Still On the Waitlist at Chicago Booth by: Just-Ship on May 21, 2011 | 3,500 Views May 21, 2011 Copy Link Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email Share on LinkedIn Share on WhatsApp Share on Reddit Today, Chicago Booth emailed to inform me that I was being kept on the waitlist. The email wasn’t a surprise, since Round 3 and previously waitlisted applicants that were admitted were called yesterday and I didn’t receive a phone call (again). I experienced a bit of déjà vu yesterday and was bummed that I am in the same spot I’ve been for over two months now, but I’m looking on the bright side, much like Lloyd Christmas (see clip). Most likely the chances of getting off the waitlist at this point are even slimmer than before, but as long as I am interested in attending Booth, I’ll do what I can to make that very small chance a reality. It’ll involve an even deeper re-evaluation of my entire application and seeing where I can address any weaknesses or clarify any potential ambiguities. In the meantime, however, I can’t consign my entire future to an uncertain hope, so I am continuing to make other plans. If I’ve learned anything in life, it’s that it is hard to rely on external factors for your own success. Instead, the ability to make the best decisions based on the available/relevant information, build meaningful relationships, and persevere and trust yourself are the important things. A little luck also never hurt anybody. While it’s best not to look to Dumb & Dumber for guidance as a general rule, I hope I can match Mr. Christmas’s optimism and admirable ability to focus on his next steps, particularly in these next few months. This post is adapted from Just Ship, a blog written by an anonymous MBA applicant who has a GMAT score above 760 and is targeting six or seven of the top ten business schools. “Just One of 4,653 Applicants Trying To Get Into A Top B-School” “Why I’m Not Applying to Harvard Business School” “The Deafening Silence Is Broken: An Invitation to Interview from NYU’s Stern School” “Why An Applicant Interview Requires A Different State of Mind” “All Is Quiet on the MIT Sloan Front” “A ‘Yes” from NYU Stern. A ‘No’ from MIT Sloan” “Kellogg Gets His (Likely) Final Application” “A Rejection from Columbia B-School” “Prepping for a Kellogg Interview” “Doing the Analysis on the Pros & Cons of Going to B-School” “The Road Not Yet Taken & What Motivated Me To Apply to B-School” “Waiting for An Invite from Chicago’s Booth School of Business” “In the Nick of Time: An Invite from Chicago Booth to Interview” “The End Is Near” “Two Years of Hands-On Work Experience or Two Years at Stern?” “Reflections on the GMAT for the Next Generation of MBAs” “Rethinking the MBA” “Sitting, Wishing, Waitlisting” “An NYU Invite vs. Chicago Waitlist: Inspiration from The Simpsons” “Reviewing ‘Ahead of the Curve’ on Harvard Business School “Going to an Admit Weekend at NYU’s Stern”