First Real Day of Essays

I have to be honest, I've been putting today off. I have read blogs and my "How to Get Into.." etc book on marketing yourself and positioning, but I hadn't yet sat down, outlined what I need to say, and started putting it into essays.

Today, I started. Despite the beautiful Southern California day, the offers of friends to go to the movies/beach/etc...I started.

It was kind of a hot and cold situation. I started by outlining my accomplishments, stats, and other details, then broke it down into the key stories that I feel I should make sure I tell the adcom. I have to say, seeing it all down on the page made me feel better about being able to make a good case for my admission. I decided that I would group my essay writing efforts by schools, not by essays of similar type for different schools, because I want to make sure each group is truly focused towards the particular school.

So, I took my lists of stories and stats and started to try to fit it into my first set of prompts - Wharton, in my case. This is where it gets a little less fun. Wharton happens to offer a tough set of questions for my particular list. Some of theirs aren't as "comfortable" - or maybe they just make it harder to provide them with nothing but shameless self-promotion - but anyway, it was tough to fit in all of my points.

I honestly still haven't figured out how I'm going to structure it. I'm going back and forth about an idea that I have to answer the question about adapting to people with different perspectives - I'm not entirely sure if the story I'm thinking of answers the question completely enough. I'm going to run the idea by a few people and see if I'm being creative or just crazy.

I will say that I feel better about having this problem than about the problem I was afraid I would have. I think part of why I had been putting this off is because I was terrified that I would sit down and not have the stories or accomplishments (because I haven't done enough) to give convincing answers. I am a little stuck on fitting said answers into the requested prompts, but it's a much more fixable problem!

5 comments:

  1. Accepted editor Tanis Kmetyk commented on your post at http://blog.accepted.com/acceptedcom_blog/2009/7/20/mba-applicant-doing-it-right.html .

    Keep up the good work.

     
  2. I really feel your agony, last Sunday I have finally started with the Wharton App as well and the questions are particularly tough. sometimes the answer to each of them is a minor anecdote in your life but they way the questions are written, one feels that if you have not improved your stamina to resist a full blown marathon, then nothing will answer question 4.

    My school list looks exactly the same as yours except I want to apply to Stanford instead of Cornell

    Take Care and feel free to contact me if you need to share the grind

     
  3. Linda - thanks so much, I really appreciated that info!

    vanished - it's great to know that you understand. it's always nice to know someone is in a similar place!

     
  4. Okay I've a question. I don't have my GMAT but I gave GRE back in 2005 which makes is still valid for 2010 admissions.
    Do you think I've a real chance at applying into the top b school which have started accepting GREs? :-/

    Syed

     
  5. Syed - i'm sorry to say that i took the gmat, so i haven't done any research into the impact of the gre or which schools accept it. best of luck to you.