Awake, arise! Strive for the Highest, and be in the Light!
Sages say the path is narrow and difficult to tread, narrow
as the edge of a razor.
~Upanishads
Awake, arise! Strive for the Highest, and be in the Light!
Sages say the path is narrow and difficult to tread, narrow
as the edge of a razor.
~Upanishads
I found this article somewhere.. do not remember where
Essaying an admission
We are looking for candidates who are driven, focused and who have some idea of where they are heading. We are also looking at applicants who have a very good command of their identity and how they’re going to accomplish their aspirations.
Moreover, we are interested in knowing how we are going to help them achieve their goals. If the applicant knows this, then they are ready to apply to business school,” says Linda Meehan, dean and executive director, Columbia Business School.
Your essays are extremely crucial and probably the only tool you have to tell the admissions staff about your life, career and goals. It is an indirect way to interact with the committee. So, making a lasting impression on them will help your case for admission. The real question is how exactly do you convey this information to the admissions committee?
Writing about yourself can be a challenging ordeal. You have to introspect and figure out an interesting and innovative way to present the experiences that have been responsible for molding your character. Before you start writing, sit with a piece of paper and answer the following questions:
Why do you need an MBA at this point?
What do you expect to achieve after completing an MBA in the short term as well as long term?
What makes your application unique?
What are your strengths and weaknesses?
What activities have you done or experiences have you had, that demonstrate leadership potential and strong analytical ability?
How will this school specifically help you achieve your career goals?
Most students tend to be frightened about writing essays. Admission officers are not looking for flowery language and ‘big’ words. The admissions committee prefers essays that are well thought out and reflect what’s important to you.
Once you have your ideas splattered across a piece of paper, your actual essay writing will become easier. “It took me days to pen down various aspects of my life.
But once I got over the initial fear of writing, I actually began to enjoy the process. Also, once I finished working on the basic essays for one university, all the other universities’ essays overlapped,” says one B-school aspirant.
Remember these points when you start writing:
Make sure you are answering the question. Often applicants beat around the bush for so long that they miss the point of the essay. For example, a question may ask, ‘State your career objectives and how our school will help you achieve them.’ If you answer, ‘I plan to come back to India and set up my own hedge fund and provide consultancy services to existing mutual fund companies’, you have answered the first part of the question but have failed to answer how the university will help you achieve this goal.
In order to answer part two of the question, you must research the particular university and talk about certain facilities that pertain to your interest and education like courses offered, research facilities, internships, etc.
This is no time to be modest. It is important to highlight and embellish your strengths and achievements. In order to do this, you must use specific examples from your life to substantiate your claims. For example, if you state, ‘I am a confident team leader who can motivate my team in many ways’ and leave this statement without any supporting example, the statement loses strength.
However, you must be honest and straightforward when writing about yourself. Admission officers are trained professionals and can spot a fake easily. Don’t try and bluff your way and exaggerate your achievements.
Similarly don’t guess what the university is looking for and then tailor your essay accordingly.
Along the same lines, you must include all relevant work experience, teamwork and leadership experiences, and post-MBA career goals in your essays. B-schools rely heavily on essays and even if you have excellent GMAT scores and work experience, badly written essays can certainly cause trouble.
Follow instructions. If a university requires an essay to be 500 words long, don’t send in 510 or 550 words. Word limits are there for a reason and it’s in your best interest to follow directions. Similarly, if the instructions are to fit your essay on two pages, please exercise common sense and use ‘normal’ A4 paper and type with a 12-point font size.
Avoid discussing politics, religion, world events or any other controversial topic. This does not mean that you should not take a stance, but avoid unpleasant subjects and references.
Focus on points that will help the admission committee know you better and don’t just state things that you think the committee wants to know. For example, if doing community service is a big part of your life, mention it.
However, if you have never even lifted a pen at the cancer hospital or orphanage, then don’t try to convince the admission committee that you are the next Mother Theresa.
Before God we are all equally wise – and equally foolish. – Albert Einstein
A common dilemna faced by people is ‘how to prepare for management entrance along with work?’.
Please do not mind, but I think of these thoughts as excuses. If you want to do something, you need to find time to do it. Stop procrastinating. Hard work is a prerequisite for everything.
It takes 2-3 hours of concentrated study on weekdays, and 4-5 hours on weekends. If you can not take out this time out of your schedule because of a temporary crunch time @ work, then grab opportunities like a lenient phase at office and utilise your time.
Your situation might be a different one, but then you need to find a solution within these constraints.
Seek the wisdom of the ages, but look at the world through the eyes of a child.
~Ron Wild
CAT is primarily divided into 3 sections:
I. Verbal Reasoning(VR) & Reading comprehension(RC)
II. Quantitative Ability(QA)
III. Logical Reasoning(LR) & Data Interpretation(DI)
First step is to buy a study package of any coaching institute (I used IMS package).
Use this package to:
a) Learn basics of QA and english grammar.
b) Get acquainted with the type and difficulty level of questions that came in past papers. c) Practice and improve accuracy.
d) Give full length tests to gauge your performance and your strengths & weaknesses. Use this information to arrive at a tentative strategy [Different strategies work for different people].
Apart from this, depending on your test results and performance measure, you can use other resources to improve in specific areas.
Trends:
Analyse last 10 year papers and if possible try to see a trend.
As no of questions is decreasing (from 180 to 75) and time extended (from 2 hrs to 2.5 hrs) so I reckon that they want to examine accuracy or in other words they test your concepts and how careful you are. But managing your time is also important, so that you get more time to spend on tougher questions.
With lesser number of questions, the choice of easier questions has gone down. Thereby, increasing the importance of each questions or in other words how you perform with limited options.
In DI & LR section, LR(puzzles) questions have stopped coming as separate questions and reasoning skills are examined through DI itself. DI sets are used to test different abilities for eg – how you handle data. Try to analyse different sets and during practice, think about what was this set supposed to test.
Some Tips:
There will be tricks in the questions, for eg. there will be some questions to check whether you are reading the question properly and observing the small details they want you to neglect.
Practice will help; but it is not about the amount of questions you do for practice but the quality of effort you put in. When you solve a question, don’t be santusht (satisfied) by getting the right answer. Find better ways to solve that question.
When you make a mistake, try to see what went wrong. Find out if it was a conceptual error or a silly mistake. Why you made the mistake? Make a note of it, keep track of how many times you made mistakes because of the same reason. And, minimise these errors.
Always remember: lesser calculations mean lesser chance of doing a silly mistake, thereby increasing your chance of getting to the right answer.
Eliminating wrong choices: CAT has multiple choice type questions. Out of 4, 1 choice will be always correct, so eliminate the other 3 wrong choices; but don’t do blind guesswork, believe in your instincts.
‘TRY TO UNDERSTAND WHAT THEY ARE LOOKING FOR’
Regards
As an engineer or graduate a person acquires technical and analytical skills which enable her/him to help in implemention of a business idea.
Initially an engineer is involved in the development and testing aspects. After some experience s/he will graduate to designing aspect of the process i.e. to be involved in ‘how’.
But to move to the ‘what’ aspect of business one needs to be aware of ‘why’. Apart from this knowledge s/he needs skills to sell her/his idea and market it. These skills and thought process can be developed over a period of time. MBA serves as a learning tool and provides with opportunities to work in these roles.
As a product developer, one needs to analyse market and identify needs of the market or a gap. For eg, www.tenaday.co.in identified the market for online testing for CAT preparation. Now, they have created a wonderful product to meet this requirement of the market.
TCS and Satyam have gone to China for business growth. Who envisioned it for indian IT companies to foray in China where nobody speaks english? who analysed the market in china? This is done either by strategy division of the company or usually outsourced to consulting firms like McKinsey.
There are a lot of other profiles which you get after MBA. So, should you go for management?? Ask yourself, are you happy in your current profile and satisfied with the growth and roles you will get? What kind of work you want to do?
THINK!
Everyone has a purpose in life. Perhaps yours is watching television.
~Author : David Letterman
Had following discussion with a friend-
R : I just now started with GMAT prep
Sudhanshu G: ohk
Sudhanshu G: i had no idea
R : feeling scared how will I make it
Sudhanshu G: arre.. chill
Sudhanshu G: ![]()
Sudhanshu G: u just need to knw how to do it and do it..
R : did u take exam b4 or is this the first time
Sudhanshu G: first time
Sudhanshu G: for gmat
Sudhanshu G: CAT – i took 4 times
R : u can try in ISB
Sudhanshu G: i m not ![]()
Sudhanshu G: need a 2 yr degree
R : oh u want only 2 yr degree
R : y so
Sudhanshu G: want to swtich field
R : then cant u do it with ISB do u feel it will take more
R : what do u want switch
R : My roomate in US she prepared very hard and scored good in mock tests (GMAT) more than 700 every time but in final she made only 540
Sudhanshu G: i dont think with ISB i can leave IT
Sudhanshu G: maybe anxiety
Sudhanshu G: my best score in mocks was 650
R : CAT if u do for 4 times will u be able to join
Sudhanshu G: ?
R : y I ask is bcoz for GMAT they say not more than 2
Sudhanshu G: not in CAT
Sudhanshu G: and for GMAT dont think abt 2nd time
Sudhanshu G: give ur best.. plan for 4 months of study
Sudhanshu G: think about 2nd time only after u have ur score in hand
Sudhanshu G: u will b surprised by what u scored!
Sudhanshu G: hey.. can I post this chat on my blog?
R : sure…..:)