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2 Questions to Improve Believability of post-MBA Goals

Many times, applicants trying to be contrarian share their post-MBA goal where the industry or the function is unique. They think that by doing so, the Business School will pay attention. I have noticed this pattern among applicants from competitive demographic like American Investment bankers or Indian IT professionals, or VC analysts.

Don’t use this strategy.

Before framing your post-MBA goal, ask these two questions:

1) Is your post-MBA career path too unique for your profile?

There are niche roles, functions, and even transitions that are not possible with an MBA. The first reason is that you don’t have a history of taking on such roles. Nor do you have shown a temperament for taking on such ambitious post-MBA roles.

For example, for someone transitioning from a highly analytical technology role to an equally analytical VC role, the post-MBA goal is feasible if you have domain expertise in a FinTech project or have expressed an understanding of investments and strategic fund allocation through your extracurricular or volunteering.

No school is expecting a 5-year experienced professional to have incredible experiences in their professional life, but there will be sparks of potential in the applicant’s story based on career progression, volunteering, and extracurricular.

If what you are aiming for is completely different from anything you have ever done personally or professionally, don’t mention it as your short-term post-MBA goal. In reality, you might end up getting that role post-MBA, but for admissions, don’t use that goal.

2) Is your target post-MBA job function and industry represented as a single-digit percentage

Let us say that you are targeting the retail industry, but according to the latest or the past two employment reports, the school’s retail placement as an industry is only 6%, and the school’s placement into a General Management function is 5%. Now in your post-MBA goal, if you mention that you want to enter a General Management function in the retail industry and you are not from the industry, then your post-MBA feasibility goes down drastically. No matter how much you build a narrative around how you will add value to that industry, the school just won’t buy your story.

So, as a rule of thumb, look at the % placed into an industry and function post-MBA. At least one of them should be in double-digit representation.

I hope you got value from the tip. You can reach out to me, Atul Jose for help with application essays, career planning, interview prep, and strategies to get into M7 and other top global MBA programs.

About the Author 

Atul Jose

I am Atul Jose, Founding Consultant of F1GMAT, an MBA admissions consultancy that has worked with applicants since 2009.

 

For the past 15 years I have edited the application files of admits to the M7 programs: Harvard Business School, Stanford Graduate School of Business, the Wharton School, MIT Sloan, Chicago Booth, Kellogg School of Management, and Columbia Business School, together with admits to Berkeley Haas, Yale School of Management, NYU Stern, Michigan Ross, Duke Fuqua, Darden, Tuck, IMD, London Business School, INSEAD, SDA Bocconi, IESE Business School, HEC Paris, McCombs, and Tepper, plus other programs inside the global top 30.

 

My work covers the full MBA application deliverable: career planning and profile evaluation, application essay editing, recommendation letter editing, mock interviews and interview preparation, scholarship and fellowship essay editing, and cover letter editing for funding applications. Full bio with credentials and admit history is here.

 

I am the author of the Winning MBA Essay Guide, the best-selling essay guide covering M7 MBA programs. I have written and updated the guide annually since 2013, which makes the 2026 edition the thirteenth.

 

The reason I still write and edit essays every cycle: a good MBA essay carries a real applicant's voice. Writing essays for F1GMAT's Books and Editing essays weekly is how I stay calibrated to what current admissions committees respond to.

 

Contact me for school selection, career planning, essay strategy, narrative development, essay editing, interview preparation, scholarship essay editing, or guidance documents for recommendation letters.