bobongo
Helluva Engineer
- Messages
- 7,574
Buddy I’ve given you examples time and time again. I’ve schooled you enough on this topic and the fact you still don’t understand my perspective on recruiting speaks volumes to your intelligence.
Ugh.
Buddy I’ve given you examples time and time again. I’ve schooled you enough on this topic and the fact you still don’t understand my perspective on recruiting speaks volumes to your intelligence.
Actually, check out Darrell Royal.
This article goes into how we pitch GT to recruits. It's quoting Jordan Woods who was a big time recruit out of Florida at the time but transferred after his Redshirt year because he was burried on the depth chart.
https://www.myajc.com/blog/georgia-...woods-his-recruitment/zr67vNmErKoCKj0slFiOwN/
at least for non athletic recruits the IAC recruits by talking about a course load that prepares you to sit at the intersection of STEM and Traditional Liberal Arts. They spend a lot of time and effort explaining how we prepare students to discuss high tech issues with the same fundamental reasoning skills developed by top tier LibArts majors.Thanks for the link. i think it tells us what we already know....that a business degree from Georgia Tech University is superior to a thousand other majors/degrees at Big State U. But it doesn't get into why/what GT can offer to a kid interested in business that a Texas or Michigan or UNC can't. My premise is that when we think about GT as a clear cut better choice, we are thinking from the perspective of an engineering education and thus may have biases that aren't true for athletes who are thinking of business as a major/career choice. I am curious as to how we differentiate ourselves in that sector, which is the pool where most of the fish swim.
I am curious about one thing...assume most of our FB players are not in engineering but in IM or business or whatever they call it now. How would one sell/differentiate GT as there are many schools who can offer P5 FB AND good (or even better actually)business schools. Uva, UNC, Uga, USC (E & W), Texas, Michigan, Indiana, etc.,etc. Outside of selling location (ATL), what IS an effective sales pitch for GT over the schools listed? I think the sell would be a lot easier IF the majors of interest for FB players were engineering as we are the clear leader (in most cases) in the various engineering disciplines. I am not directing this specifically at you but just curious as to what the others here have to say, esp. the business/IM majors. What did you get at Tech that you wouldn't have gotten at the schools I mentioned?
I will say that Clemson was nothing back then like they are now & we didn’t have to play VT & Miami then , but we got nfl talent !! Now we don’t ! If the school won’t allow us to we should play in the IVY league
^^^This is true for the college of science as well. I have worked all over the east coast in academic and private sectors and I can't count the number of people who haven't even heard of GT in my field. I remember someone asking me if it was a 2 year "Tech" school lol.
FWIW GT's business school reputation does not extend much beyond the Southeast. I am in banking and there is almost 0 name recognition in the NE & Midwest.
Unfortunately the 'academic name' of Cal, Michigan, UVA, NW & Duke all are far ahead of us and the only remedy for that is time and continued excellence
I told my Illinois high school guidance counselor I wanted to apply to Georgia Institute of Technology and they told me I could do better than a regional tech school. As others have said, name recognition is weak outside of the SE. Michigan is better in almost every way and is a more regional name there, and Purdue, Northweatern, and Illinois compete with us academically
IIRC you are correct.Also wasn’t there an article about him trash talking GT?
Actually, GT's business school is a nationally ranked program that has traditionally been higher ranked than uga for undergrad degrees. Our business program is no joke, but that in itself should tell you something, Our "easy athlete degree" is a nationally ranked business degree. We might lose a few athletes to the schools you mentioned because they want a better business program, but we lose far more to the ones who would rather focus on football and have an easier major to deal with. And that's not to mention the ones who simply want to follow a degree path not offered by GT at all.
Not for football players.Bama and UGA have good law degrees don't they?
Not for football players.
Yankee ignorance doesn't mean much. Georgia Tech is internationally known.