« Researching Programs: Talk to Students | Main | Med School Admissions: Michigan Chat Transcript with Robert Ruiz »

INSEAD 2008 Application Questions, Deadlines, and Tips

INSEAD Deadlines for September 2008 Intake

 

                    App Deadline        Interview Decision    Decision Notification

Round 1        Oct. 3, 2007            Nov. 9, 2007           Dec. 21, 2007

Round 2        Dec. 5, 2007            Jan. 18, 2008        Feb. 29, 2008

Round 3         Feb. 6, 2008           Mar. 21, 2008          Apr. 30, 2008

 Round 4        Apr. 3, 2008            May 7, 2008               June 20, 2008

INSEAD Essay Questions

 

The questions are the same as last year's and my comments (in red) are virtually the same. 

Each essay topic listed below and in the subsequent pages must be answered.

1. Give a candid description of yourself, stressing the personal characteristics you feel to be your strengths and weaknesses and the main factors, which have influenced your personal development, giving examples when necessary. (400 words approx.)

For a question like this I recommend two strengths and one weakness. If you can choose one anecdote that reveals both the strengths and the weakness, you will have a strong essay.  Don't forget to discuss how these qualities influenced your personal development.

A word on weaknesses. Be honest without going overboard. Don't make up a phony weakness. I attended an HBS info session last year. One of the alumni said that he discussed a "phony weakness" in his essays (required for HBS that year) and his interviewer focused right on it, and basically said, "Come on. What's a real weakness?" He had to get real in a hurry. Take advantage of the essays: Give it some thought and respond with the benefit of that reflection.. For more information, please see "Flaws Make You Real."

2. Describe what you believe to be your two most substantial accomplishments to date, explaining why you view them as such. (400 words approx.)

Try to take accomplishments from different arenas of your life. (But don't go back to high school and earlier to do so.) The accomplishments should show impact, contribution, and for INSEAD at least one should have a multi-cultural flavor.

3. Describe a situation taken from school, business, civil or military life, where you did not meet your personal objectives, and discuss briefly the effect. (250 words approx.)

In choosing the situation, here's a case when you can go back in time a little -- let's say 2-5 years. You can illustrate how you learned from this situation and were able to meet similar objectives next time around.

4. Discuss your career goals. What skills do you expect to gain from studying at INSEAD and how will they contribute to your professional career. (500 words approx.)

This is a forward-looking career goals question. Use the past to set context for your future and show that your goals are anchored in experience. Then explain how INSEAD with its intense, one-year, general management program and strong international focus will help you achieve your goals.

5. Please choose one of the following two essay topics:

a) Have you ever experienced culture shock? What did it mean to you? (250 words approx.), or

b) What would you say to a foreigner moving to your home country? (250 words approx.)

These two have been part of the INSEAD repertoire for several years. Choose the one that is easiest for you to answer and allows you to bring out a facet of your experience not found in the other essays.  

6. Is there anything that you have not mentioned in the above essays that you would like the Admissions Committee to know? (200 words approx.) This essay is optional.

Take advantage of the optional essay to give them one more reason to admit you. DON'T use it for a grand summary, a restatement of your other essays, or something similarly boring, superficial, and repetitive. A tight, focused essay highlighting something you haven't yet discussed.

Re-application

7. In case of reapplication, please use this page. Your essay should state any new aspects of professional, international, academic, or personal development since your last application. We would also like you to explain your motivation for re-applying to INSEAD. This essay should not exceed 400 words.

Until recently, INSEAD did not consider reapplications. The key question: How are you better this year than last? What has changed to make you more worthy of the fat envelope?

If you would like help with your INSEAD MBA application, please consider Accepted's MBA essay editing and admissions consulting or a INSEAD Comprehensive Package, which includes essay editing, interview coaching, consultation, and a resume edit for the INSEAD MBA application.

  AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Posted on Wednesday, June 27, 2007 at 12:05PM by Registered CommenterLinda Abraham in , | Comments23 Comments | References6 References

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

References (6)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.

Reader Comments (23)

Hi Linda,

This is regarding the question about cultural shock. As a person from a very reserved family, I have experienced many situations where I confronted a cultural shock. However, given the current state of the global mind-set, they might reflect as if I had an orthodox mindset. I can still outline the daunting experience I had in France with my inabilities to communicate in French language.

How would INSEAD take this example, even though I will mention how I manage d to get immersed in French culture and establish friendships?

Regards,

Tarun Kumar Vatwani
August 6, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterTarun Vatwani
In most cases, if you can show that you adapted and overcame your initial shock it should work. You would no longer have the rigidity that you started out with, if you adapted. It could be a good essay if told honestly and with a little humor.

Good luck!
August 9, 2007 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Hi Linda,

I am looking to apply to Insead for my second MBA.

I have graduated with my first MBA from a university in my home Country. I have completed 3 years of work exprience since.


How would INSEAD expect my application to illustrate the reasoning behind doing a second MBA?



Thanks,

Sachin N
September 11, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterSachin N
First of all, verify that INSEAD will consider an application from someone who already has an MBA. I'm not sure either way.

Assuming it will consider your application, you need to argue why you need a second MBA to achieve your current goals. What will this MBA give you that your previous one did not and cannot? And the answer cannot just be prestige or ranking.

Good luck!
September 18, 2007 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Hi Linda,
There is one question on the application which you do not have above:
Please give a detailed description of your job, including nature of work, major responsibilities; and, where relevant, employees under your supervision, size of budget, number of clients/products and results achieved. (250 words)

It is hard to find any info on this question on the web - do you have any comments?
Thanks!
September 19, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterRaul
Hi Linda - sorry one further question. Further to the above, there is one other question not listed
Please give us a full description of your career since graduating from university. If you were to remain with your present employer, what would be your next step in terms of position? (250 words)

and how is this one different to the first personal essay question? They seem very similar

Thanks!
September 19, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterRaul
Raul,

The first one asks about your current responsibilities. The second one asks about your career since graduation. Obviously your responsibilities have changed.

For the first one, I would give the facts they ask for highlighting your contributions and impact and quantifying them as much as possible. The question doesn't really call for analysis or insight or information about your motiviations and lessons learned. That's for the "real" essays.

Good luck!
September 20, 2007 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Hi Linda,
Thanks for the quick response.
So the first two essays don't really fit into the overall 'picture' that I'm trying to paint? In question 2 where I am listing my career to date, do I just write it out in chronological order?

Thanks
September 25, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterRaul
Everything fits into the overall picture you are trying to create. Certainly the facts of your current and recent jobs are an important part of the mosaic.

Linda
October 2, 2007 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Hi Linda,
I have been running my own business for the last eight years.
In the main application, how do I state my salary ?
My renumeration is judged on the turnover on my Company. So will it do if I were to state my company's GTO instead.
October 9, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterKM
I'm not sure what GTO means . Revenue?

You need to state your income ie, what you use personally after business expenses are paid by the company.

Good luck!
October 18, 2007 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Hi Linda,

I have been wait-listed at INSEAD. Is there something I should be doing on my part to increase my chances for converting the wait-list to an Admit? Should I be pushing any updates to my profile (I recently received a promotion and a salary hike)?

Please advise.

Regards,

Tarun Kumar Vatwani
December 26, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterTarun Vatwani
Hi Linda,

Thanks for the response. INSEAD did ask me to confirm whether I would like to be on the wait-list or not.

Regards,

Tarun Kumar Vatwani
December 27, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterTarun Vatwani
Hi Linda,

I did go through the chat transcripts and found them really helpful in planning my next course of action.

After I submitted my application, I did have some new developments on my end. I was recognized for the significant contribution to the arrangement of Indian festivities at the company premises. I even received a promotion as a Group Leader way ahead of the stipulated duration of employment with the company. The promotion is a recognition of my expertise and management abilities in the office space.

INSEAD has a limitation of two recommendations. Owing to this limitation, I opted for recommendations from my immediate supervisor and project manager who (I believe) had provided valuable feedback over my performance in the profession so as to keep me in the race for Sep 2008. As part of my plan of action for strengthening my profile among the pool of wait-listed candidates, I would like to submit another recommendation from a Project Manager with whom I worked for more than a year, but who is not my direct supervisor.

1. Will it offend the Ad-Com if I provide an additional recommendation?

2. The additional recommendation will be from a non-Indian (French-Jew) with whom I worked with in France at the customer location. Will this help in enforcing my adaptability of working in a multi-cultural setting?

Please advise.

Tarun Kumar Vatwani
December 28, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterTarun Vatwani
Take advantage of the need to confirm your interest in remaining on the waitlist to tell them of growth/promotions/achievements since you applied.

If INSEAD says that they want no additional material, then ask your project manager not to submit a 3rd rec or letter of support. If they don't explicitly say not to provide that letter and you feel the 3rd letter will add to their information about your qualifications and provide a different perspective, then take the risk and don't stop your project mgr from submitting an unsolicited letter of support.

Good luck!
December 30, 2007 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Thanks.

Regards,

Tarun Kumar Vatwani
December 30, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterTarun Vatwani

Hi Linda,

Do you feel it is better for an applicant to apply in the first round of an intake or is any round equally good. For most schools, all rounds but the last are quoted to be equally competitive. The last round being more-so competitive.

For the August intake at INSEAD, per the chat, all 4 rounds are quoted as equally competitive. In your experience have you found this to be the case?

Thanks in advance for your thoughts on this.

Regards,

J.
January 4, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJayG
J.

If you are from a over-represented cohort in the application pool, then you are better off applying in an earlier round for a given intake. If you are from an under-represented group, then you can take INSEAD at its word.

In almost all cases, you want to apply when your application is ready or again, I quote "Linda's Rule: Apply as early as possible PROVIDED you don't compromise the quality of your application."

Good luck!
Linda
January 10, 2008 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Hi!
I just went through the two stages prior to decision by INSEAD-R2-July 2009. I want to know my real opportunity here in percentage terms:
How many people apply for each round in average?
How many people is pre-selected for interview in average?
How many people that were selected and then interview enters INSEAD, in average?

Thanks in advance

Rafael
January 31, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterE. Rafael Sánchez S.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.