kdgregory's comment is right on the nail. Marketing, business development and strategy have nothing to do with programming.
I'd suggest that the first thing you should ask yourself is: do you want to write programs, or do you want to sell programs that solve people's problems?
Put another way, if I gave you an interesting software program, would you be able to work out the important things that make it interesting, then drop you in a room full of strangers and tell them about it?
Marketing really does boil down to this ability to tell stories and make people want to buy. While you can learn what this at business school, the best marketeers have an inbuilt ability to come up with brilliant ways to communicate and execute them really well.
And yes, a good marketeer has to sell. Especially in smaller startups, "lead generation" is vital to get business in. That can mean anything from cold-calling to writing advertising copy, but it also means working with potential customers to really understand who they are and what they want.
If you'd rather sit in the background writing the programs and creating the software, then marketing won't be a satisfying career.
A word of caution: "business development" in software firms almost always means developing partnerships, which itself means selling relationships with peer companies. And, except for the most naive of cash-rich VC-funded startups, "strategy" positions are held by VP-level fellows with lots of experience.
If this all still sounds like fun, then good employers will hire on potential ability. Show them that you can learn -- the MBA will be a good start there, especially if you have produced work that is directly relevant to the field you want to work in. You will have to interview lots of times, but as part of marketing is being keen, enthusastic and self-starting that shouldn't be a challenge.
As previously noted by others, your network of contacts will be vital, and you can expect your potential employers to check your online history. Brush up your LinkedIn profile, and work your existing networks such as old school colleagues as well as your MBA classmates.
Good luck,
-- Jeremy
Marketing Director, Borland EMEA, mid-1990s to 2000 or so