-
houstonmba59
- Newbie | Next Rank: 10 Posts
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Thu Jul 07, 2011 3:30 pm
Hi all,
I've been wanting to pursue a top-tier MBA for many years now (since early Undergrad), and I estimate I'm about two years away from Matriculation. I'd like a profile evaluation to evaluate my weaknesses early.
Background Info:
- White male, currently 25 years old.
- Graduated May 09 from a regional Midwest engineering school with a mechanical engineering degree and a minor in economics.
- Cumulative GPA is on the low side, 3.05, but I excelled in my quantitative economics minor (3.8 among 6 finance & econ classes).
- My grades were generally poor in my engineering and math classes (B's and C's).
- GMAT 700 (V40, Q45, AWA 6.0), 90th percentile
Work Experience:
- Summer internship helping start a distribution business from the ground up
- Summer internship as a production supervisor for big three automaker (40 direct reports)
- 1.5 years in oil and gas services as an applications engineer (selective rotational program)
- 6+ months (currently employed) in oil and gas services managing the proposal/bid process for a $200MM/year product line and I'm exposed to many facets of the business
Recommendations:
- Expected to be very strong from various managers at current employer
Extracurriculars:
- Was a DJ at the college radio station for ~2 years
- Leader of senior design team that had project actually implemented at corporate sponsor
- Avid investor and blogger (1-2+ hours a day of research), started with own money at age 15
- Heavy into personal fitness (5-6 days a week), for what its worth
I'm aiming at the following Top 25 schools for fall 2013 Matriculation after I gain more work experience. Looking at a finance focus for eventual career in consulting, industry, or perhaps banking.
- UT Austin
- Carnegie Mellon
- Michigan Ross
- Duke
- UVA Darden
- Northwestern / Chicago GSB (big reach?)
How realistic are these schools given my background? Is my weak quantitative performance a deal breaker given my quant-heavy degree and work experience? Would taking accounting or similar at a local university bolster my quantitative 'pedigree,' given that I've already excelled in many finance and economics classes?
Thanks for your input!
I've been wanting to pursue a top-tier MBA for many years now (since early Undergrad), and I estimate I'm about two years away from Matriculation. I'd like a profile evaluation to evaluate my weaknesses early.
Background Info:
- White male, currently 25 years old.
- Graduated May 09 from a regional Midwest engineering school with a mechanical engineering degree and a minor in economics.
- Cumulative GPA is on the low side, 3.05, but I excelled in my quantitative economics minor (3.8 among 6 finance & econ classes).
- My grades were generally poor in my engineering and math classes (B's and C's).
- GMAT 700 (V40, Q45, AWA 6.0), 90th percentile
Work Experience:
- Summer internship helping start a distribution business from the ground up
- Summer internship as a production supervisor for big three automaker (40 direct reports)
- 1.5 years in oil and gas services as an applications engineer (selective rotational program)
- 6+ months (currently employed) in oil and gas services managing the proposal/bid process for a $200MM/year product line and I'm exposed to many facets of the business
Recommendations:
- Expected to be very strong from various managers at current employer
Extracurriculars:
- Was a DJ at the college radio station for ~2 years
- Leader of senior design team that had project actually implemented at corporate sponsor
- Avid investor and blogger (1-2+ hours a day of research), started with own money at age 15
- Heavy into personal fitness (5-6 days a week), for what its worth
I'm aiming at the following Top 25 schools for fall 2013 Matriculation after I gain more work experience. Looking at a finance focus for eventual career in consulting, industry, or perhaps banking.
- UT Austin
- Carnegie Mellon
- Michigan Ross
- Duke
- UVA Darden
- Northwestern / Chicago GSB (big reach?)
How realistic are these schools given my background? Is my weak quantitative performance a deal breaker given my quant-heavy degree and work experience? Would taking accounting or similar at a local university bolster my quantitative 'pedigree,' given that I've already excelled in many finance and economics classes?
Thanks for your input!












