Young MBA Profile

Launched April 26, 2006
This topic has expert replies
Newbie | Next Rank: 10 Posts
Posts: 5
Joined: Sat Aug 16, 2008 7:56 pm

Young MBA Profile

by jkgsd2 » Sat Aug 16, 2008 8:19 pm
I'm 21 years old and have 1 year left till I get my Bachelor's in Business Administration w/ emphasis in Management. I don't want to drop out of school, go work, then get my MBA in a couple of years, so I've been working throughout my high-school and college career. Here's my profile:

School: Mid-West State-School
Major: Business w/ emphasis in Management
GPA: 3.1
GMAT: 630 (practice - Princeton Review's website, haven't taken the real thing yet)
Work: When I graduate I will have worked at Best Buy for 6 years. I have been promoted several times, and I will have had 3 years of management experience - I supervise/hire/train about 15 employees.
Extra: none - some volunteer experience in high school, but I've been too busy working full time and going to school the last 4 years

I want to get an MBA from a good school with emphasis in Technology Management.

A couple of questions:

1) When doing research, most school have the median age as 27-30. Will my age significantly impact my chances of being accepted into these schools?

2) Will my work experience, and especially management experience, count towards MBA "experience", or do schools look at experience after you graduate? Will being a manager at a retail-store fulfill the duty of having several years of "management experience"?

3) I have worked full-time throughout my college education which has resulted in me having a lower than preferred GPA. If I explain this during an interview, will it greatly affect my chances of being accepted?

4) And probably the most important question, how do I know which school I should apply for? I have been doing extensive research on US News and Business Week to see the "Profiles" for each MBA school. I have been told that I should go to graduate school in the same area of where I would want to work, so should I be looking at schools in California if I want to work for a major technology company? Also, how do I know which schools I have a chance for, since most school profiles have statistics that I don't meet (older, more experience, higher GPA). Should I be looking at schools in the Top-25, Top-50? I only have 1 chance to apply for MBA school (since I want to attend the school in Fall 09), and I don't want to have my managers send out recommendation letters to 10 different schools (they are so long, I feel bad having them send letters to more than 2 schools).

Your help and advice would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks in advance!
Source: — Ask Stacy Blackman |

GMAT/MBA Expert

User avatar
MBA Admissions Consultant
Posts: 3845
Joined: Wed Feb 06, 2008 8:57 pm
Location: Houston, TX
Thanked: 442 times
Followed by:148 members

by Lisa Anderson » Mon Aug 18, 2008 7:34 am
Dear jkgsd2,

While I understand your desire to go straight to business school, it is a taller hurdle to jump to gain admission with no post-graduate work experience. When reporting years of work experience, it is the number of years post-bachelor's degree in a professional, full-time role. So your experience at Best Buy is important and will give you plenty of great examples to showcase, but it will not be counted in your years of work experience. Likewise, your experience is not "management experience" by b-school standards as it is a job someone could have without a college degree. Once again, you still have skills and experiences that will be important to your application so be sure to draft your resumes and essays accordingly.

Being at the bottom of the age spectrum, you need to demonstrate your maturity to handle business school and working with people that are 10+ years older than you. Schools expect candidates coming straight from undergraduate programs to have high GMAT and GPA numbers. With your 3.1, it is important that you score in the 80-90th percentiles (like 680+). Working your way through school does mitigate the GPA to some degree, but a high GMAT is critical for you.

Based on your profile, I would suggest looking at schools in the 30-50 range or smaller, regional programs located around concentrations of technology companies. These schools are generally more amenable to younger candidates and will view your managerial experience more favorably.

Good luck,
Lisa
Lisa Anderson
Consultant
Stacy Blackman Consulting

Learn more about me

Newbie | Next Rank: 10 Posts
Posts: 5
Joined: Sat Aug 16, 2008 7:56 pm

by jkgsd2 » Wed Aug 20, 2008 9:11 pm
Lisa:

Thanks for your reply!

UC Davis is number 44 on the US News Top 50 MBA Schools. There class profile, located at https://www.gsm.ucdavis.edu/ProspectiveS ... 0#profiles states:

Average GMAT 671
Range 590–770

Average GPA 3.4
Range 2.3–4.0

Average age 29
Range 22–37

Average work experience 5 years
Range 0–13 years

Do you think I would have a chance at getting accepted to this university?

GMAT/MBA Expert

User avatar
MBA Admissions Consultant
Posts: 3845
Joined: Wed Feb 06, 2008 8:57 pm
Location: Houston, TX
Thanked: 442 times
Followed by:148 members

by Lisa Anderson » Thu Aug 21, 2008 6:19 am
Dear jkgsd2,

I think it is possible you could gain admission to UC Davis, assuming you score 670 or higher on your GMAT. As I stated before, applicants coming straight from undergraduate programs need to have high numbers and demonstrate they are ready (basically a higher standard). Since your current GPA is below their average, you will want to get it as close to the average as possible. Consequently, your GMAT will then need to be at or above the average to put you in the best position. It is not impossible to gain admission with a 650, but being at or above the average is a better position for you.

Best of luck,
Lisa
Lisa Anderson
Consultant
Stacy Blackman Consulting

Learn more about me