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I have 5 years of government and nonprofit work experience with increasingly expanding responsibilities. Well-liked and respected by colleagues. Expecting strong recommendations. Entering business school with the goal of better understanding nonprofit management to transition to executive and leadership roles.
Target School: Stanford GSB
Considering: Harvard, Wharton, Chicago Booth, MIT Sloan
See More Profiles For: Stanford GSB
Application Status: Open
Undergrad School: Yale
Undergrad Major: Government
GPA: 3.7
GMAT: 750
Age: 27, Ethnicity: Asian or Indian
Extracurriculars: Mentor for first-gen college students. Meet with a student weekly to offer support with their resume, job applications, interview skills, etc., Serve as an admissions interviewer for my alma mater.
Title: Assistant Director
Industry: Nonprofit / B-Corp
Company: National NGO
Length of Employment: 1 yr, 10 mos
Title: Policy Advisor
Industry: Government / Military
Company: Worked in the Governor's office of a large state
Length of Employment: 3 yrs, 2 mos
1) On the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic as a government worker in a major state – witnessed and participated in first-hand crisis management. 2) Launched a new initiative in my current nonprofit, raised over $5m in one year.
Continuing in the public sector, aiming to transition into leadership roles, either in nonprofit, government, or philanthropy.
Join in! Click here to assess the odds of Ms. Public Service
This is an excellent profile. You are a highly desirable MBA candidate and I believe. your chances of an admit at Stanford are pretty good, though as the most highly selective MBA program in the world, you just never know for sure. If, for whatever reason, you don’t ring the bell at the GSB, I feel fairly certain that at least two or more of the other schools you have targeted will invite you to be a member of their class. Why am I so confident? You have a jumbo GMAT score at 750. You have a solid GPA of 3.7 from an Ivy League university. You have been directly involved at a high government level in managing through a crisis that has impacted everyone. …
This is an excellent profile. You are a highly desirable MBA candidate and I believe. your chances of an admit at Stanford are pretty good, though as the most highly selective MBA program in the world, you just never know for sure. If, for whatever reason, you don’t ring the bell at the GSB, I feel fairly certain that at least two or more of the other schools you have targeted will invite you to be a member of their class. Why am I so confident? You have a jumbo GMAT score at 750. You have a solid GPA of 3.7 from an Ivy League university. You have been directly involved at a high government level in managing through a crisis that has impacted everyone. And in your current role at a national nonprrofit, you launched an initiative and raised more than $5 million in a single year. Based on the quality of your profile, you should be interviewed by almost all of the schools to which you intend to apply. One serious question to consider, given the fact that you could not have earned a lot of money working for either an NGO or the government, is what kind of scholarship support you would be seeking. You are in a strong position for an award at Stanford, Harvard or any of the other schools on your target list. Stanford, Harvard, and Chicago Booth are most likely going to be more generous because those three schools have a lot of fellowship money to give. Your post-MBA career goals also mean that you could very well have a harder time paying off a big loan so whatever scholarship support you get will probably make the difference in where you go. My advice: Don’t get your heart set on any one school. Go to the MBA program that gives you the best deal, given these circumstances. Good luck to you. My odds are for Stanford where the admit rate is about 6%. Your chances at HBS, Wharton, Chicago and MIT are much higher for obvious reasons.
Stanford should accept you. Whether they will or not is another issue.
I think you’d have a great shot at Wharton, Booth, and Sloan. Nobody’s a shoe-in at HBS or GSB though, but you seem to have as good a shot as anyone!
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