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Earlier Round 1 MBA Application Deadlines/Notification Dates

Several top MBA programs have released their 2009-2010 application deadlines and essay questions, and I am noticing an interesting trend for those programs that have three rounds. Harvard, Wharton, and Stanford have all moved their Round 1 deadline to the first week in October and their Round 1 notification date to mid December. 

2009-2010 Round 1 Deadlines

 School            Deadline      Notification Date
 Harvard  Oct. 1  Dec. 15
 Stanford  Oct. 7  Dec. 16
 Wharton  Oct. 1  Dec. 18

 

The earlier round 1 dates have several implications for the schools and applicants. For the schools:

  • The admissions committee staffs can go on their holiday break knowing that all round 1 files have been read and decisions released. They really get a break.
  • They may move recruiting activities a little earlier.
  • While not all schools have changed their deadlines (Kellogg for example), I belive that additional schools will do so, especially those who release their questions in June and early July.

What does the change mean for you, the applicants? Opportunity. Here's why:

  1. You can apply Round 1 and know before the year is out where you will attend, if accepted. You can go into the holidays without worrying about applications, interviews, and the rest. You can plan the next nine months knowing where you will be in September.
  2. While #1 is nice, the biggest benefit accrues if you are rejected. You will have at least 2-3 weeks to submit applications to additional programs This is powerful flexibility.

Very few applicants are strongly competitive in all areas. Many, many more applicants have a chance at the most competitive programs, but cannot be confident of acceptance. This group will benefit the most from the earlier deadlines and notification dates. They can apply to elite schools during Round 1, and if accepted they will celebrate their December holidays with more joy. If rejected, then can implement their Plan B and apply to programs that still support their goals and are somewhat easier to get into. 

If you are going to take this approach, you should not wait to hear from your Round 1 programs to decide which schools belong on your Round 2 list. You should be ready to move the minute you determine you are rejected at all your Round 1 schools. In fact, you shouldn't even wait until the Round 1 notification dates pass to start working on those Round 2 applications. Depending on the number of schools you intend to apply to during the second round, the exact deadlines, and your ability to adapt essays (NOTE: I wrote "adapt," not "cut and paste") from round 1 applications to round 2 applications, start working on your round 2 applications before the round 1 notification dates. The quality of your Round 2 applications will suffer if you attempt to crank out four thoughtful, polished applications between the Round 1 notification dates and the Round 2 submission dates. Don't let it happen to you.

What do you think about the earlier schedule? Will it change your application strategy? If you have an opinion, please comment below.

To help you launch your Round  1 applications, Accepted has an Early Bird Special running now. You can save 15% on all Accepted MBA essay services. Use coupon code "MBAEB" without the quote marks."


What Does It Mean to Write from the "Inside Out"?

After devoting many days and countless revisions to his 250-word Stanford GSB Reliance Fellowship essay, the blogger at MBAdreamz concludes: "The mantra for writing essays should be bringing one’s 'INSIDE OUT.' The more one knows and reveals (about himself) in the essays, the more comfortable and confident he would be with the essays." Having worked with grad school applicants for 13 years, I understand what he means, and I also understand some of the process he went through before he was satisfied with his essay.

Applicants are always eager to begin grad school as a step toward realizing career goals, but they often discover that the process of writing distinctive application essays that define themselves and their career goals can be hard work. Some really struggle to make the link between where they have been professionally and how that path links logically to their career goals. These questions, as well as the more personal questions that ask people to reveal their values and defining experiences, also require self-reflection, which doesn't come naturally to everyone. 

This isn't surprising. Our media-driven society is based on soundbite-sized commentary, and even newspaper and magazine articles get shorter and shorter. I call it the "Twitterizing" of communication, where there's just not a lot of room for depth.

That's why the blogger referred to this process of writing "from the inside out." Having to write so succinctly forced him to dedicate serious "think time" to his goals; there were no extra words to spare. But the effort was worth it, as he submitted his essay with confidence. Similarly, most of my clients who struggled with figuring out what to write have told me how happy they were that they went through this process of clarifying their career goals and personal values, even if they admittedly weren't thrilled about doing so in the first place. Sometimes, clients will do more research about their career goals in order to write as concretely as the schools would like. This research often becomes a path to discover niche areas of their chosen careers that really suit their experience and interest, and then they are able to write more confidently about their need for a graduate degree and their longer term career plans.

Similarly, questions about personal values and background also present an opportunity for applicants to consider their animating values, what is really important to them. This process helps the school get to know them better, and to envision how they will fit in with the school's own personality. I know most of my clients would agree that this exercise is a win-win: it creates more compelling, defined essays, and it also gives applicants a rare chance in an otherwise rushed schedule for honest self-reflection and the acquisition of self-knowledge. And that result is always a side benefit of the MBA application process.

If you would like help in this process, I would be happy to work with you!

 


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Average 2008 GMAT: 726
Average 2008 Acceptance Rate: 8%
Average 2007 GPA: 3.61
Class Size: 370
2010 Application Deadlines - Oct 7, 2009; Jan 6, 2010; Apr 7, 2010
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Stanford Business School Application Tips


DateRatingCourse
01/20094.50Entrepreneurship
03/20084.67Entrepreneurship
02/20081.57Marketing
01/20081.20Finance
12/20073.25High-Tech
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The following editors have had clients accepted to this school:
Linda Abraham
Paul Bodine
Cindy Tokumitsu
Jennifer Bloom
Sheila Bender
Sonia Michaels
Judy Gruen
Catherine Cook
Tanis Kmetyk
Sachin Waikar
Inge Miller
Robbie Walker
Natalie Grinblatt Epstein






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