letters of recommendation

10 Strategies for Obtaining Outstanding MBA Recommendation Letters

10 Strategies for Obtaining Outstanding MBA Recommendation Letters

You will need compelling recommendation letters to get admission to the top most competitive business schools. If you are enrolling for an MBA, you should get reference letters from your most supportive mentors. These letters aid the application process by making you seem more human. We'll outline ten tips in this blog to assist you in getting a stellar MBA recommendation letter.

Letters Of Recommendation: When You Can't Ask Your Current Boss. Now what?

Letters Of Recommendation: When You Can't Ask Your Current Boss. Now what?

What happens if your current workplace does not support you going off to business school? If your current boss is unwilling to write you a letter of recommendation? Or you just can't ask them because it might jeopardize your current work situation? Well, this actually happens a lot. Luckily, we have five reasons and resolutions for this.

THE IDEAL LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION SCENARIO

THE IDEAL LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION SCENARIO

What MBA applicants should be doing right now (earlier on in the application process) and without letting the cat out of the bag, approach your boss. Only do this if you think your boss is going to be receptive to you applying to business school. Gage to see how supportive they are and if they would provide you an LOR.

Waiving Your Right to View Your Recommendation Letter

Waiving Your Right to View Your Recommendation Letter

Curiosity killed the cat, and it can kill your MBA aspirations too if you can’t resist the temptation to view your recommendations.

Should You Care That an MBA Program is Good at Marketing Itself?

Should You Care That an MBA Program is Good at Marketing Itself?

This post is going to feel like its about Wharton, but its not - not really.  I'm prompted to write it because of Wharton, but it is about a larger issue, which is whether or not you should have a takeaway when you see that an MBA program is going all in on its marketing.  Should you read into it or ignore it?  And if you do search out some meaning, is it is good or bad thing when a business school suddenly seems to have hired a new marketing whiz who knows how to game the headlines?  Let's dive in.