Meet The Bocconi MBA Class Of 2026, Manan Mehta by: Matt Symonds on April 02, 2026 | 7 minute read April 2, 2026 Copy Link Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email Share on LinkedIn Share on WhatsApp Share on Reddit Manan Mehta Hometown: New Delhi, India Undergraduate School and Major: Manipal Institute of Technology, MAHE – Civil engineering Most Recent Employer and Job Title: Fischer Fixings Oman, Business Development Engineer Fun Fact About Yourself I am originally from India, but I grew up in Oman. My parents and I are settled in Oman. I completed my undergraduate studies in India and worked for a few years after graduating. I have seen very different spectrums of life, given the diverse people I met there. What makes Milan such a great place to earn an MBA? What drew me to Milan is the kind of experience it offers beyond the classroom. It’s a city that attracts people who are not only looking for a strong academic program, but also for a broader cultural experience. That intention is something you immediately sense in the MBA community itself. Many students choose Milan deliberately, for the chance to live in a European context that feels active, social, and intellectually stimulating. The combination of academic rigor and everyday life in the city makes the experience feel richer and more immersive than I initially expected. Aside from your classmates, what was the key part of SDA Bocconi’s MBA curriculum and programming that led you to choose this business school and why was it so important to you? Initially, two factors stood out: the School’s rankings over the years and the cohort size. As I moved further along in my decision-making process, though, what really stood out was the cohort size. With around 125 students, the class is large enough to be diverse, but small enough to allow real connection. Over time, this has become one of the strongest aspects of the program for me. You end up interacting with most of your classmates, working together repeatedly, and building relationships that feel genuine rather than transactional. That closeness also extends to faculty. Seeing professors regularly over an extended period makes the relationship feel more accessible and personal. It becomes much easier to engage, ask questions, and build a real dialogue. What course, club or activity excites you the most at SDA Bocconi? Organizational Behavior was one of the courses that surprised me the most in the first semester. Accounting was another. Coming from an engineering background, I initially found it intimidating and was honestly quite nervous at the start. The way the course was taught completely changed my perspective. For the first time, I began to understand the logic and structure behind accounting, and even to find it engaging. It reached a point where I started considering a finance concentration, which is something I never would have expected before starting the MBA. The Bocconi MBA is known for striking a balance between core business knowledge and skills that emphasize vision, judgment, and innovation. What area do you hope to strengthen during your year of business school and why? Finance is a key area I want to strengthen, but just as important for me is developing the ability to work effectively in truly multicultural teams. I’ve worked in international environments before, but here the diversity is constant and unavoidable. Every team brings together people with different ways of thinking, communicating, and approaching problems. Learning how to navigate that complexity on a daily basis has been one of the most valuable parts of the experience so far. What is your unique quality that will enable you to make a big contribution to the Class of 2026? I bring a perspective shaped by having lived and worked in the Middle East for many years. Understanding that context, both professionally and socially, allows me to contribute viewpoints that are not always part of the conversation in a European business school setting. At the same time, I naturally enjoy connecting people. I’m comfortable bringing together individuals who might not otherwise interact, and creating spaces where different perspectives can meet. Acting as that kind of bridge is something I see as a real contribution to the cohort. The Bocconi MBA is also known for its strong emphasis on innovation and entrepreneurship. Why does the program’s focus on STEM insights and mindful leadership appeal to you? Sustainability and long-term impact have always mattered to me. Growing up in Oman, where my father is a civil engineer who worked in management roles and now runs his own construction business, I was exposed early on to challenging labor conditions and social issues. These experiences shaped the way I think about responsibility and leadership. SDA Bocconi’s focus on sustainability and impact-oriented leadership gives me a framework to build on those concerns and carry them forward in my career. On the STEM side, I appreciate how the program encourages active engagement with tools such as AI and data-driven analysis. Being asked to use these tools in class has pushed me to think more critically about how they can support better decision-making in real business contexts. Looking ahead, I’m particularly interested in courses that connect machine learning with business applications, as I see them as essential to shaping more informed and responsible leadership. When you think of SDA Bocconi, what is the first word that comes to mind? Why? People. More than anything else, it’s the human dimension that defines the experience for me. From faculty to classmates, the environment feels genuinely welcoming and approachable. That openness is not something I expected to find so consistently in a business school setting. What stands out is how natural the interactions feel. People are curious about each other and willing to connect across different backgrounds. Even exchange students have commented on how unusual it is to see a cohort where everyone greets each other and engages so freely. It creates a sense of belonging that feels authentic rather than performative. Describe your biggest accomplishment in your career so far. My career has involved several significant transitions, from highly technical bridge design work to roles with a stronger business orientation. One achievement I’m particularly proud of was connecting my professional work with my academic background. While working at Hilti, I collaborated with my undergraduate university to integrate cutting-edge industry developments into the curriculum. Now the material continues to reach thousands of students each year. From a business perspective, another key accomplishment was redesigning how our engineering team tracked its commercial impact across nine different markets. By understanding local sales processes and adapting internal workflows, we improved how results were measured, moving from CHF 2.1 million in tracked impact to over CHF 13 million the following year. The business itself didn’t suddenly grow overnight, but our ability to understand and communicate our value changed significantly. What advice would you give to help potential applicants gain admission into SDA Bocconi’s MBA program? Humility matters more than people often realize. Strong academics and professional experience are important, but SDA Bocconi clearly looks for people who are open, grounded, and aware of what they bring to a community. It helps to reflect honestly on your values, understand what the School stands for, and think about how your own perspective aligns with that vision. Not by forcing a narrative, but by recognizing where your interests genuinely connect with the School’s priorities. The strongest applications come from people who are clear about who they are and why they want to be part of this specific community. © Copyright 2026 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.