Mark the Date

  • March 5, 2008: USC Marshall Waitlist Chat, 12:00 PM PT/3:00 PM ET/8:00 PM GMT
    On Wednesday March 5, 2008 at 12:00 PM PT/3:00 PM ET/8:00 PM GMT, Kellee Scott, Senior Associate Director of Admissions and Alicia Valencia, Associate Director MBA Admissions, will respond to your questions about Marshall's waitlist policies and procedures. If you are on Marshall's waitlist, come to the chat and find out what you can do improve your chance of admission.
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April 25, 2008

New Blog location

Accepted has moved this blog to a different hosting service. We invite  you to view it at http://blog.accepted.com.

We've enjoyed our stay with Typepad and intend to keep this blog posted, but will add new posts only to blog.accepted.com. Please visit us there and subscribe so that you don't miss any of the tips and news that will be added regularly.

If you want to ask us a question, you can do so on the new blog or in the Accepted Admission Forum.

See you at the Accepted Admissions Almanac.

February 25, 2008

Three Stories

Once upon a time there was a wedding (actually yesterday). The father of the bride wanted to give a speech. His wife (me) worried that he would bore the guests. Mildly insulted and not wanting to forgo an opportunity to praise the bride, his new son-in-law, his son-in-law’s parents, and to share a few words of wisdom, the proud papa insisted on going ahead with his speech. However, he also decided to use stories to illustrate his points. He kept his guests’ attention during his 15-minute discourse. When he returned to the table, he triumphantly said to his wife, “See. I told you I wouldn’t talk too long.” He came about as close to “I told you so” as he could.

Once upon another time, there was an elite business school by the name of “Harvard.” (Its friends called it “HBS.”) HBS had a professor named John Kotter, who became an internationally famous “leadership and change guru.” When he wanted to spread his gospel of change to the widest possible audience, he didn’t publish a thick tome full of facts; he didn’t write a philosophical treatise on the truth about change and leadership. (Been there; done that.) He wrote a fable. Why? In Kotter’s words, fables “take serious, confusing and threatening subjects and make them clear and approachable. Fables can be memorable…They can stimulate thought, teach important lessons, and motivate anyone…” His book has become a best-seller.

In fact stories are so important that another top business school (Michigan’s Ross School of Business) has an award-winning screen writer, Robert McGee, come to its orientation “to teach business leaders how to tell a riveting story.” McGee wants to challenge the new MBA students to “take a case study and create a story that will persuade. He wants them to answer the question … What is the inciting incident that upsets the balance of forces in this company’s life? What is the object of desire?”

Ross gets it. Harvard gets it. Even my husband gets its. The engaging and persuasive power of a compelling, succinct story.

Do you get it? Considering that you want your essays to engage and persuade, can you afford not to use one of the oldest and most successful techniques of communication known to man? You really can’t.

Embrace stories. Show what you want to communicate. When you sit down to write your AMCAS essay, application essays, or personal statement, which succinct anecdotes illustrate your point? What were the turning points in your life? In your dreams? What motivated you to change?

Keep it real. Keep it memorable. Just tell a story.

February 11, 2008

Let's be friends...

Accepted has a Facebook page. I invite you to become an Accepted.com fan and/or join our first Accepted.com group, "Ask Accepted: MBA Admissions Experts." We plan to add other groups in the near future. In the meantime, please drop-by.

And all you Acceptees, clients and visitors to Accepted.com, please feel free to add me as a Facebook friend. Yes, this grandma has a Facebook page. That news was met with a certain amount of eye-rolling, shrugged shoulders, and we-can't-take-her-anywhere looks from my kids, who are mortified that their mother has a Facebook page. They'll get over it, and you and I can be Facebook friends.

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July 11, 2005

I'm in the WSJ

I am quoted in a front page article in the Wall St. Journal today! The article, "Perfect College Essay
Takes Lots of Practice -- And Extra Help,"
has  our prices wrong, and the quote may not be exactly what I said, but I'm in! And the article reflects the college application essay editing scene reasonably well, with an overemphasis on a few college prep camps.

May 09, 2005

50% off all Info Products through May 12

In honor of my birthday I am offering 50% off all Accepted.com ebooks from Monday May 9, 2005 – Thursday May 12, 2005 If you’ve enjoyed the insightful admissions tips in Accepted.com’s Odds ’N Ends, now’s your opportunity:

  • Submit a Stellar Application: 42 Terrific Tips to Help You Get Accepted, a collection of the best of O&E’s tips from 1998 -2003, and save money. (Regularly $19.97)
  • Best Practices for 2005 MBA Admissions:  Take advantage of the super advice captured in this transcript of a one-of-a-kind teleseminar.  Find out what are the 4 Pillars of a Successful Application, and most importantly, discover the concrete steps you can take to strengthen your pillars. (Regularly $29.97)
  • The Finance Professional’s Guide to MBA Admissions: If you are in investment banking, corporate finance, venture capital, or any financially related field that sends oodles of applications to top business schools, this ebook can teach you how to distinguish yourself from your competition and improve your chances of admissions. (Regularly $29.97)
  • The Consultant's Guide to MBA Admission: Invest in the one resource written for YOU. Transform yourself from "just another consultant" into a distinctive, exciting prospect. Learn to mine your experiences and project the qualities schools value. This ebook has sample HBS essays. (Regularly $29.97)
  • Create a Better Sequel: Reapply Right to B-School: Determine what went wrong and how to change the outcome. Get the information you need to navigate the MBA admissions maze and transform those thin rejections into fat acceptances. Buy this 28-page ebook today to propel your reapplication. (Regularly $19.97)

Waitlisted? Check out:

All these ebooks are:

  • Instantly downloadable.
  • In PDF format.
  • 50% off from Monday May 9, 2005 to Thursday May 12, 2005.

March 15, 2005

Kaplan Testing Early History

If anyone is curious how Kaplan Testing (and I think the whole test prep industry) started, read this short Fortune article, "Class Act" about  Kaplan Testing founder, Stanley Kaplan, now 85 years old.

March 02, 2005

Trends in College Education

The College Journal article "Turbulent Times Ahead" surveys trends in undergraduate education.

February 16, 2005

Your Personal Statement: Writing that Sells

Your personal statement and application essays are frequently compared to marketing material.  The analogy is a good one. Indeed, many admissions books talk about "Marketing Yourself to..."

Well let's see how marketers market. Do they use broad general statements so that they all sounds alike? The bad ones do. The good ones write so that you see, feel, taste, or hear their product. Their copy make the product come alive. Not surprisingly, good copy writers provide an example you can learn from.

The article "Three Ways to Turn Vague Attributes Into Compelling Copy"   provides great advice for writing compelling essays. Since the article is a little heavy on marketing jargon, I'll summarize:

  1. Don't make broad claims of desirable attributes; let the reader experience those attributes through your essay(s).
  2. Learn from your customers: the admissions committees. They are telling you want they want to know in their questions. Answer them!  If you want to know what they want to know, read the questions (along with their Web sites, brochures, etc.)
  3. Let your personal statement embody the qualities you are trying to convey. In other words, if you want to be thought of as a mature, articulate professional, write like one.

February 01, 2005

Admissions Consultants.

Dave on the GMATClub Blog has posted a thoughtful piece on what admissions consultants really do.

January 28, 2005

5 Keys to a Great Resume

I gave a presentation last night at UC Irvine's  Association for Computing Machinery ("ACM" -- Doesn't that name sound archaic?).  My presentation was titled "5 Keys to a Great Resume" and was geared to college applicants and those looking for their first or second job.

I thought I would share the key points with my blog readers:

  1. Demonstrate qualities employers value (leadership, responsibility, integrity, diligence, initiative, teamwork) with a variety of experiences if you can't point to a lot of professional experience.
  2. Location, location, location: Put your most impressive elements towards the top of your resume, if at all possible. For most seniors, it will be your education and hopefully your GPA.
  3. Don't state the obvious by describing typical responsibilities for a given position; reveal achievement and impact so that each bullet adds value.
  4. Make judicious use of detail: Use numbers to reflect on the quality of your work.
  5. Tune up your writing: Use active verbs, watch your tense, be consistent, and double-check spelling.

Accepted Admissions Almanac