Stanford GSB 2011 MBA Application Questions, Deadlines, Tips.

UPDATE- THE TIPS FOR STANFORD‘S 2012 MBA APPLICATION ARE NOW ONLINE- Please post questions or comments to the new post.  

This Stanford GSB 2011 MBA Application tip post is one of a series of posts providing MBA application and essay advice for applicants to top MBA programs around the world. You can access the entire series at http://blog.accepted.com/acceptedcom_blog/tag/2011-mba-application-tips. My tips for answering Stanford‘s questions are in red below. 

 

Stanford GSB 2011 Essay Questions

Essay 1: What matters most to you, and why?

This deceptively simple question has been Stanford’s first for the last several years, and it is actually one of the hardest, if not the hardest, MBA essay question to answer. It demands introspection. Before you put pen to paper or finger to keyboard, take time to reflect on what you value, how you have demonstrated those values, and why you hold them dear.

When I think back on our many successful Stanford clients, they were the ones who showed, especially in Essay A, that they did not turn away or close their eyes when they saw need. They could demonstrate that they seized the initiative when they recognized an opportunity to contribute. They were comfortable expressing emotion, their values, and their ability to act on both. More than anything else, to me initiative and self-awareness characterize the successful Stanford application. Implication: You have to reflect upon your values and those times you have acted upon them. Yes I wrote that a few seconds ago, but it bears repeating. Climbing Mt. Everest or suffering from terrible social ills is not a requirement of admission, but you do have to know the person occupying your skin.

Essay 2: What are your career aspirations? What do you need to learn at Stanford to achieve them?

This question, similar to last year’s, is a variation of a standard MBA goals question and different flavors have occupied this slot on the Stanford application for years. For this forward-looking question, you need to define your career goals and then explain how Stanford’s program will help you achieve your goals. Understand the flexibility inherent in Stanford’s new curriculum, its integrated approach to management, and how both will help you learn what you need to know to achieve your career goals. Realize that the curriculum allows for personalization based on your goal and your distance from that goal. Obviously, a clear goal and knowledge of the Stanford GSB curriculum are imperative to answer this question.

Essay 3: Answer two of the four questions below. Tell us not only what you did but also how you did it. What was the outcome? How did people respond? Only describe experiences that have occurred during the last three years.

The first issue you must address when looking at Essay C is “Which two do you choose?”. Answer: the two that, when combined with your required essays, allow you to present the most impressive, textured, and comprehensive picture of you. Take advantage of Stanford’s flexibility within the limits they specify below. Tell your story to maximum effect by using the limits to your best advantage, just as Stanford suggests. Finally, note that these questions are experiential , not theoretical. They are about the past, not the future. And Stanford wants recent experiences. It wants to know how you achieved, what was the response of those around you, and what was your impact. For further insight, please see “Confessions from the Director of Evaluation” and “Writing Effective Essays.”

Option A: Tell us about a time when you built or developed a team whose performance exceeded expectations.

This is a twist on last year’s question. It requires specifics and works well with anecdotal responses. Stanford does not want to know about all the times that you may have built or developed a team. It wants to know about “a time,” a specific incident, when your performance exceeded expectations. When did you build a team that faced challenges and succeeded? What were the expectations? What impact did your team have and how did it exceed expectations? Make sure you relate your role in its success.

Option B: Tell us about a time when you made a lasting impact on your organization.

Use a different experience than you use in Option 1 to answer Option 2. Exploit the opportunity to show Stanford a different facet of your experience and personality. In discussing your impact, refrain from writing about leadership in general terms. Focus on the specific aspects of your contribution and its impact. Discuss what you used to garner trust, organize your group, empower them, and achieve your goal.

Option C: Tell us about a time when you generated support from others for an idea or initiative.

Use this question to present a challenge you successfully handled. A PAR approach would work well here, as well as with the other 3 questions.

Option D: Tell us about a time when you went beyond what was defined or established.

This is a very broad question. It reveals Stanford’s values and allows you to discuss any event when you went beyond the norm. The suggestions for the other 3 questions hold here too. Choose to respond to this question if it allows you to demonstrate the individuality and initiative that Stanford values in a setting other than those you have used earlier.

Essay Length

You have your own story to tell, so please allocate the 1,800 words among all of the essays in the way that is most effective for you. We provide some guidelines below as a starting point, but you should feel comfortable to write as much or as little as you like on any essay question, as long as you do not exceed 1,800 words total.

  •   Essay 1: 750 words
  •   Essay 2: 450 words
  •   Essay 3: 300 words each

For one-on-one guidance through the Stanford MBA application, process please check out Accepted.com’s Stanford Application Package or our other MBA essay editing and admissions consulting assistance.

Additional Resources:

By Linda Abraham, President and Founder of Accepted.com.

 

About Linda Abraham
  • Nick

    Hi Linda, do I have a shot at Stanford?

    27, M, gay, Asian
    Undergrad 3.0GPA Ivy League
    Grad 3.5GPA Ivy League
    730 GMAT

    Work ex: 1 year tech startup, 3 years tech consulting, 4 years independent consulting (this last one part-time), all with an education industry focus.

    Extracurriculars: Significant involvement and leadership with multiple large nonprofits. Also very involved in fundraising.

  • Linda Abraham

    Nick,

    yes. You do have a shot at Stanford GSB.

    Best,
    Linda

  • Aniruddha

    Hi Linda,

    Thanks for all the resourceful blogs.

    I would like to know your feedback on my profile. I will be applying to HBS 2+2 and Stanford GSB in 2011.

    -22 years, male, Indian, no work-ex
    -Currently junior year, Metallurgical and Materials Engg. (B.Tech+M.Tech, 5yrs) at Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur
    GPA : 8.42/10
    -Volunatry Minor in Mech. Engg. (GPA 7.33/10, only student in batch of 800 to pursue this)
    -Co?Founder and VP of an early stage start?up of manufacturing Li?ion batteries (Won Asia's largest bplan contest at IIT Bombay and awards at several other competitions)
    -Founder and CEO,of an initiative to convert research projects into business ventures
    -Co?Founder and Chapter Coordinator, India Youth Climate Network, IIT Kharagpur Chapter
    -Head, Energy Projects, Engineers Without Borders, IIT Kharagpur Chapter (currently deploying energy solutions at nearby villages)
    -Summer internships at
    1. ITC Ltd., India (large and reputed FMCG firm in India)
    2. Imperial College London and Corus, UK
    3. (One more internship before applying to Stanford in 2011)

    -Also involved in a consultancy project with Institution of Mech. Engineers, UK

    Area of focus:
    Technology Transfer,entrepreneurship,climate change

    GMAT : currently preparing (expecting 750+)

    Many thanks,
    Aniruddha

  • Aniruddha

    Hi Linda,

    Please reply to the above post. It would be of great help to me.

    Many thanks,
    Aniruddha

  • Linda Abraham

    Aniruddha,

    I'm sorry I missed your post and didn't reply sooner. Thanks for the second post.

    Assuming your GMAT comes in as anticipated, you have a competitive profile for both HBS 2+2 and Stanford. If you are currently a junior, you would apply to the latter program next year.

    Best,
    Linda

  • Aniruddha

    Dear Linda,

    Thanks for the feedback.

    Aniruddha

  • phil

    Hi Linda,
    i consider applying for Stanford as i want to change career.
    what do you think of my profile ;
    - 32 years old, french/portuguese, male
    - 10 years in banking (last 5 in private equity as investment manager)
    - GMAT 750
    thanks for your help

  • phil

    Hi Linda,
    I forgot to add :
    - graduated from INAPG, one of the top tier french engineering schools. It is dedicated to agronomics
    thanks again for your help

  • Linda Abraham

    Phil,

    You are a little hard to predict. On one had you have more experience than Stanford usually admits.On the other hand it is excellent experience and your French/Portuguese background is probably a little distinctive in the applicant pool.

    If you have solid reasons why you need an MBA, given your impressive experience and can show fit with Stanford's program, I think you will receive serious consideration.

    I would also suggest that you consider other top programs that are more open to older applicants. You may also want to explore the Sloan Fellows programs at MIT, Stanford, and LBS.

    Best,
    Linda

  • piya

    I(Piya) am from Hyderabad, India.I have turned 22 last month. I have pursued B.Com(Hons) and CS(A professional course like Chartered Accountancy) as well. I have got 2 years of work ex.
    Following is my profile in detail:
    10 th standard:90%(Topper in all the 5 branches of my school)
    11th standard:94%(Topped at the state level and also topped in all the 350 branches of my junior college.)
    12th standard:92%
    B.Com(Hons):78%(College and university topper)
    CS:Topped in all the three years at state level alongwith National ranks.
    I am right now working in my father's software firm.I have 1 year, 11 months of work experience. Basically my work is based on e-commerce.I have revamped the entire website and it has now got a viewership of 20,000 visitors per day. I am also working on other website portals owned by my firm and leading a team of 50 people which include engineers and MBA's.
    I am also involved in giving presentations on subjects like an anger management, time management, etc. I very deeply associated with ISKCON and have participated in many programs conducted by them.
    I want to know whether with this profile, do I have any chance of making to Stanford or Harvard B-School.

  • piya

    Hi Linda
    Please reply to the above post.
    Your feed back will be of great help.
    Thank You.

  • http://www.accepted.com Linda Abraham

    Piya,

    If you do well on the GMAT and graduated from a school with a rigorous reputation, you would have a chance at both schools. HOwever, I suggest you consider other programs too. Look for programs that support your long-term goals and are friendly to younger applicants.

    Best,
    Linda Abraham

  • John

    Hey Linda,

    I have a question about the interview's weight and goal in the application process. How defining is the interview? Is it only a "fit" interview? Any do's don't that would apply specifically to Stanford?

    Thanks a lot,
    John, UK

  • Linda Abraham

    John,

    Please see http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/mba/admission/dir_interviews-p.html for Stanford's view on the role of the interview.

    No it is not defining. It is "supplemental info."

    For Stanford be prepared to show initiative and confirm and expand upon the impression made in your essays. Clearly you were doing something right or they wouldn't have invited you to the interview.

    This is not unique to Stanford, but they seem to be moving to behavioral questions. Be prepared for both types of questions. See http://blog.accepted.com/acceptedcom_blog/2011/2/25/mba-admissions-interviews-behavioral-and-qualitative-questio.html for tips on preparing for both types of questions.

    Best,
    Linda

  • Ritvik

    Hi Linda,

    Could you please comment on the suitability of my profile for applying to Stanford?

    Graduate from Indian Institute of Technology
    Low GPA – 2.6; GMAT – 740
    Very good extra-curricular – won many awards at national and international competitions; held many student offices in college
    6 years of work experience in consulting and data analytics; currently in a client engagement manager role in US

    Thanks,
    Ritvik

  • Linda Abraham

    I'm not optimistic because of your low GPA and the intense competition among Indian applicants. Are you interested in any other programs?

    Linda

  • Ritvik

    Hi Linda,

    Thanks for your response. I am also considering applying to Wharton, MIT, Kellogg, Booth, Stern, Haas and Ross. I would finally go with 4-5 out of all of these. Any suggestions on which ones would be a good fit for me?

    Thanks,
    Ritvik

  • Ritvik

    Also, this should be obvious, but just to clarify – I meant a GPA of 2.6 converted to a 4 point scale and not on a 10 point scale :)

    Thanks,
    Ritvik

  • Ritvik

    Hi Linda,

    Could you please respond to my query? I am mainly using the latest US News rankings ( http://grad-schools.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-business-schools/mba-rankings ) as my base and want to target 4-5 schools out of the top 15. Do let me know for which schools my GPA wouldn't be a serious handicap.

    Thanks,
    Ritvik

  • Linda Abraham

    Ritvik,

    What was your percentage when you graduated? class rank? Was there a reason for the low GPA? have you taken any classes since college? In the top 15, a 2.6 is a serious handicap — even with a 740 GMAT and competitive work experience.

    Also, what do you want to do with your MBA?

    Linda

    Regards,
    Linda

  • Aryan

    Hi linda,
    Wanted ur views on my profile below:
    24 male indian
    Chatered accountant all india rank 16
    Cfa
    85% in 10th std
    Big 4 tax consulting experience
    3 yrs work ex at matriculation
    Negligible extra curriculars
    But volunter for an ngo and member of toastmasters since few months.
    Aiming for h/s/w
    Thanks,
    Aryan

  • Linda Abraham

    I'm not optimistic, but what is your GMAT score?

  • Aryan

    Hi linda,
    Thanks for ur honest and prompt reply.

    Based on my preparations, i am confident of 740+ gmat score.

    Further, does getting good recommendations, me belonging to a family with limited means and supporting d family from the age of 13 add meat to my chances at h/s/w?

    Thanks again!!

  • Linda Abraham

    Aryan,

    A 740+ score, good recs, and your personal story will help. But don't set your heart on Stanford. Also apply to other programs.

    Best,
    Linda