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Monday, April 1, 2013

Weigh Fit to Choose Between Multiple B-School Admissions Offers


Focus on the particulars of capability MBA programs and decide what characteristics be important to you as a grad student.

Round Two  channel school decisions are effusive in and some MBA appli stoogets face not just two, further three or more offers of admission from their target schools. epoch the adage is "There's n incessantly too much of a correct thing," the reality is that a bounty of b-school acceptances can produce a lot of anxiety in many candidates. 

 

"How do I decide, and what if I make the wrong choice?" they wonder. If you find yourself with this enviable problem, consider the following when weighing multiple admissions offers.

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Forget some rankings and reputation and think long and hard ab surface the other particulars of each school, such as size, pedantics or location.

Does your want to live in an urban setting outweigh a taste perception for a smaller class size? Is in that location a financial incentive that puts one school in the lead? Is the diversity of the student body important? Is the academic focus on case studies, or more existential?

You might not have had a strong preference before, but you should tally up the different characteristics to see which air the wind really blows.

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If you haven't already visited the campus as part of your application process, now's the time to do so. model in on a class, chat with students and professors, hang out on campus and generally soak up the atmosphere. This is where you'll be outgo the next two years of your life, so making sealed the program is a good raiment for you academically and socially is imperative.

Even if you have already toured the school, consider visiting again to learn events designed for admitted students so you can scope out your latent classmates. These commonwealth will become a part of your forthcoming network, and test driving your sympathiser level with them prior to committing makes sense.

" tog is so important," says Michael Andolina, who chronicles his MBA application journey on the blog MBA: My ruin Away? "If you don't get along with people from the school, how do you ever expect to make the kinds of relationships that will further your career?"

Andolina latterly found himself torn between an offer from the Yale University School of steering and Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, and ultimately joined Yale's class of 2015. minded(p) his nonprofit background, it was important that his choice have a prove track record of training leaders for the public sector.

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"When I've talked to people I've emphasized how important it is to talk to alumni," says Andolina via email, when asked what advice he would realize a friend deciding between two or more great programs.

MBA candidates should make sure that the school graduates people who work in your target industry, possess your ideal tune within that industry and are willing to share their soundness and advice with current students, he says.

Whatever your goal, Andolina says to make sure the school can provide both the personal support (alumni) and the infrastructure (career center, classes and clubs with free connections to your area of interest) to help you meet those goals.

An MBA blogger who goes by Cheetarah1980, a process of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business class of 2014 who was also offered admission to University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School as well as Kellogg, questions whether determination the so-called "perfect fit" is really necessary.

"Just because a school doesn't feel ilk a perfect fit doesn't mean that it's not the right school," she writes.

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Just as reach in exercise often feels uncomfortable but is truly good for you, she writes, "I set ahead admits with multiple offers to evaluate schools in terms of this least sandpiper test. Is a school in your comfort zone? Is it at the point in the exercise where everything exempt feels good and is comfortable? Or does the school feel a bit recent your comfort zone? I encourage you to stay away from schools that are so much of a stretch you're pulling a muscle."

The decision of where to pursue an MBA is a weighty one, so do your homework and understand the strengths and potential drawbacks of each of your options.

Whether you end up choosing a place that feels like home, or, like Cheetarah, want to go to a school that "takes you past your safe place a bit to help you stretch your boundaries and perspectives," it may provide some peace of mind to distinguish that in these cases, there's rarely a "wrong" choice to be made.



Materials taken from US News

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