STAGE 1
Figure out whether business school is right for you
STAGE 2
Understand what admissions officers are looking for
STAGE 3
Strengthen Your Profile and Build Your Network
Strengthen Your MBA Profile
Strengthen Your Personal Brand
Tell Your MBA Story
Manage and Build Relationships
Prepare Financially
  • Strengthen Your MBA Profile

    Once you understand what MBA admissions officers are looking for in candidates, turn your attention to strengthening your profile and building your network. While many applicants obsessively focus on the specific components of the MBA application, particularly essays, think more holistically about your application profile first. Refine your personal brand and develop your MBA story, then convey them through the application components, such as your resume, essays and recommendations.

    Don’t try to figure all of this our on your own. Manage and build relationships with admissions officers, MBA alumni, current students and professionals in your industries of interest. This will help your strengthen your applications and prepare for your post-MBA career.
    Finally, consider how you will pay for business school, by preparing financially for MBA costs. Don’t wait until after you’ve gotten in to business school to determine how you will pay for it!

     

  • MBA Personal Brand

    What do other people think of you? What words would they use to describe you? Would you use those same words to describe yourself? When considering people from the different areas of your life, from work to social to volunteer to family life, would they describe you in similar ways? These questions essentially speak to your personal brand and how others perceive you.

    As with well-known consumer products, you must (1) develop yourself (the product) by gaining skills, knowledge and experience and (2) define your brand by your actions and your work product. And finally (3) market your brand through your communication and your presentation (how you talk about and carry yourself).


    • Step 1: Understand how an MBA will change your personal brand
    • Step 2: Define your personal brand
    • Step 3: Incorporate your personal brand into your MBA story

     

  • Tell Your Story in the MBA Application

    Completing an MBA application is a ton of work – not because there is a lot to do and write, but rather because there is such limited space to capture who you are and why that school should admit you. Follow these steps to tell your story in the most compelling way:


    • Step 1: Understand what each school wants from MBA applicants
    • Step 2: Determine the MBA story that you want to tell
    • Step 3: Use each application component to your advantage

     

  • MBA Relationship Management

    During the MBA application process, you should develop relationships that can strengthen your business school applications, support your school selection and grown your professional network.

    Strengthen your MBA applications
    There are countless numbers of people who have gone through the business school admissions process before you as candidates that can share their business school experiences to help you understand the MBA value proposition and the opportunities that attending business school can offer you.

    Support Your School Selection
    There are so many great business schools, and it can be difficult to figure out which ones are the right schools for you. Leverage relationships with MBA alumni and current students to learn about their schools, and also about how they choose which school to attend and why. Ultimately, you will have to decide what’s best for you, but get advice and insight from others so you make a thoughtful choice.

    Grow your professional network
    So often the alumni network is cited as the most valuable aspect of business school and that’s likely true for many MBAs. Engaging that network though doesn’t start on day 1 of your MBA program, it should start on day 1 of your MBA application process. When you conduct an informational interview with an alumnus to understand more about their experience, you are building your network. When you meet a fellow prospective MBA candidate at an admissions event, you are building your network. At this point, you are largely building your network for later use and you don’t know who is going to make the introduction, send you the job description, provide the funding or be the business partner to advance you toward career opportunities. So it’s important to cast a wide net.


    • Step 1: Understand what relationship building opportunities that your schools of interest offers
    • Step 2: Set your relationship management goals based on your specific needs
    • Step 3: Meet Admissions Officers and tell your story
  • Prepare for the Financial Costs

    Attending business school is a costly endeavor. Tuition alone can exceed $60,000 per year for some programs, and the total cost of business school extend far beyond that. While putting together great MBA applications may be your top priority, also consider how you will prepare yourself financially for business school.


    • Step 1: Understand the costs and returns
    • Step 2: Get your financial house in order
    • Step 3: Tell your story to minimize your financial costs of business school