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Best Practices for
MBA Admissions

Create a Better Sequel: How to Reapply Right to Business School

MBA I.V.: Mainline to Top MBA Programs MBA Interview Questions and Tips

The Nine Mistakes You Don`t Want to Make on an MBA Waitlist


MBA BlastOff: 45 Terrific Tips to Launch Your MBA Application to Acceptance.

Submit a Stellar Application

The Finance Professional`s Guide to MBA Admissions Success

Great Application Essays for Business School

UC Berkeley Haas

2009 Haas Business School Packages

MBA Admissions Consulting
MBA Essay Editing
MBA Interview Services
MBA Wait List Letter

Report From AIGAC Conference: Buzz vs.Substance

The AIGAC conference this year was fantastic. The first day consisted of presentations from Pete Johnson of Haas, Christie St. John of Tuck, Cassandra Pittman of INSEAD, Wendy Huber of Darden, Soojin Kwon Koh of Ross, and Bruce Delmonico of Yale's SOM. During the second day AIGAC was hosted by NYU Stern and Columbia Business Schools. Thanks to Anna Ivey of Anna Ivey Consulting and Jeremy Sheinwald of MBA Mission for all their efforts in organizing the event. Thanks also to Manhattan GMAT for hosting AIGAC on the first day and to Columbia and Stern for hosting us on Day 2. Finally, thanks to Graham Richmond of Clear Admit who spearheaded AIGAC's survey. More on that another day. The entire event was simply outstanding.

Certain terms came up in almost every presentation. Co-author with me of MBA BlastOff: 45 Terrific Tips to Launch Your MBA Application to Acceptance and MBA I.V.: Mainline to Top MBA Programs MBA Interview Questions and Tips, Maxx Duffy, has a useful term for words that tend to be overused in admissions because they represent important values: "umbrella words." As a consequence of this overuse, qualities like leadership are best broken down and demonstrated than talked about in their umbrella form.

Similar treatment is appropriate for umbrella-words-in-training -- the terms that came up over and over again in connection with almost every school at the conference. It's important for you to know how to relate to the latest and greatest buzz on the MBA scene. Merely parroting it won't do. Like the school representatives, you need to go deeper. Let's examine the most common of these terms:

  • Experiential learning. Almost every school touts its experiential learning opportunities. So don't write or talk about "experiential learning." Discuss how each school's particular experiential program is right for you. Reveal how Haas@Work will help you achieve your goals in your Haas application; or why Stern's Industry Mentoring Initiative is the perfect program for you because you are a career changer committed to a particular direction; or how Columbia's Master Classes represent the ideal opportunity to put theory into practice, a process you have enjoyed on a previous, specific occasion. Understand the nuances and points of difference between these programs to show that you have done your homework and really belong at your target schools.
  • Sustainability. Green is the color of the day, and I'm not just talking about Twitter avatars in sympathy with Iranian demonstrators. Don't write vaguely about "sustainability." Will you participate in INDEAVOR, The Energy Club, The Africa Initiative, or all the above at INSEAD to further your interest in renewable energy and entrepreneurship? Which of the almost twenty courses that study sustainability at Darden are you most interested in? How will you take advantage of the Batten Institute's resources as you dive into sustainable development in emerging markets?
  • Global. Global everything was everywhere at the conference. Ross sends roughly 50% of its MAP projects outside the US to roughly 30 countries. Yale has a required International Experience in its core and hosts a Global Leadership in Healthcare Conference with other professional schools at Yale. Which aspects of your target schools' global offerings are relevant to your goals and interests? If they are relevant, don't talk about study abroad or international projects; talk about the particular programs that are attractive to you, and why they appeal.
  • Flexibility. Several programs emphasized the increased flexibility of their programs. Both Tuck and Columbia have decreased the number of required courses and introduced mini-courses or seminars. Stern gives you a wide range of options in terms of designing your program. Yale allows you to take almost all second-year electives outside of SOM. How does your school's flexibility assist you in reaching your MBA goals? What level of flexibility is important to you?

These terms reflect important concepts in graduate business education today, but if you write about them superficially, you will appear .... superficial. Don't reflect merely the shallow buzz in your application. Study and understand the points of difference by scouring school web sites and attending presentations. Just as the AIGAC presentations went beyond the superficial to the substantive, so will your receptions and presentations.  

Ensure your applications reveal a profound grasp of the distinctive currents among outstanding MBA programs, like those that presented to and hosted AIGAC last week. 


MBA News from the Bay Area: Haas, Stanford

The two most prominent business schools in the San Francisco Bay Area, Haas and Stanford,  both had "news" yesterday that MBA applicants should know about:

  1. Strengthening the general management framework at Haas.
  2. More leadership training, specifically at the beginning of the program.
  3. An expanded international component.
  4. A new experiential learning initiative for the second half of the program.

"You really do get a feel for Stanford when you're walking around the campus, but I'm not nearly eloquent enough to put that into words. I think a key factor is that it is an other-oriented community; people really do look out for each other. Students look out for classmates to ensure that classmates are succeeding academically and professionally. Our faculty looks out for each other and for students as well. It's that kind of culture."


Additional Posts about UC Berkeley Haas

UC Berkeley Haas RSS Feed

Average 2008 GMAT: 714
Average 2008 Acceptance Rate: 12%
Average 2008 GPA: 3.54
Class Size: 240
2009 Application Deadlines: Nov. 4, 2008, Dec. 9, 2008, Jan. 30, 2009, Mar. 11, 2009
University of California MBA Admissions

UC Berkeley Haas MBA Application Tips


DateRatingCourse
03/20084.48Entrepreneurship
01/20084.18Entrepreneurship
01/20073.52General Management
01/20074.30High-Tech
06/20063.80Marketing
All Entries

DateTitle
10/29/20082009 UC Berkeley Haas MBA Admissions Chat with Peter Johnson
11/20/2007Haas MBA with Peter Johnson & Stephanie Fujii
10/18/2006Haas MBA with Peter Johnson and Jett Pihakis
2/15/2006Haas MBA Waitlist with Pete Johnson
9/29/2005Haas MBA Chat with Pete Johnson
10/11/2004Haas MBA Chat
12/17/2003Haas Chat with Peter Johnson


The following editors have had clients accepted to this school:
Linda Abraham
Paul Bodine
Cindy Tokumitsu
Jennifer Bloom
Sheila Bender
Sonia Michaels
Judy Gruen
Cydney Foote
Tanis Kmetyk
Sachin Waikar
Inge Miller
Robbie Walker






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