Where to Apply - MBA Applications Strategy

The value of an MBA from a top school is indisputable. Therefore, you should give yourself the best chance for success by putting as much effort as possible into your applications. But first, you need to evaluate your personal strengths and weaknesses to determine which schools are your best fit.

Where to apply

From the US to Asia to Europe and other locations, you have a number of business school options. We recommend that you consider where you want to be before beginning the actual application. Schools have their own particular atmospheres, particular climates, geographies, cultures, in addition to having unique curricula, expertise, and ranking. Before simply applying to highest-ranking schools according to U. S. News and World Report or Business Week or the Financial Times, take a moment and consider the following questions.

Where would you like to spend a few years? Often the pursuit of prestige or the attempt to be accepted at the highest ranked school possible (though important in some respects), gets in the way of selecting a school that is right for you. What areas would you like to specialize in? How do you learn best? Do you prefer teamwork to working alone or vice versa? Are there individuals at a particular school with whom you are interested in interacting? What are my chances of getting in?

Take time to consider your options. For example, Joanne is interested in the following criteria: (1) class size, (2) rank, (3) curriculum, (4) length of study, (5) location (East coast), and (6) expertise in finance. In order to measure her options in an organized fashion, she selects several business schools and inputs their characteristics in a chart.

You should weigh carefully what a school offers both academically and environmentally. This may require some degree of thought and research as to how MBA programs are related to your professional and personal inclinations.

We do not recommend applying to too many programs. The crafting of too many applications can act as a hindrance on your own ability to create customized applications for each program. In addition, every application incurs a financial cost. However, how many is too many will vary from applicant to applicant.

Site Search
Next Events
Free Monthly Workshops - GMAT & Top MBA -Major Global Cities & Online
Manhattan Review Blog
Forum
Manhattan Review Videos
Testimonial
Thanks for all your help, and the solutions you sent. I just thought I would let you know that I took the GMAT exam today and scored 720. I am thinking of going to INSEAD for a 1-year course beginning January 2003. I thank you for your help and wish you all the very best for the future.
-Michael B. (This student took our GMAT crash course.)


Manhattan Review test preparation courses and services help students achieve better scores with our proven methods. We offer GMAT, TOEFL, SAT, ACT, GRE, and LSAT preparation classes and tutoring. Our store sells GMAT guides, GMAT official guides, TOEFL Guides, Online practice tests, and more. We also offer MBA admissions consulting, Law school admissions consulting and graduate school admissions consulting. To help you get into Columbia, Harvard, Stanford, Yale and other top business schools, law schools and graduate schools, let our expert consultants review your essays, resume, personal statement and application.