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Georgetown McDonough 2010 MBA Application Questions, Deadlines, Tips. 

Georgetown McDonough 2010 MBA Essay Questions

My comments are in red:

All essays should be double-spaced using 10 point font. Prepare your attachments offline in separate document files and upload them individually. Please follow the instructions regarding length of each attachment, and label each page with your name.

ESSAY ONE (Required) - Limit: 750 words
A) What position do you plan to obtain upon graduation from the MBA program? Please include both industry and function in your explanation.
B) How will the combination of your past experiences and the Georgetown MBA position you for this new opportunity?
C) Please describe how you envision your career progression beyond your initial post-MBA position.

NEW- This is a goals question broken down into more specific sub-questions than last year's. It remains a straightforward, connect-the-dots MBA goals question.  Click on the link for tips on writing an essay that both distinctly reflects You and demonstrates your knowledge of Georgetown.)

 ESSAY TWO (Required) - Limit: 750 words
A) What does leadership mean to you? What are the personal characteristics and skills required to be an effective leader?
B) Provide a specific example of when you demonstrated leadership skills. Describe a challenge that you faced and the results that you achieved.
C) What areas do you wish to develop in order to become a more effective leader?

Again, similar to last year's question, but more specific.  There are several critical elements to this question: Your definition of leadership, your personal example of leadership, the challenge you faced, the impact you had, and how you would like to develop further. Don't feel compelled to respond in exactly the order given in the questions; just make sure you answer all elements.

ESSAY THREE (Required) - Limit: 750 words
How will your classmates benefit from your presence in the Georgetown MBA program?

What talents are you going to bring to Georgetown, and where to you intend to contribute them? Do your homework on McDonough before you answer the question. What clubs will you want to participate in? What initiatives will you want to take? This a great essay in which to show both self-awareness and your knowledge of Georgetown.

ESSAY FOUR: COMMUNITY CONTRIBUTIONS - Limit: one page
A) Please provide a bulleted list of your post-undergraduate involvement in the community. Indicate the nature of the activity or organization, dates of involvement, offices held, and average number of hours spent each month.
B) What motivates you to continue contributing to the community? Limit: 250 words

A is a list and not an essay, but in your description focus on achievement, contribution, and impact. If you were membership chair of a particular organization, don't just list "Membership Chair." Also note that membership increased 20% during the year that you were membership chair.

B is a short essay and you don't have a lot of room. Discuss your motivations and reference your past or ongoing community service.

OPTIONAL ESSAY ONE - Limit: 500 words
If you are not currently employed full-time, use this space to provide information about your current activities.

Please see "Laid off! How Will It Affect Your Application"

OPTIONAL ESSAY TWO - Limit 500 words
Please provide any information you would like to add to your application that you have not addressed elsewhere.

If you don't need to address any of the issues suggested above, please see "The Optional Question: To Be or Not to Be."

For help with your McDonough MBA application, please consider Accepted.com's MBA essay editing and admissions consulting or one of our Georgetown Comprehensive Packages.

Georgetown McDonough 2010 MBA Deadlines

  Application Deadline Decision Notification
Round 1 November 1, 2009 January 15, 2009
Round 2 January 2, 2009 March 25, 2009
Round 3 March 20, 2009 May 14, 2009

 

*Students wishing to be considered for merit-based scholarships should apply no later than round 2.
**International students are strongly encouraged to apply by round 2 in order to have sufficient time to secure a student visa.

MBA Admissions: Responses to MBA Applicant Blog Posts

I stumbled across a couple of posts by new MBA bloggers. One blogger is about to start b-school, and one wants to apply. My thoughts on two of their posts:

  • In "My first Blog - Who am I" and Why do I want to do an MBA?, The Man Who Thinks He Can explores his reasons for pursuing an MBA. I hope he won't take offense, but he really needs to sharpen his reasons. Detesting his current and previous jobs, as described in the first post, is a terrible reason to apply to business school. The reasons he lists in Why do I want to do an MBA? are at least positive, but they are not specific enough. His post-MBA goal should detail more than "a better network" or the possibility of getting an "enjoyable and well paid job." What kind of job does he want after his MBA? In what industry? Doing what? For most programs, direction and purpose is part of the admissions evaluation. He says that blogging is helping him clarify his thinking, and I hope it continues to do so.
  • At the other end of the process sits Stratcase who has been accepted to b-school and offers suggestions to consultants about the MBA admissions process. I strongly agree with this piece of advice: "try to find a speciality." If you are a "consultant," you are just like all the consultants out there. However if you are an environmental consultant, or a health care consultant, or a process improvement consultant, there are fewer of you applying to business school. That modifier distinguishes you and helps you stand out from the crowd. Obviously, your work experience has to substantiate the title, but if it does, use it. For more tips on applying from consulting to business school, please see:

Take the MBA Admissions Survey!

We'd like to hear from you!

As a member of the Association of International Graduate Admissions Consultants (AIGAC), we are conducting a survey to help us better understand MBA applicants’ goals and needs.  If you are or will be an MBA applicant, we invite you to share your priorities and views on the MBA application process. 

This online survey should take just 10 minutes to complete.  We would love to receive as many responses as possible before the closing date of Friday, March 20, 2009 - and AIGAC will be giving away an iPod Touch and two iPod Shuffles as a token of our gratitude! 

Thanks in advance for your participation!

Simply click here to begin. 

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Your Tough Admission Decisions

This is the time of year when applicants—the “lucky” ones, that is—often have to make some difficult decisions. Take the quandary posted by Omne at his blog, Omne’s MBA Journey. In a nutshell, Omne has been admitted by Wake Forest with a full-ride scholarship and waitlisted at UNC and Georgetown. He must give Wake Forest an answer by April 1, but is holding out hope that higher-ranked Kenan-Flagler and/or McDonough Georgetown will admit him off the wait list and offer him some dough. Their admit/deny decisions will be announced March 23, but their scholarship decisions won’t come until after April 1. Should he take the sure thing or reject Wake Forest in the hopes that UNC and/or Georgetown (assuming they admit him) offer him money? How do you weigh the value of free ride at a lower-ranked MBA against the potential brand and ROI advantages of a higher-ranked MBA that leaves you in the hole financially at graduation?

Well, first you can try to weigh it by the numbers.  MBAs from Georgetown and UNC make about $94,000-95,000 right out of school, whereas Wake Forest MBAs pull in about $79,000. So right off the bat, some of the tuition money Omne is saving may well be sacrificed in lower income. BusinessWeek recently looked at MBA’s pay 20 years after earning their degrees at the top 45 schools. Georgetown and UNC MBAs were making about $161,000. Though Wake Forest does not appear in BusinessWeek’s study, it seems reasonable to assume that Wake Forest MBAs generally make less than the lowest-ranked schools in BW’s study, which ranged between $108,000 and the mid-$120,000s. Complicating this numbers analysis is the cost-of-living factor—some regions pay more than others, but then they cost more to live in too. Still, by this financial barometer, the income gap between Omne’s Wake Forest MBA and an MBA from UNC or Georgetown will only widen over his career—overwhelming whatever he may have saved by getting a free ride at Wake Forest.

And earning his MBA from higher-ranked B-schools like Georgetown and UNC may offer brand advantages—such as better name recognition in job markets outside these schools’ region—that Wake Forest can’t compete with. By that same token, if Omne’s ideal job market is Winston-Salem, NC, then Wake Forest and it’s free MBA may be his best all-round choice. But there are other complexities to consider, such as Omne’s preferred employer post-MBA. If he wants to join Bank of America, both UNC and Wake Forest are good choices, but Georgetown’s arguably the better bet if he wants to join Citigroup. And you can bet there will be local employers in Winston-Salem for whom a Wake Forest MBA will give Omne the inside track.

Omne needs to run the numbers, ask himself where he wants to spend his career geographically, which industry he’s set on and which employers he most wants to work for. When he does that, Wake Forest could pull closer to UNC and Georgetown in overall “payoff” (both material and personal). But strictly in terms of salary, an MBA from UNC and Georgetown with a partial scholarship looks like the better choice than a free-ride MBA from Wake Forest.

At this point in time to maintain flexibility, it may make most sense for Omne to pay the deposit at Wake Forest and keep his spot. If he is accepted at UNC or Georgetown and determines that the benefits of a UNC or Georgetown education are so great that he will forgo the full ride, they are probably great enough also to lose the deposit. Just chalk it up to the cost of an MBA education.

Paul Bodine is Senior Editor at Accepted.com and author of “Great Application Essays for Business School” and “Perfect Phrases for Business School Acceptance.”

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4 Tips for Proofing Your Prose

Tons of deadlines this month, and I meant to post these tips earlier in the week. Time got away from me. Please use these techniques for essays with upcoming deadlines.

  1. Give yourself a break. Put the application away for a day, overnight, several hours, or at least a coffee break. (More is better, but don't miss the deadline.)
  2. Print out the essay or any document that you want to proof. For some reason, changing the medium helps to restore your critical perspective.
  3. Change your location when you proof. Move to an easy chair or to the kitchen table. Anywhere but where you have been writing and editing forever.
  4. Read the essays out loud. E-nun-ciating. Reading aloud will automatically slow you down and prevent you from skimming. Additionally, your ear will catch awkward sentences and errors that your eye alone may miss.

If you want professional editing that saves you time, please check out Accepted.com's professional personal statement and application essay editing.

 

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