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50+ Successful Wharton Business School Essays: Successful Application Essays - Gain Entry to the World's Top Business Schools
Contributor(s): Lewis, Bredesen R. (Author)
ISBN: 061560658X     ISBN-13: 9780615606583
Publisher: Lewis
OUR PRICE:   $23.74  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: July 2012
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Education | Secondary
Dewey: 650.071
Physical Information: 0.33" H x 7.01" W x 10" (0.61 lbs) 152 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Gain access to top MBA programs like Wharton, Harvard, and Stanford. See successful MBA application essays that gained access to Wharton. Learn to refine your personal message and powerfully put across your story for business school Admissions Committees. Applying to business school is a long, arduous and at times frustrating process. It is difficult to control where you were born and have lived, what undergraduate school you attended, the GPA you got, and the job you have done for half of a decade. What is exceptional about business school is that the lessons you have learned and your personal "story" matter tremendously. What differentiates you from all of the other applicants is your ability to convincingly paint this portrait. You must be able to convey the core of who you are, your specific experiences and the insights you have had. Top business schools such as Wharton, Harvard and Stanford are looking for a diverse student body that represents the society and world we live in. This means leaders in fields from industry, to start-ups, to nonprofits. As anyone who is deeply involved in the business school application process knows, there is a large business that has sprung up around getting you into a top school. That some applicants pay thousands of dollars while others may not be able to can distort the essence of an application in search of a perceived ideal that no longer exists. 50+ Successful Wharton Business School Essays is designed to provide examples of successful essays that demonstrate the diversity of experiences people have had and portray the commonalities in self-reflection and personal growth that admissions committees are looking for.