Deferred MBA Program
Most of the top business schools offer some sort of deferred admissions initiative where you are accepted to the school and have somewhere between 2-5 years to actually begin the program. I am determined to get an MBA somewhere down the line and believe this is a fair way to break in.
I know the deferred admissions program is aimed at STEM students as they wouldn't usually get an MBA down the line, but I see that over 20% of people who are accepted are Economics majors and pursuing careers in finance.
I'm a rising junior at a non-target school (I am also a straight asian male) who was fortunate enough to lock down a SA stint for next summer at a BB and have a fair amount of time on my hands now. Applications open for this deferred program in the first semester of senior year so I have a bit of time. I plan to start studying for the GMATs soon and am curious to hear if I have a shot at breaking into HBS, Wharton, or GSB given my non-target background (I have a good GPA and good extracurriculars and on-campus involvement).
Thank you in advance!
Curious about this as well! Is it a good idea to apply to one of the deferred MBA programs if you want to start out in IB but are not sure about your long term plan? Most people that I know who went to B-school wanted a career change. At this point, I am not really sure if I want to stay in IB long term. Are there any advantages of applying to the deferred programs as opposed to the regular application process? Thanks!
As you mentioned earlier, these schools are targeting STEM majors. They do take IB/PE/Consultants with Econ degrees but usually from HYP. Business/Econ majors are a minority at Stanford in their general class profile so i doubt it gets better for deferred. In terms of H/S and to some extend W, MBBs are way more prestigious than IB and they look at consulting experience more favorably than IB. Also being an Asian male is not gonna help you in any way so if I were, I would get 4.0 and 780 GMAT and get GS FT and then you might have a shot.
Is MBB consulting really viewed as way more prestigious than a top BB?
Yes but cuz of 2 mains reasons: a. MBB take far fewer people at undergrad level compared to Banks. b. Their recruiting process is way more selective than Goldman or other top banks since banks might take a good amount of non targets but that number is in low single digits at MBB. Also they have a very high GPA/SAT/ACT requirement than Banks. Also the core of the work is not as money-grabbingish as finance since you are helping companies and clients grow and what not even tho same people end up doing PE.
the pure unpleasantness of this post
MS all you want and keeping sucking your own on how prestigious IB is
How selective are MBBs compared to top EB/BBs?
For McKinsey, they receive over 300k apps and they pick around 3000 for first round and then less than half of those get to the second round and then the offers are extended to less than half of those. So you are left with a class of around 500 across the globe which includes both BA(UG) and Associate(MBA)
I'd say they're both difficult for different reasons so its not really fair to compare. I think MBB is much more "merit based" (strong resume) in terms of getting a first round if you are a target and its much harder to get into from a non-target, and their target school list is also smaller and more prestigious. Banking you can have lower resume strength but requires a ton more networking to get into a first round. Both difficult, but in different ways.
Seems like a controversial opinion but I completely agree
...
Definitely will be an uphill battle. At the end of the day, you’re in an over-represented group, within a major and career path that is not prioritized in deferred admissions.
Not impossible, however. Couple of my colleagues are “2+2”ers that were on traditional paths. You need to have a tremendous story (which you either do, or you don’t) that ties into your long-term goals, career paths, and the prospective mba programs.
You need to have been extremely active on and off campus with evidence of impact and leadership.
You need very strong, sincere recommendations. And, obviously, you need great GPA/GMAT.
The Wharton deferred process is significantly less competitive than H/S (numbers games). So I do think if you check a lot of those boxes above, you could have a good shot despite being a traditional student. For Harvard, and especially Stanford, you have to be extraordinary to break into deferred from your background.
Now, if I was competitive enough to have a shot at these programs as an undergrad, I probably wouldn’t lock in a wharton offer 2-4 years early. But that’s another story.
It really sucks to be asian huh :(
Quarter of my BB group is Asian
Curious to gain perspective, why did some of your friends who were in traditional paths apply to deferred MBA programs? I'm a junior right now, I'm interested to understand why people try out grad schools when they have their traditional paths set out, and what reasons do they give grad schools for their "Why MBA"?
From what I've been reading on WSO, seems like MBA is more useful for networking and branding, but you'd obviously not give that reason in interviews right?
If you don't mind me asking. What constitutes a great GPA? Would a 3.8/3.9 at a state school be enough or do I need closer to 3.95+?
Wondering if I were to apply to the deferred program and then get denied, would that hurt my chances 4/5 years later if I decided to re-apply?
There websites state that "previous applications will have no effect on new applications" so i'm assuming no
Gotcha, appreciate the info
interested
this is such garbage LOL; admit here to mit deferred (albeit not HSW) and literally 50%+ of the class is MBB/BB/IB/EBIB with an econ or finance background. what is said is so far from what actually happens so shoot your shot since you have great experience
Curious to gain perspective, why did you apply to deferred MBA programs? I'm a junior right now, I'm interested to understand why people try out grad schools when they have their traditional paths set out, and what reasons do they give grad schools for their "Why MBA"?
From what I've been reading on WSO, seems like MBA is more useful for networking and branding, but you'd obviously not give that reason in interviews right?
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