Toggle navigation
MBA Watch Logo
MBA Watch Sponsor
Kellogg SOM | Mr. Military To Entrepreneur
GMAT 745, GPA 2.38
London Business School | Mr. Decarbonisation
GMAT 695, GPA 3.5
Kellogg SOM | Mr. MENA Growth Equity
GMAT 730, GPA 3.4
MBA Watch Sponsor
Kellogg SOM | Mr. West Point Logistics
GRE 327, GPA 2.76
Harvard | Mr. Energy & AI PM
GRE 328, GPA 9.65
Tepper | Mr. Tech Mil-Veteran
GMAT TBD, GPA 3.35
MBA Watch Sponsor
Columbia | Mr. European MBB Consultant
GMAT 645 (Gmat Focus), GPA 8.2
MIT Sloan | Mr. Startup Strategy
GMAT 720, GPA 3.7
Stanford GSB | Mr. Mid-Market PE
GMAT 770, GPA 4
MBA Watch Sponsor
Stanford GSB | Mr. MBB Guy From Big 4 & Startup
GRE 325, GPA 3
Harvard | Ms. Social Infrastructure
GRE 328, GPA 6
IE Business School | Mr. Indian Tech
GRE 333, GPA 3.38
MBA Watch Sponsor
Duke Fuqua | Mr. Never Too Late
GMAT 710, GPA 3.77
Columbia | Mr. Coast Guard Officer
GRE 327, GPA 3.1
Columbia | Mr. Wannabe Fintech
GMAT 725, GPA 8.4
MBA Watch Sponsor
PQ Logo
Featured Schools
University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management
IESE Business School logo 440 x 200
MBA Full time event
HKU Business School
KOGOD MBA School of Business
NYU Color (440 x 200 px)
Today's Featured Schools
Featured Schools
University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management
IESE Business School logo 440 x 200
MBA Full time event
HKU Business School
KOGOD MBA School of Business
NYU Color (440 x 200 px)
  • Home
  • Main Menu
  • Most Recent
  • This Week’s Most Viewed
  • GMAT Master
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Events
  • Study In UK
  • Special Reports
Rankings
  • MBA
  • Online MBA
  • Specialized Masters
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Executive MBA
  • Undergraduate Business Schools
News & Features
  • All Business School News
  • MBA
  • International MBA News
  • Online MBA
  • Specialized Masters
  • Admissions
Inside Business Education
  • THE Register
  • Thought Leadership
MBA
  • School Profiles
  • Rankings
  • News
  • Jobs
  • Faculty & Leadership
  • Best 40 Under 40 Professors
  • Events
Students
  • News & Features
  • Meet The Class
  • Best & Brightest MBAs
  • Best & Brightest Online MBAs
  • Women In Business School
Careers & Pay
  • News, Advice, & Trends
Online MBA
  • News & Advice
  • School Profiles
  • Rankings
  • Events
  • Pursuing Purpose At Gies
Masters Degrees in Business
  • News & Advice
  • Specialized Masters Directory
  • Rankings
  • Business Analytics
  • Master's In Management
  • Events
Financing
  • Financing Your Degree
Study IN Series
  • Study In France
  • Study In UK
Admissions
  • News & Advice
  • Admissions Consultant Directory
  • Your MBA Game Plan
  • Admissions Gateway
  • Getting Into HBS, GSB, & Wharton
  • Handicapping Your MBA Odds
  • MBA Watch
  • Events
GMAT & GRE
  • News & Advice
  • GMAT Master
More Resources
  • FREE: Insider Guides
  • FREE: Successful Essays To The GSB & HBS
  • Special Reports
Events
Videos
Podcasts
Executive MBA
Undergrad
Full Archive

About | Privacy Policy | Advertising| Editorial | Contact Us

Follow Us

Subscribe | Login

  1. Home
  2. Sponsored Blogs: Insights & Advice From MBA Admissions Consultants
  3. Advice Column: True Or False: Are You Falling For These Business School Application Myths?

Advice Column: True Or False: Are You Falling For These Business School Application Myths?

by: Karen Marks, North Star Admissions Consulting on May 21, 2025 | 123 Views
May 21, 2025
    • Copy Link
    • Share on Facebook
    • Share on Twitter
    • Email
    • Share on LinkedIn
    • Share on WhatsApp
    • Share on Reddit

business-school-application-myths

Hello P&Q readers, and welcome to my advice column! My name is Karen Marks, and I am the Founder and President of North Star Admissions Consulting. I have been helping people get into their dream schools since 2012, and prior to that I was the Associate Director of Admissions at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth. Today, my goal is to give applicants the accurate, insider information that they need in order to succeed and make good decisions. Want your question answered in a future column? Ask away, no topic is off limits!

Are you gearing up for Round 1 Applications? If so, you might be trying to sort through all of the MBA admissions “advice” swirling around. Do you know whether these pervasive rumors are true or false?

  • True or False: You Can’t Get in With Low Grades and/or Test Scores

False. You totally can, and many of my clients do, including to the most selective business schools. However, it’s critical to substantiate your ability to handle the work. Take additional classes, do what you can to make sure that the test scores reflect your potential, ask for a waiver, if you qualify. Talk about the analytical skills that you use at work. Beyond that, dazzle the Committee with your other sterling qualities, so that they are incentivized to admit you, personally. It’s not enough to hope that the Committee won’t worry about your D+ in Stats or your 27th percentile GMAT – address it head on.

  • True or False: The Essays Aren’t That Important

False. The essays matter a great deal, and are your best chance to explain why you should be admitted. DO NOT wait until the last minute to write them, and make sure that you are being thoughtful, honest, specific and strategic in terms of the story that you craft.

  • True or False: It’s Better to Keep Your Goals Vague

False. If you don’t have a plausible, specific story about what you’re moving towards professionally – short and long term – you are unlikely to get in. Although it is true that being weirdly, overly specific (I only want to work in new product development for Apple with a focus on the Guam market, stationed in the Netherlands) will also raise red flags, you still need to get specific. The Committee wants to know that you understand what the MBA degree will help you accomplish, and that you have a plan that will enable you to start successfully recruiting as soon as you arrive. 

  • True or False: Always Get Recommendations from People with Fancy Titles

False. You want the recommenders to know you well, and to be committed to advocating for you. Admissions officers are unimpressed by fancy titles – they are looking for genuine insight into your character and skill set. Choose the person who knows you best, in a supervisory capacity. Furthermore, when in doubt, go with the recommender who is most excited to write knowledgeably, in a detailed way, on your behalf.

  • True or False: Don’t Talk About Failures or Hardships

False. Adversity can build character, and how you bounce back can reflect well. Committees value resilience and grit, as well as the abilities to admit fault and to take feedback. They do NOT value arrogance or overconfidence, so go ahead and exhibit humility and compassion, and help them understand that you have the maturity to own it when things don’t go perfectly.

  • True or False: If your Activities Aren’t Formal, Ideally Volunteering, You Shouldn’t List Them

False. This is one of the most common mistakes that I see. Candidates who don’t have “formal” activities tend not to list them, which can lead to a totally blank activity section. Business schools will then worry that you can’t/won’t contribute to the community, which is a problem. They also don’t get a great sense of your personality and might conclude that you don’t have one – which is also a problem. Go ahead, list soap making, frog rescue, walks in the woods. Talk about however you actually spend your time.

  • True or False: You Will Be Judged Harshly for Periods of Unemployment 

False. I mean, if you have never held a full-time job, you likely aren’t qualified for a top MBA program. Also, if you have been fired for cause from multiple jobs, it’s likely to be an issue. However, if you have been laid off or taken a while to find your path after college, just explain it. The Committee won’t automatically hold these periods of unemployment against you.

  • True or False: Business Schools Prioritize Applicants from Elite colleges and “Name Brand” Firms

False. Although students from Ivies and firms like McKinsey and Goldman are overrepresented at many M7 programs, it isn’t because the Committees automatically think more highly of these applicants. Students from these schools do present with credentials that indicate that they can succeed academically and professionally, based on past performance. However, admissions officers are always looking to diversify their classes, across so many dimensions – they don’t want a cohort of clones. Furthermore, MBA programs obviously know that there are brilliant students at every school and from a wide variety of backgrounds, and they are typically excited to meet them.

One of the many benefits of working with an experienced admissions consultant is having an expert to help you sort through bad advice. If you’re applying to business school, feel free to reach out – I’m happy to help.


North Star Admissions Consulting logoKaren has more than 15 years of experience evaluating candidates for admission to Dartmouth College and to the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth. In addition, since founding North Star Admissions Consulting in 2012, she has helped applicants gain admission to the nation’s top schools, including Stanford, Harvard, Yale, Wharton, MIT, Tuck, Columbia, Kellogg, Booth, Haas, Duke, Johnson, Ross, NYU, UNC, UCLA, Georgetown and more. Clients have been awarded more than $85 million dollars in scholarships, and more than 98% have gotten into one of their top choice schools.

© Copyright 2025 Poets & Quants. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished, rewritten or otherwise distributed without written permission. To reprint or license this article or any content from Poets & Quants, please submit your request HERE.

Trending

Full Circle: The IIT Kharagpur Classmates Who Became Wharton Classmates

Fortuna Admissions MBA

The Future Of MBA Careers In An AI-Driven World

NEW Karen Marks Photo

Advice Column: Invited To A Business School Interview? Here’s What It Means.

How To Prepare for The Wharton Team-Based Discussion

Jody Keating, Fortuna Admissions

5 Tips To Craft A Killer MBA Resume

5 Tips For Addressing A Gap In Your MBA Resume

The 3 Types Of MBA Interview Questions You Must Master

Decoding Insights About HBS With Briti Ghosh HBS’25

Tagged: advice column, Business School Application Myths, Karen Marks, North Star Admissions Consulting, True Or False: Are You Falling For These Business School Application Myths?

Post navigation

Previous Article: Kellogg Launches Veterans Program Honoring Stanley Cup-Winning CEO Alum
Next Article: MBA Pay Gaps, Promotion Disparities & Leadership Barriers Persist For Women & Minorities: New Forté Study
  • Stay Informed. Sign Up! Login
    Logout
    Search for:
  • Partner Blogs

    When Is The Perfect Time To Get An MBA?

    by Bill Kooser, Fortuna Admissions (4 days ago)

    The Art Of The Elevator Pitch: Top Tips For MBA Applicants

    by Sharon Joyce, Fortuna Admissions (2 weeks ago)
    NEW Karen Marks Photo

    Advice Column: Working On A Last-Minute MBA Application? Read This First

    by Karen Marks, North Star Admissions Consulting (4 weeks ago)

    Eight Weeks To Round 2: Your MBA Application Countdown

    by Silpa Sarma, Fortuna Admissions (1 month ago)

    Keep Calm And Carry On: How To Manage Stress During MBA Application Season

    by Judith Silverman Hodara, Fortuna Admissions (1 month ago)
  • Online MBA Hub Specialized Masters Directory Business Analytics Hub MBA Admissions Consultants Assess My MBA Odds

Our Partner Sites: Poets&Quants for Execs | Poets&Quants for Undergrads | Tipping the Scales | We See Genius

About P&Q | P&Q News Archives | Privacy Policy | Licensing & Reprints | Advertising & Partnerships | Editorial | Contact Us | Sign In / Register

Copyright© 2025 C Change Media, LLC All Rights Reserved.

Website Design By: Yellowfarmstudios.com