Showing posts with label B-School Preparation Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label B-School Preparation Tips. Show all posts

21 April 2015

Strategic Tips on How to Crack GD-PI of Top B-Schools

Most of you would have successfully managed to clear through the maze of several MBA entrance exams such as CAT, XAT, IIFT, CMAT, SNAP and other exams and now staring at a seemingly terrifying session of GD/PI ahead. Yes the process is tough, the panelists are extremely learned people who pick out the best for their college. Though it may be intimidating at first, a little practice and a lot of preparation can take you through. 

Here are 10 points that can make sure that you have a smooth sailing ahead.

1) Know Thyself
The importance of this cannot be stressed enough. Know yourself, your strengths, weakness, specialties and shortcomings and have a reason for any particular answer.


2) Tell about Thyself
Prepare a very solid answer to tell me about myself. Cover things like your family background education, work experience, extra circulars, hobbies and also why an MBA.

18 April 2015

Puzzle on Liner Equation - There are four groups of Mangoes, Apples and Bananas

Question:  There are four groups of Mangoes, Apples and Bananas as follows:
Group I : 1 Mango, 1 Apples and 1 Banana
Group II : 1 Mango, 5 Apples and 7 Bananas
Group III : 1 Mango, 7 Apples and 10 Bananas
Group IV : 9 Mango, 23 Apples and 30 Bananas

Group II costs Rs 300 and Group III costs Rs 390.

Can you tell how much does Group I and Group IV cost?

Answer:    Group I costs Rs 120 and Group IV costs Rs 1710

Solution: 

Assume that the values of one mango, one apple and one banana are M, A and B respectively.

From Group II : M + 5A + 7B = 300
From Group III : M + 7A + 10B = 390

Subtracting above to equations : 2A + 3B = 90

For Group I :
= M + A + B
= (M + 5A + 7B) - (4A + 6B)
= (M + 5A + 7B) - 2(2A + 3B)
= 300 - 2(90)
= 300 - 180
= 120

Similarly, for Group IV :
= 9M + 23A + 30B
= 9(M + 5A + 7B) - (22A + 33B)
= 9(M + 5A + 7B) - 11(2A + 3B)
= 9(300) - 11(90)
= 2700 - 990
= 1710

Thus, Group I costs Rs 120 and Group IV costs Rs 1710.










14 April 2015

Tips to Write Best Statement of Purpose (SOP) for MBA Admission Interviews

The SOP is the first opportunity to talk directly to the admissions committee, to make you stand out from among a pool of similarly qualified candidates, to convince the committee that you have the spark, the thirst for knowledge that could add value to your class. SOP gives you a wonderful platform to highlight the best in you. When you apply, each of the parameters in the application viz., Letter of recommendations, extra-curricular achievements, and work profile - adds an extra dimension to your personality. But it is the SOP that brings your candidature to life – which is why each essay is read carefully by at least two and often four or five people before a decision is taken on your application.

Understanding SOP:

The Statement of Purpose is your personal statement about who you are, what has influenced your career path so far, what your professional interests are and where you plan to go from here. You are required to highlight your purpose of pursuing management career, reasons of choosing a particular institute you are applying to and skills that you have gained till date. A perfect combination of all these makes an ideal SOP.



How to write a SOP:

a)    Identify the objective: Usually the purpose is to persuade the admissions committee that you are an applicant they should choose. You may want to show that you have the ability and motivation to succeed in life or you may want to show the committee that you are the kind of candidate who will do well in the business management.

b)    Prepare a Structure: Right structure of the SOP will guide your thoughts through out the essay. It makes great sense to prepare a skeleton first and then add the flesh.

c)    Identify your achievements: While highlighting different skills, you should mention your achievements and describe how they have helped you in making the person you are.

d)    Identify the major setbacks in your professional life and the learning from them: Having some setbacks in careers in common, but what you learn from them and how you improve after that is more important.

e)    Make it Unique: The people who read your application have been doing so for years and are skilled at spotting fakes. Your SOP should reflect the real you – so do not borrow it from someone.

The Don’ts:

a)    Do not be verbose: Using jargons may make the panel read your SOP; but getting your ideas right is possibly more important and hence using the right words is crucial.

b)    Do not cross your word limit: If it’s, let’s say, 800 words, keep your SOP around 700 to 830 words.

c)    Do not over praise the institute: Highlight the advantages that the institute provides as compared to another institute of same standard but be sure when to stop.

d)    Do not try to pretend: Do not try to tell the admissions committee what you think they want to hear. Be honest, look inside yourself and do your best.

e)    Do not try to justify your under performances: Rather try to share the learning from your failures.

Preparing ten to twelve drafts over a period is common as writing your Statement of Purpose (SOP) is a long and intensive process. It is necessary to put in this hard work to come up with something that is uniquely yourself, and which convinces the admissions committee that you are right for their school. This is a great opportunity to look inside yourself and be rewarded by a better understanding of who you are and what you want.


By - Hitesh Devalia
Team Endeavor

The author is COO, Endeavor Careers Pvt. Ltd., and a versatile CAT/GMAT trainer.