an established organization and not the person who wills it into existence in the first place, it can be a pretty interesting curriculum.