MBA Grants

Laid off? Five pointers IT Applicants Should Consider

Laid off? Five pointers IT Applicants Should Consider

Since October of this year, over 60,000 tech workers have been laid off. Kellogg Northwestern stated in November 2022 that it will waive the GMAT and GRE tests for laid-off IT professionals. Other top business schools have followed suit in order to attract the market's flow of elite talent. For newly laid-off individuals, MIT Sloan and Berkeley Haas have extended round-two deadlines. Cornell Johnson is waiving the application cost and the application test. And, for its January 4th deadline, UCLA Anderson reduced the application procedure to just one essay question, as well as extensions for test scores and recommenders. So, how can you prepare to submit a competitive, yet timely, round two application in four to six weeks? Here are five pointers for IT applicants considering an MBA.

4 Trends Changing the MBA Application Over the Last Decade

4 Trends Changing the MBA Application Over the Last Decade

Fewer and shorter essays, increased gender equality, and the popularity of the GRE testing (instead of the GMAT) are just a few of the developments in MBA admissions that might be informative for today's applicants. The types of MBA applicants schools are looking for and what makes them stand out have undergone significant changes. In this blog post we talk about how business school applications have changed over the past ten years and how these patterns affect the way you should approach your MBA application today.

HBS's New Full-Tuition Scholarship

HBS's New Full-Tuition Scholarship

The students with the highest financial need—roughly 10% of the student body—will get full-tuition scholarships as a result of increased financial assistance money that HBS is unveiling. The school will also extend more need-based scholarships to students from middle-class families. In this blog post, we will talk about how this came about and what this means if you’re applying to HBS.