Stop What You’re Doing And Watch This MBA Application Advice Video Right Now by: Marc Ethier on May 07, 2026 | 2 minute read May 7, 2026 Copy Link Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email Share on LinkedIn Share on WhatsApp Share on Reddit At some point in the MBA admissions process, nearly every applicant worries about saying something dumb in an interview. Saïd Business School has a simpler fear in mind: accidentally pitching the wrong school. In a newly released video from the MBA admissions team at the University of Oxford – one of the world’s oldest universities – executive director of recruitment and admissions Clare Woodcraft offers applicants some refreshingly human interview tips, including one that sounds obvious – until the adrenaline kicks in. “Remember which school you’re interviewing for,” Woodcraft says. It’s the kind of advice that probably exists because somebody once praised Harvard during an Oxford interview. A VERY OLD SCHOOL, A VERY MODERN WARNING The short video walks applicants through common MBA interview mistakes and how to avoid them. Among the recommendations: prepare like it is a job interview, know your résumé cold, and have a clear explanation for why you want an MBA – and why this MBA specifically. The tone is notably less intimidating than many MBA admissions discussions online, where candidates swap stories about “curveball” questions and mock-interview prep marathons. On Reddit and GMAT forums, applicants obsess over whether they will get grilled on leadership failures, geopolitics, or post-MBA career plans. Oxford’s advice is more grounded: be prep A short new video from Oxford Saïd offers calm, practical MBA interview advice with a surprisingly charming twist. ared, be thoughtful, and maybe do not accidentally name-drop a rival school. Which, honestly, feels like useful life advice far beyond business school. DON’T MISS AT OXFORD SAÏD, THE NEW POET LAUREATE WANTS MBAs TO FEEL BEFORE THEY CALCULATE © 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.