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How to differentiate myself from the competition?

Welcome to F1GMAT’s #askAtulJose series. In today’s episode, I will cover how to differentiate yourself from the competition.

1) Emotional Intelligence

I could see a remarkably common trait among Stanford MBA admits in just the first call. There is a certain vulnerability that comes across. Although the applicant has an impressive career progression and client appreciation letter/awards as proof, there is still some doubt whether they are Stanford MBA material. And this doubt and emotional intelligence to reflect and find one’s vulnerable moments help humanize their journey. They are open to ideas. When presented with the idea of rewriting essays or approaching recommenders, they have a calm and persistent way of problem-solving. There is no panic. The essays have expressions of disappointment and hurt, but the overall tone is optimistic. They want to change the world.

2) Commitment to Work

This is not a cool thing to say, but applicants who get into M7 schools are workaholics. Everybody is to a certain degree. For these applicants, there is a clear direction and purpose in how they approach the problems. The most obvious differentiating factor is that they don’t deprioritize their work while writing or rewriting essays or preparing for the GMAT/GRE. It is always their personal time that is sacrificed. And this is evident in one form or the other in how the recommenders highlight certain traits. Consistently, their ownership of tasks/projects and client needs are mentioned in the recommendation letter.

3) Creating Opposite Stereotypes

American Investment bankers, Indian IT professionals, and Chinese manufacturing or real-estate applicant all have certain stereotypes in how they approach problem-solving. These stereotypes are overrepresented in any application pool. So, it is very easy for schools to eliminate certain applicants if their essays convey this stereotype.

There are certain stereotypes even in extracurricular – Indian applicants actively involved in Cricket and their college festival. American applicant with half-marathon and marathons. Chinese applicants trained in Violin from childhood. These are all stereotypes. And even if you have other differentiating experiences and traits, these stereotypes take the attention away from your unique experiences.

Applicants who differentiated themselves had a deep awareness of these stereotypes and shortlisted achievements, volunteering, and extracurricular accordingly for the resume. They created unique narratives and, while interviewing, maintained consistency in stories that matched their personal brand.

I hope you have a clear understanding of how to differentiate from the competition for MBA application:
1) Demonstrate Emotional Intelligence
2) Show commitment to work
3) Create stereotype opposites before starting the application.

For help in standing out from your competition with the resume, essays, and recommendation letters, reach out to me, Atul Jose

About Atul Jose

Atul Jose is the Founding Consultant at F1GMAT who has helped applicants get into M7 and Top 30 Global MBA programs over the past 14+ years. He is the author of the Winning MBA Essay Guide and the host of the Winning MBA Admission Tips Podcast.

 

About the Author 

Atul Jose - Founding Consultant F1GMAT

I am Atul Jose - the Founding Consultant at F1GMAT.

Over the past 15 years, I have helped MBA applicants gain admissions to Harvard, Stanford, Wharton, MIT, Chicago Booth, Kellogg, Columbia, Haas, Yale, NYU Stern, Ross, Duke Fuqua, Darden, Tuck, IMD, London Business School, INSEAD, IE, IESE, HEC Paris, McCombs, Tepper, and schools in the top 30 global MBA ranking. 

I offer end-to-end Admissions Consulting and editing services – Career Planning, Application Essay Editing & Review, Recommendation Letter Editing, Interview Prep, assistance in finding funds and Scholarship Essay & Cover letter editing. See my Full Bio.

Contact me for support in school selection, career planning, essay strategy, narrative advice, essay editing, interview preparation, scholarship essay editing and guiding supervisors with recommendation letter guideline documents

I am also the Author of the Winning MBA Essay Guide, covering 16+ top MBA programs with 240+ Sample Essays that I have updated every year since 2013 (11+ years. Phew!!)

I am an Admissions consultant who writes and edits Essays every year. And it is not easy to write good essays. 

Contact me for any questions about MBA or Master's application. I would be happy to answer them all