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Admissions Tip: Word Limits

by Clear Admit, Oct 24, 2010

The question of how strictly applicants need to adhere to word limits is one we get a lot at Clear Admit. MBA candidates naturally have a good deal of information they want and need to convey in their materials, and getting the important ideas down under restrictive word counts is a difficult task. While it might be tempting to run a bit beyond the guidelines to slip in that one extra thought, its important to keep the reasons for word limits in mind.

Essays test your ability to communicate clearly and concisely

In addition to being a forum for explaining your goals and sharing your story, the essays also serve as a test of the applicants ability to communicate clearly and concisely, not to mention follow directions and answer a question. Because business schools and post-MBA employers place a premium on all of these elements, adhering to word counts ultimately works to the candidates advantage.

Take the reader's time into consideration

The other consideration is the readers time. Because of high application volume and the need to give every applicant fair and thorough consideration, schools are forced to limit the amount of information in each file. If you consistently extend your answers beyond the suggested limits, you are essentially asking the reader to give you more time than they are devoting to the other applicants. In other words, if you were to ignore the word limits and overshoot by 30% throughout, this might imply that you consider yourself to be 20% more interesting than everyone else who applied.

There is some leeway

That being said, there is some leeway. For the vast majority of programs, its generally acceptable to exceed the word limit by 10%. There are, of course, a few exceptions:

Caveat #1: If a school gives you a range (e.g. 250-750 words), you should ideally stay within that range.

Caveat #2: If a school gives you a page limit (e.g. 2 pages), you should stay within that limit without excessive margin manipulation or font size reduction.

In terms of the other end of the length issue, it is likely unwise to consistently fall more than 10% below the word limits, as this is valuable room in which to share further information about your candidacy (and might signal a lack of effort, experience, or accomplishments).

Best of luck to all those working on their application essays!