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You can find a better version of my blog at http://www.adammarkus.com/blog/.

Be sure to read my Key Posts on the admissions process. Topics include essay analysis, resumes, recommendations, rankings, and more.

July 16, 2011

ON POST-MBA ENTREPRENEURIAL GOALS

I wanted to provide some admissions advice for MBA applicants with entrepreneurial goals. As with all my advice, it is based simply on what is intended to generate a positive admissions result from an MBA program and is not primarily intended to be actual career advice.

How will a specific MBA program help you achieve your entrepreneurial goals?
Be specific.  For example, Wharton, a school that many don't initially associate with entrepreneurship, has significant resources in this area, which are all accessible via this page.  You can find similar entrepreneurial pages for HBS, Stanford (Given the vast entrepreneurial resources that exist through Stanford University, this link is for the entire university, not just the GSB), Columbia Business School, UC Berkeley Haas, Chicago Booth, MIT Sloan,  and many others if you look for them. Some schools, might not have a single comprehensive page. If you can't find main academic, student club, and research pages, it is probably a good indicator that the school is not very good at entrepreneurship. If the school is not good at entrepreneurship and you want to go there, I suggest making non-entrepreneurial goals for that school.  I have worked with  many clients who changed their goals to fit the school's actual resources and found it to be a successful admissions strategy.

Given the entrepreneurial resources that exist at the school you are planning to apply to, do you need post-MBA goals that involve working at a company prior to starting your own?
I often have encountered reapplicants with the past experience to make a strong case for post-MBA entrepreneurial career who inserted a non-entrepreneurial short-term goal in their career (usually in consulting or some equally unimaginative path) because they needed two goals which were very different (As though being an entrepreneur and building a successful enterprise long-term were not different enough!) or because they did not think that anyone would consider a direct move into entrepreneurship as reasonable.  When I work with people who clearly have an entrepreneurial track record, my basic position is that unless they really see some reason why they need a short-term non-entrepreneurial phase prior to launching their own business, they should completely focus on a post-MBA entrepreneurial future.  MBA programs that are strong in entrepreneurship are designed to actually help their students launch successful start-ups.  See for example, this press release from Chicago Booth.  By the way, I think a huge number of applicants do not ever think about Booth for entrepreneurship, which is a huge mistake. 

If you don't have a specific business plan that you think you want to develop in your MBA program, what areas interest you?
I think for those who have already tried and succeeded or failed or something in-between it is not necessary that you go in with a full plan that you want to implement.  Rather, think about what really interests you and that you can make the best case for.  You don't need a business plan when you apply, but you do need to explain what you are passionate about.  Of course, if you actually have a plan and can justify why you need an MBA to launch it, that is great!

Longer Term Entrepreneurial Goals
It is certainly reasonable to have a short-term goal that is non-entrepreneurial and a longer term goal that is.  Starting one's own business after mastering a profession is reasonable enough.  Longer term entrepreneurial goals in areas such as finance and consulting can certainly require an initial post-MBA career as an employee.  Disclosure: I am biased because this what I did after working as an admissions consultant at a company from 2001-2007.  I developed expertise in an organizational setting that made it possible for me to go independent.  When one aspires to launch a consultancy, a venture fund, or other types of businesses that rest on expertise, a post-MBA goal that makes that makes obtaining that expertise possible is necessary. Whatever your entrepreneurial goals are, just make sure that your longer terms goals actually show a wideness of vision that help the admissions office understand that you are someone who wants to have significant impact in the future.

-Adam Markus
 アダム マーカス
I am a graduate admissions consultant based in Tokyo, Japan with clients worldwide. If you would like to arrange an initial consultation, please complete my intake form, which is publicly available on google docs hereand then send your completed form to adammarkus@gmail.com.  You can also send me your resume if it is convenient for you.  Please don't email me any essays, other admissions consultant's intake forms, your life story, or any long email asking for a written profile assessment. The only profiles I assess are those with people who I offer initial consultations to.  See here for why.


アントレプレナーシップ 

July 15, 2011

Michigan Ross Information Session on August 9th in Tokyo

What: Ross Information Session (by Ross Admissions Office Director Soojin Koh)
When: August 9th, 2011 (19:00-21:00pm)
Where: Conference Square MPlass "Success" Room
            Mitsubishi Building 1F, 2-5-2, Marunouchi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo
http://www.marunouchi-hc.jp/emplus/access/index.html


************************************

【開催告知】Michigan Ross Information Session @8月9日(火) in 丸の内

8月9日(火)にMBA受験生を対象としたInformation Sessionを開催いたします!
昨年に引き続き、Admission DirectorのSoojin Kohが来日しRossの魅力について
語る予定です。

開催概要は下記をご覧ください。
現役在校生数名に加えまして卒業生も多数参加する予定ですので、どうぞ奮ってご参加ください。

<日時> 2011年8月9日(火) 18:30 受付開始、19:00 開会~21:00

<会場> コンファレンススクエア エムプラス 「サクセス」ルーム
東京都千代田区丸の内2-5-2 三菱ビル 1F TEL: 03-3282-7777
http://www.marunouchi-hc.jp/emplus/access/index.html

<Tentative Schedule>
18:30 - 19:00: Registration/networking w/ alumni
19:00 - 19:15: Admissions Presentation of Ross MBA programs
19:15 - 20:00: Application workshop
20:00 - 20:30: Q&A w/ alumni
20:30 - 21:00: Networking

<お申込み方法>
下記のウェブサイトからお申し込み下さい
2011 Tokyo Info Session - Registration


それでは皆様のお申し込みを、心よりお待ち申し上げます。

 

July 11, 2011

Resume Template for MBA, LL.M., & Other Grad School Applications

You can find my suggested MBA, LL.M., or other graduate school admissions resume template on Google docs here and on Scribd here. Many of my clients have found this  template to be a very effective basis for making a successful graduate school application resume.  It is especially designed for providing a balanced (academic, professional, everything else) perspective on the applicant, which, is especially important in the case of resumes for business school.

-Adam Markus
 アダム マーカス

I am a graduate admissions consultant based in Tokyo, Japan with clients worldwide. If you would like to arrange an initial consultation, please complete my intake form, which is publicly available on google docs hereand then send your completed form to adammarkus@gmail.com.  You can also send me your resume if it is convenient for you.  Please don't email me any essays, other admissions consultant's intake forms, your life story, or any long email asking for a written profile assessment. The only profiles I assess are those with people who I offer initial consultations to.  See here for why.

MIT Sloan School of Managementの在校生・卒業生による学校説明会を開催致します

MIT Sloan's currentJapanese students and alumni will be holding an informational event in Tokyo on 8/28. It is limited to 100 people so I suggest registering as soon as possible.
-Adam

MIT Sloan School of Managementの在校生・卒業生による学校説明会を開催致します。参加お申込はこちらから(先着100名様限り:当日は確認メールのプリントアウトをご持参下さい)。
日程:8月28日(日)
時間:14:00-16:00 (13:30より受付開始)
場所:六本木アカデミーヒルズ49 カンファレンスルーム1+2
内容(予定):
1. 基調講演-井澤吉幸氏(株式会社ゆうちょ銀行 取締役代表執行役社長、MIT Sloan Asian Executive Board Member)
2. 学校紹介プレゼンテーション
3. 在校生・卒業生パネルディスカッション
4. 在校生・卒業生への個別Q&Aセッション

* 本説明会は在校生・卒業生による自主的な企画イベントであり、アドミッションプロセスとは一切関係ありません
* 当日はカジュアルな服装でお越しください

July 01, 2011

10 Really Stupid Things that MBA Admissions Applicants Do

I thought it might be time for a list.  Since it is summer, I suggest reading this while enjoying a cool drink or two (or three...).   This is a list of 10 really stupid things that MBA applicants do. Try to avoid doing these things if you are an MBA applicant.  But if you do them, please be advised that my reapplication consulting services are available to help you recover from your mistakes.

10 Really Stupid Things that MBA Admissions Applicants Do:


1. Have someone else write their essays for them.  You will be able to get away with it if you have someone who can perfectly capture your voice without turning your essay into something obviously written by a hack journalist moonlighting as an admissions consultant,  generic content that an unimaginative ghost writing drone produces, or an essay obviously written by a native English speaker when you are not (as demonstrated by TOEFL, IELTS, GMAT and/or background).

2. Ignoring admissions data when selecting schools.  While you are not reducible to a set of statistics, you had better use that benchmark to get a sense of the realism of proceeding with application to any particular school.  Knowing what level of competition you face will best help you gauge the difficulty of admission.  Taking calculated risks is necessary skill for any successful investor in anything, so do your research.  For a risk portfolio approach to select schools, please see here.

3. Going only by statistics when selecting schools.  For US schools, 10% of all admitted applicants are below the school's reported 80% range for admits in terms of GMAT, GPA, or experience. In my experience, applicants can certainly get admitted if they have other aspects to their application that outweigh mere numbers. While the number of exceptions to the rule is limited, the chance for admission still exists.  You need to think carefully about how much risk you want to take, but don't merely settle for where you seem to statistically fit if you want to try and gain admission to what you would consider to be a better program. For a risk portfolio approach to select schools, please see here.

4.  Treat all MBA programs as the same.  Some applicants fail to really look into the really huge differences between programs and as a result cannot ever demonstrate fit in their essays.  Learn about fit here.

5.  Don't take recommendations seriously. Some ways applicants don't take recommendations seriously include: Providing limited or zero guidance to recommenders who might not actually be familiar with the unique aspects of MBA program recommendations, providing so much information to recommenders that their recommenders essentially paraphrase the applicants essays to the point where it appears the applicant wrote the recommendation(s) and providing obviously forged recommendations.  To get around these problems, please see here and here.

6. Provide a user unfriendly resume. The resume is a such key piece of most MBA applications, but some applicants submit resumes that are too technical, only focused on professional experience, provide too little detail,  provide too much detail about the wrong things, don't conform to standard resume formats, or otherwise fail as an effective advertising device for the applicant.

7.  Don't prepare for interviews. Don't even get me started, it will make me sick to my stomach. Every year I work with clients who get invited to great schools for interviews and some of them simply think they can go in unprepared because they do better that way or that it is not a big deal.  Usually interviews are a big deal.  Start here.

8. Don't send timely thank you notes to interviewers.  I don't care whether you send an actual physical note by mail or by an email, but send a note!  It is the sort of minimal politeness that tells an interviewer and an admissions committee should be able to expect.

9.  Spend too much time reading online applicant forums. There is nothing more mentally crippling than wasting too much time on online applicants forums, which often have the function of being urban myth producing echo chambers. Don't get me wrong, you should most certainly read them, but if it becomes an excuse (LIKE FACEBOOK) to actually not work on your applications or test preparation, you need to chill out.

10. Fail to network with alumni and current students.  One of things that is truly awesome about most MBA programs is the willingness of current students and  many alumni to share their experience and inform applicants.  Take full advantage of this. If you are too shy to network, an MBA is not for you.  Have you considered a career as a blogger?


-Adam Markus
 アダム マーカス

I am a graduate admissions consultant based in Tokyo, Japan with clients worldwide. If you would like to arrange an initial consultation, please complete my intake form, which is publicly available on google docs hereand then send your completed form to adammarkus@gmail.com.  You can also send me your resume if it is convenient for you.  Please don't email me any essays, other admissions consultant's intake forms, your life story, or any long email asking for a written profile assessment. The only profiles I assess are those with people who I offer initial consultations to.  See here for why.


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