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INSEAD PROFILE EVALUATION THREAD: Post all Profile Eval Requests Here! : INSEAD

Updated on: Jun 5, 2017

Please Post All Your INSEAD Profile Evaluations in this Discussion


Please review previous posts to understand how profiles similar to yours have been evaluated and how they compare with you prior to posting. Thank you!

===============================



Hello. I'd like to kindly request you for your two cents on my candidacy for INSEAD. Here goes.

Background:
Indian IT Male
Age 32
GMAT 720
TOEFL 114

Education:
Bachelor of Engineering majoring in Computer Science from one of the top 10 private engineering colleges in India

Work Experience: Total 9+ years
Job 1 - Top IT company headquartered in Germany
Worked for 7 years of which 5 have been leading teams. When I left, I was managing a team of 12 and have managed cross-functional, cross-cultural and for 4 months even a cross-company team. Lots of international travel across 3 continents meeting customers, understanding requirements and then building the product roadmap and pipeline for 3 major countries.

Job 2 - Tech Entrepreneurship
Built a mobile app that is still active. Co-founder/CEO. Managing a team of 6. Receiving Angel Funding of $30,000. Early successes but now the numbers aren't too encouraging. Obviously, the entrepreneurial journey has come with plenty of learnings through successes and failures.

Extra curriculars - Traveling is my passion. Have traveled to over 30 countries in 10 years (most in a personal capacity). Lots of learning. Some volunteer work and sports activities as well. PADI Certified diver.

Post MBA Goal - continue my passion for building products by working in a product management or tech strategy role in a tech company like Google/FB/Amazon etc. Long-term get back to entrepreneurship.

Last edited by Narenn on 05 Jun 2017, 08:36, edited 3 times in total.
Updated
Expert's
post

Nov 11, 2016

You have a great profile from a statistical point of view and you're also well-rounded. I definitely encourage you to apply. Ideally there would be some community leadership here....and I'm hoping that your Quant is high to compete with fellow Indians. J Term is probably optimal because you will want to do an internship in one of those companies.

Farrell Dyan Hehn, MBA
Admissions Consultant & Verbal Strategist MBAPrepCoach.com

Nov 11, 2016

Hi Farrell,

Thank you so much for taking the time to give me your valuable inputs. I have a quant score of 49. I'm hoping this coupled with my engineering degree should be enough to pass muster? Your thoughts?

Posted from my mobile device
Expert's
post

Nov 11, 2016

ashman843 wrote:Hi Experts!

I'd like to kindly request you for your two cents on my candidacy for INSEAD. Here goes.

Background:
Indian IT Male
Age 32
GMAT 720
TOEFL 114

Education:
Bachelor of Engineering majoring in Computer Science from one of the top 10 private engineering colleges in India

Work Experience: Total 9+ years
Job 1 - Top IT company headquartered in Germany
Worked for 7 years of which 5 have been leading teams. When I left, I was managing a team of 12 and have managed cross-functional, cross-cultural and for 4 months even a cross-company team. Lots of international travel across 3 continents meeting customers, understanding requirements and then building the product roadmap and pipeline for 3 major countries.

Job 2 - Tech Entrepreneurship
Built a mobile app that is still active. Co-founder/CEO. Managing a team of 6. Receiving Angel Funding of $30,000. Early successes but now the numbers aren't too encouraging. Obviously, the entrepreneurial journey has come with plenty of learnings through successes and failures.

Extra curriculars - Traveling is my passion. Have traveled to over 30 countries in 10 years (most in a personal capacity). Lots of learning. Some volunteer work and sports activities as well. PADI Certified diver.

Post MBA Goal - continue my passion for building products by working in a product management or tech strategy role in a tech company like Google/FB/Amazon etc. Long-term get back to entrepreneurship.



Hi Ashman,

I see you already have some good admits in your Kitty. Congratulations on those.

Of your 7 years work experience, has any been spent abroad? INSEAD, as I am sure you already know, values international work experience or work exposure, which means, you work in international teams even if you have not travelled.

INSEAD is also great for entrepreneurship, and your entrepreneurial experience should be valuable there.

Since you already have two admits in hand, go ahead and apply - you will have to work out your financials though. I guess you will have to pay the fee for your current options by sometime in December but you would get to know your INSEAD decision only by March next year (at the earliest).

Nov 11, 2016

MBADecoder wrote:
ashman843 wrote:Hi Experts!

I'd like to kindly request you for your two cents on my candidacy for INSEAD. Here goes.

Background:
Indian IT Male
Age 32
GMAT 720
TOEFL 114

Education:
Bachelor of Engineering majoring in Computer Science from one of the top 10 private engineering colleges in India

Work Experience: Total 9+ years
Job 1 - Top IT company headquartered in Germany
Worked for 7 years of which 5 have been leading teams. When I left, I was managing a team of 12 and have managed cross-functional, cross-cultural and for 4 months even a cross-company team. Lots of international travel across 3 continents meeting customers, understanding requirements and then building the product roadmap and pipeline for 3 major countries.

Job 2 - Tech Entrepreneurship
Built a mobile app that is still active. Co-founder/CEO. Managing a team of 6. Receiving Angel Funding of $30,000. Early successes but now the numbers aren't too encouraging. Obviously, the entrepreneurial journey has come with plenty of learnings through successes and failures.

Extra curriculars - Traveling is my passion. Have traveled to over 30 countries in 10 years (most in a personal capacity). Lots of learning. Some volunteer work and sports activities as well. PADI Certified diver.

Post MBA Goal - continue my passion for building products by working in a product management or tech strategy role in a tech company like Google/FB/Amazon etc. Long-term get back to entrepreneurship.



Hi Ashman,

I see you already have some good admits in your Kitty. Congratulations on those.

Of your 7 years work experience, has any been spent abroad? INSEAD, as I am sure you already know, values international work experience or work exposure, which means, you work in international teams even if you have not travelled.

INSEAD is also great for entrepreneurship, and your entrepreneurial experience should be valuable there.

Since you already have two admits in hand, go ahead and apply - you will have to work out your financials though. I guess you will have to pay the fee for your current options by sometime in December but you would get to know your INSEAD decision only by March next year (at the earliest).



Hi Namita,

Thank you for your inputs! Although I have never been formally located in a foreign country. Since 2008, for at least 2 months a year, I have traveled all over Canada and the United States meeting customers, their senior management and their technical teams. I've hosted meetings, workshops and presented in conferences as a representative of the company. In 2014, 2 additional markets (One of them being United Nations and some of it's subsidiaries) were added to my kitty and that only widened my international experience further. I spent almost 4 months abroad collectively that year. Will the fact that I wasn't formally located abroad discount the international experience I've had over the years?

Thank you!
Expert's
post

Nov 11, 2016

Yes, that will do! Also it goes without saying that you will want to nail the app, and clearly articulate areas of differentiation vs other Indian applicants. If you engage help, I'm optimistic.

Farrell Dyan Hehn, MBA
Admissions Consultant & Verbal Strategist MBAPrepCoach.com
Expert's
post

Nov 11, 2016

ashman843 wrote:
Hi Namita,

Thank you for your inputs! Although I have never been formally located in a foreign country. Since 2008, for at least 2 months a year, I have traveled all over Canada and the United States meeting customers, their senior management and their technical teams. I've hosted meetings, workshops and presented in conferences as a representative of the company. In 2014, 2 additional markets (One of them being United Nations and some of it's subsidiaries) were added to my kitty and that only widened my international experience further. I spent almost 4 months abroad collectively that year. Will the fact that I wasn't formally located abroad discount the international experience I've had over the years?

Thank you!



I would focus more on the overall international exposure accrued due to working with expats and foreign teams. Four months in terms of numbers, is hardly a lot of time to travel abroad, although qualitatively it could have been an amazing and insightful period for you. Ofcourse if you have some recountable experiences during the four month travel period, you can use them in the essays (if they fit the question).

Nov 11, 2016

MBADecoder wrote:
ashman843 wrote:
Hi Namita,

Thank you for your inputs! Although I have never been formally located in a foreign country. Since 2008, for at least 2 months a year, I have traveled all over Canada and the United States meeting customers, their senior management and their technical teams. I've hosted meetings, workshops and presented in conferences as a representative of the company. In 2014, 2 additional markets (One of them being United Nations and some of it's subsidiaries) were added to my kitty and that only widened my international experience further. I spent almost 4 months abroad collectively that year. Will the fact that I wasn't formally located abroad discount the international experience I've had over the years?

Thank you!



I would focus more on the overall international exposure accrued due to working with expats and foreign teams. Four months in terms of numbers, is hardly a lot of time to travel abroad, although qualitatively it could have been an amazing and insightful period for you. Ofcourse if you have some recountable experiences during the four month travel period, you can use them in the essays (if they fit the question).


A small clarification I'd like to make here. Since 2008 I've traveled 2 months a year minimum and in 2014 it was about 4 months. That brings my international experience to a total of 12 + 4 =16 months, unfortunately not at a single stretch. I'd like to think it is substantial enough because it really did broaden my business thinking to a more international scale.

Nov 11, 2016

MBAPrepCoach wrote:Yes, that will do! Also it goes without saying that you will want to nail the app, and clearly articulate areas of differentiation vs other Indian applicants. If you engage help, I'm optimistic.

Farrell Dyan Hehn, MBA
Admissions Consultant & Verbal Strategist MBAPrepCoach.com


Thank you for the advice. Of course, I do realize that the competition will be extremely tough. I've heard that INSEAD these days aren't too gung ho about older candidates. Is there any truth to this rumor?
Expert's
post

Nov 11, 2016

Thanks for sharing.

You have rich materials to choose from. For instance, you could use experiences working with international teams to showcase your collaboration and leadership skills. Or use your experience with the mobile app to show entrepreneurial spirit and self-awareness, identifying how an MBA would help you. Your passion for traveling would be good to demonstrate your open-mindedness and curiosity, as well.

Experiences presenting and winning over clients/stakeholders will also be good in showing you interpersonal skills. It would help to show how all of these skills and experiences (and the INSEAD MBA) will help you towards your post-MBA goals.

Be sure to take time to outline the stories you will use for each of the essays. You would want to maximize your available materials to distinguish you from other well-qualified Indian candidates, as you can expect very strong competition.

All the best!
Expert's
post

Nov 11, 2016

You may also find our blog entries helpful:

https://www.gmatclub.com/forum/veritas-prep-resource-links-no-longer-available-399979.html/2016/0 ... ss-school/

Will Involvement in a Failed Company Hurt Your Chances of Being Accepted to Business School?

Ideally, business school applicants would all be able to fill their admissions essays with great work stories showcasing contributions to their company’s success. Creating breakthrough products, transforming the company through original innovations, leading entry into a new market, generating record profits, and other similar accomplishments would all look great on an MBA application.

In reality, however, work circumstances and probabilities do not always play out perfectly – products can miss, campaigns can fail, companies can collapse, civil wars can break out, and global economic crises can ensue no matter how brilliant and dedicated an employee or entrepreneur is.

How, then, does an MBA applicant who went through these failures present himself or herself to be qualified for an MBA? Or how can a seemingly “ordinary” applicant elevate himself or herself from the pool of other applicants who may have more impressive success stories to tell? If this sounds like your predicament, showcase these three attributes to really make your application stand out:

Big-Picture Lessons
Recessions, industry down-cycles, and political crises can all contribute greatly to the failure of a company. However, there is a silver lining – not only do these circumstances provide the environmental context that removes blame from the applicant, but they also offer an interesting backdrop to highlight learning experiences that would make for rich classroom discussions.

If you experienced a business failure due to reasons like this, identifying the major lessons you learned will help display a high-level awareness of world events and their business impact, a quality that can be used to strengthen future leadership potential. At the company level, witnessing the impact of lost profits and jobs can provide you with firsthand experience of its effect on employee morale, corporate culture, and the real human concerns affected by difficult business decisions.

Personal Skills Gained
When struggling companies are forced to cut costs, this often results in the remaining employees handling more tasks, putting in more hours, and taking on bigger responsibilities, and all amidst a tense work environment. As such, employees lower on the corporate ladder may be able to have more involvement in reevaluating the whole business model, product lines, or distribution channels, and become part of the decision as to whether their firm should pull-out or stay in the market.

This accelerated exposure – usually reserved for very senior levels – can be a very difficult experience, however it can also be a good source of learning and growth in terms of skills, knowledge, and maturity. Explaining your business’ failure by showcasing the skills you gained from it can show the admissions committee that you know how to make the most of a difficult position and learn from your work environment.

Character Displayed
A family business may fail at an heir’s turn or a start-up may fall victim to a recession, but these “failures” may also be an opportunity to highlight character traits such as resilience and resourcefulness. Creating new opportunities or adjusting to a totally new environment will show adaptability and determination, which are strong qualities for a future global leader that admissions committees will pick up on. Even if the failed enterprise is directly attributable to you, displaying the honest self-awareness and accountability to identify areas for personal development – including how a particular MBA program will help correct these flaws – can create a compelling and authentic application that will help you stand out as a candidate.

So, will your involvement in a failed business completely ruin your chances of admission to business school? No! Explain the failure of the venture through the aforementioned traits, and the admissions committee will be able to see how a bad situation led to the development of a great MBA candidate.
Expert's
post

Nov 12, 2016

ashman843 wrote:
MBAPrepCoach wrote:Yes, that will do! Also it goes without saying that you will want to nail the app, and clearly articulate areas of differentiation vs other Indian applicants. If you engage help, I'm optimistic.

Farrell Dyan Hehn, MBA
Admissions Consultant & Verbal Strategist MBAPrepCoach.com


Thank you for the advice. Of course, I do realize that the competition will be extremely tough. I've heard that INSEAD these days aren't too gung ho about older candidates. Is there any truth to this rumor?

Would say more so for consulting, where it is awkward to bring a 33yo in at the same rank as a 26 yo. Employers are driving that change (imo, more time to suck you dry before you go quality of life on them and leave) For tech, this whole thing is less rigid.

With regards to your age, Europe is your best bet, honestly. Would recommend that you also apply to IMD and HEC where the average age is 30. Judge also.

Farrell Dyan Hehn, MBA
Admissions Consultant & Verbal Strategist MBAPrepCoach.com
Expert's
post

Nov 13, 2016

ashman843 wrote:Hi Experts!

I'd like to kindly request you for your two cents on my candidacy for INSEAD. Here goes.

Background:
Indian IT Male
Age 32
GMAT 720
TOEFL 114

Education:
Bachelor of Engineering majoring in Computer Science from one of the top 10 private engineering colleges in India

Work Experience: Total 9+ years
Job 1 - Top IT company headquartered in Germany
Worked for 7 years of which 5 have been leading teams. When I left, I was managing a team of 12 and have managed cross-functional, cross-cultural and for 4 months even a cross-company team. Lots of international travel across 3 continents meeting customers, understanding requirements and then building the product roadmap and pipeline for 3 major countries.

Job 2 - Tech Entrepreneurship
Built a mobile app that is still active. Co-founder/CEO. Managing a team of 6. Receiving Angel Funding of $30,000. Early successes but now the numbers aren't too encouraging. Obviously, the entrepreneurial journey has come with plenty of learnings through successes and failures.

Extra curriculars - Traveling is my passion. Have traveled to over 30 countries in 10 years (most in a personal capacity). Lots of learning. Some volunteer work and sports activities as well. PADI Certified diver.

Post MBA Goal - continue my passion for building products by working in a product management or tech strategy role in a tech company like Google/FB/Amazon etc. Long-term get back to entrepreneurship.


Assuming your GMAT is fairly balanced, you have a competitive profile for INSEAD. However, competition is intense so don't apply only to INSEAD. Do you prefer a one-year program and Europe, or are you open to two-year programs in the U.S.?

You may want to listen to an interview I had a few weeks ago with the new admissions director at INSEAD, Virginie Fougea. Lots of insight into what they are seeking in applicants.

Best,
Linda
_________________
Linda Abraham
Accepted ~ The Premier Admissions Consultancy
310-815-9553

Listen to Admissions Straight Talk for interviews with admissions directors, MBAs, test prep pros, and financial aid sources.
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Nov 13, 2016

VeritasPrepEdison wrote:Thanks for sharing.

You have rich materials to choose from. For instance, you could use experiences working with international teams to showcase your collaboration and leadership skills. Or use your experience with the mobile app to show entrepreneurial spirit and self-awareness, identifying how an MBA would help you. Your passion for traveling would be good to demonstrate your open-mindedness and curiosity, as well.

Experiences presenting and winning over clients/stakeholders will also be good in showing you interpersonal skills. It would help to show how all of these skills and experiences (and the INSEAD MBA) will help you towards your post-MBA goals.

Be sure to take time to outline the stories you will use for each of the essays. You would want to maximize your available materials to distinguish you from other well-qualified Indian candidates, as you can expect very strong competition.

All the best!


Thank you so much for the pointers. This will definitely help me with my application.

Updated on: Nov 14, 2016

Accepted.com wrote:
ashman843 wrote:Hi Experts!

I'd like to kindly request you for your two cents on my candidacy for INSEAD. Here goes.

Background:
Indian IT Male
Age 32
GMAT 720
TOEFL 114

Education:
Bachelor of Engineering majoring in Computer Science from one of the top 10 private engineering colleges in India

Work Experience: Total 9+ years
Job 1 - Top IT company headquartered in Germany
Worked for 7 years of which 5 have been leading teams. When I left, I was managing a team of 12 and have managed cross-functional, cross-cultural and for 4 months even a cross-company team. Lots of international travel across 3 continents meeting customers, understanding requirements and then building the product roadmap and pipeline for 3 major countries.

Job 2 - Tech Entrepreneurship
Built a mobile app that is still active. Co-founder/CEO. Managing a team of 6. Receiving Angel Funding of $30,000. Early successes but now the numbers aren't too encouraging. Obviously, the entrepreneurial journey has come with plenty of learnings through successes and failures.

Extra curriculars - Traveling is my passion. Have traveled to over 30 countries in 10 years (most in a personal capacity). Lots of learning. Some volunteer work and sports activities as well. PADI Certified diver.

Post MBA Goal - continue my passion for building products by working in a product management or tech strategy role in a tech company like Google/FB/Amazon etc. Long-term get back to entrepreneurship.


Assuming your GMAT is fairly balanced, you have a competitive profile for INSEAD. However, competition is intense so don't apply only to INSEAD. Do you prefer a one-year program and Europe, or are you open to two-year programs in the U.S.?

You may want to listen to an interview I had a few weeks ago with the new admissions director at INSEAD, Virginie Fougea. Lots of insight into what they are seeking in applicants.

Best,
Linda


Hi Linda,

Thank you so much for taking the time to evaluate my profile. I have a Q49/V40 split. Would that constitute as a balanced split? I've applied to a few unis in the US, Canada, Singapore and India. Gotten 2 admits, 2 interviews coming up and the rest are still under review. I've been a little iffy about Europe (with the obvious exceptions of LBS and INSEAD) because of the economic situation prevalent at the moment in EU. I'd prefer a one year course given my higher than average work ex and the fact that I intend to stay in the same field post MBA. With that said, I would appreciate any advice you can give me to help me through this rather stressful process.

Thank you!

Last edited by ashman843 on 14 Nov 2016, 06:36, edited 1 time in total.

Nov 14, 2016

MBAPrepCoach wrote:Would say more so for consulting, where it is awkward to bring a 33yo in at the same rank as a 26 yo. Employers are driving that change (imo, more time to suck you dry before you go quality of life on them and leave) For tech, this whole thing is less rigid.

With regards to your age, Europe is your best bet, honestly. Would recommend that you also apply to IMD and HEC where the average age is 30. Judge also.

Farrell Dyan Hehn, MBA
Admissions Consultant & Verbal Strategist MBAPrepCoach.com


Thank you so much for the help Farrell.! Much appreciated.
Expert's
post

Nov 14, 2016

ashman843 wrote:
Accepted.com wrote:
ashman843 wrote:Hi Experts!

I'd like to kindly request you for your two cents on my candidacy for INSEAD. Here goes.

Background:
Indian IT Male
Age 32
GMAT 720
TOEFL 114

Education:
Bachelor of Engineering majoring in Computer Science from one of the top 10 private engineering colleges in India

Work Experience: Total 9+ years
Job 1 - Top IT company headquartered in Germany
Worked for 7 years of which 5 have been leading teams. When I left, I was managing a team of 12 and have managed cross-functional, cross-cultural and for 4 months even a cross-company team. Lots of international travel across 3 continents meeting customers, understanding requirements and then building the product roadmap and pipeline for 3 major countries.

Job 2 - Tech Entrepreneurship
Built a mobile app that is still active. Co-founder/CEO. Managing a team of 6. Receiving Angel Funding of $30,000. Early successes but now the numbers aren't too encouraging. Obviously, the entrepreneurial journey has come with plenty of learnings through successes and failures.

Extra curriculars - Traveling is my passion. Have traveled to over 30 countries in 10 years (most in a personal capacity). Lots of learning. Some volunteer work and sports activities as well. PADI Certified diver.

Post MBA Goal - continue my passion for building products by working in a product management or tech strategy role in a tech company like Google/FB/Amazon etc. Long-term get back to entrepreneurship.


Assuming your GMAT is fairly balanced, you have a competitive profile for INSEAD. However, competition is intense so don't apply only to INSEAD. Do you prefer a one-year program and Europe, or are you open to two-year programs in the U.S.?

You may want to listen to an interview I had a few weeks ago with the new admissions director at INSEAD, Virginie Fougea. Lots of insight into what they are seeking in applicants.

Best,
Linda


Hi Linda,

Thank you so much for taking the time to evaluate my profile. I have a Q49/V40 split. Would that constitute as a balanced split? I've applied to a few unis in the US, Canada, Singapore and India. Gotten 2 admits, 2 interviews coming up and the rest are still under review. I've been a little iffy about Europe (with the obvious exceptions of LBS and INSEAD) because of the economic situation prevalent at the moment in EU. I'd prefer a one year course given my higher than average work ex and the fact that I intend to stay in the same field post MBA. With that said, I would appreciate any advice you can give me to help me through this rather stressful process.

Thank you!



You're verbal is a little stronger, but yes it's balanced enough. You may want to consider CBS' J-term option (discussed on their site and also in this interview with CBS Director of Admissions, Emily French Thomas. If you'd consider a U.S. two-year program, look into Cornell Johnson or Cornell Tech in NYC, NYU Stern, Duke, UNC, and UCLA.

We have a lot of advice on the Accepted web site. Please check out accepted.com/mba. You might find helpful essay tips for the 2016-17 application cycle. or Also explore the podcasts at https://blog.accepted.com/listen-mba/. Finally, if you would like one-on-one assistance with your application to help you show that you belong at your target programs, please visit https://www.accepted.com/mba/services .

Best,
Linda
_________________
Linda Abraham
Accepted ~ The Premier Admissions Consultancy
310-815-9553

Listen to Admissions Straight Talk for interviews with admissions directors, MBAs, test prep pros, and financial aid sources.
Follow Accepted on Twitter
Follow Accepted on Facebook
Subscribe the Accepted Admissions Blog
Expert's
post

Nov 15, 2016

ashman843 wrote:
MBADecoder wrote:
ashman843 wrote:
Hi Namita,

Thank you for your inputs! Although I have never been formally located in a foreign country. Since 2008, for at least 2 months a year, I have traveled all over Canada and the United States meeting customers, their senior management and their technical teams. I've hosted meetings, workshops and presented in conferences as a representative of the company. In 2014, 2 additional markets (One of them being United Nations and some of it's subsidiaries) were added to my kitty and that only widened my international experience further. I spent almost 4 months abroad collectively that year. Will the fact that I wasn't formally located abroad discount the international experience I've had over the years?

Thank you!



I would focus more on the overall international exposure accrued due to working with expats and foreign teams. Four months in terms of numbers, is hardly a lot of time to travel abroad, although qualitatively it could have been an amazing and insightful period for you. Ofcourse if you have some recountable experiences during the four month travel period, you can use them in the essays (if they fit the question).


A small clarification I'd like to make here. Since 2008 I've traveled 2 months a year minimum and in 2014 it was about 4 months. That brings my international experience to a total of 12 + 4 =16 months, unfortunately not at a single stretch. I'd like to think it is substantial enough because it really did broaden my business thinking to a more international scale.


Yes I agree, 16 months is substantial- it sounded like 4 months international travel in all

Nov 16, 2016

Hello everybody,

I am a French male with 2 years work experience (will have 3.5 by the time I join and 1 year of internships made during my undergraduate not included in these 2 years)
Working area: Investment banking (M&A)
Company: BNP (French Bank)
GMAT: 750
GPA: 3.0
Undergraduate: Top 5 French Business School
Had a start-up experience during my first years of undergraduate.

EC:
Volunteered 3 months in an African country to work on the renovation of foster homes for single women and orphans.
I spend 2 hours each week to supply soup kitchen to the needs in my city.
I have played volleyball (low level) 14 years and I am found of mountain climbing (e.g. Mt Blanc, Kilimandjaro, Mt Fuji, ...)

My GPA and the bank I work for are not really stellar and I do not have international experience.
My goal is to switch into Private Equity and try to go abroad.

What do you think of my application to INSEAD? Do you think I can try more Tier-1 B-School?

Thanks

Nov 16, 2016

Hi there, welcome!

You do have a solid profile and I don’t think your GPA is an issue with a 750 on the GMAT. It is very hard to translate French grades into GPA anyway, how did you even manage to obtain that 3.0? You also are from a top 5 B-school, you’ll be fine. I don’t think they’ll worry about your academic capacities. Also, BNP is not bad and certainly not M&A.

IMO, the only things that can play against you, at least as far as INSEAD is concerned, are your age (WE) and your international experience.

If INSEAD is your first choice, I would say try to work on your international experience for a year or two and then apply. If you don’t get the opportunity to go international, it’s fine you can just show your international motivation maybe through your ECs or future goals. So far, your ECs look great. Just try to average a 4 year work experience though so that you don't put yourself at a disadvantage. Remember France is a very competitive pool at INSEAD, and you have “all them engineers always wanting to go to business schools” competing as well :lol:.

That said, If INSEAD is not your top choice then you should definitely apply to US schools now.
Good luck :)

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