Manhattan Prep/Kaplan Survey: More than 8 in 10 Business Schools Expect Fierce Competition Again This Admissions Cycle
These results come on the heels of a recent report from the
Admissions officers shared the following pieces of advice for applicants:
- "Many times, candidates want to impress the admission committees. However, what admissions committees really want is to see who they are, and whether they fit with their program's culture, values, and community.”
- “The thing students should know is that academic transcripts are the most important determinant of admissions. Anything else is secondary. Taking the right courses, getting good grades in these courses, having the right undergraduate major, these are the things that matter most.”
- “Though holding strong grades and work experiences are reviewed, we also look at students' communication and collaboration efforts, their motivations, curiosity about the field, emotional intelligence, and any leadership potential.”
Notably, the survey also found that 75 percent of test optional schools say that if an applicant submits a competitive GMAT®, GRE®, or EA® score, it does in fact help their application. Many schools adopted test-optional policies during the COVID pandemic when it was difficult to test safely, and most have chosen to stick with them as a way to widen the application funnel—though the most competitive MBA programs such as
“Competition for seats at top business schools remains intense. That’s driven not only by the enduring value and versatility of the MBA, but also by external forces—a job market that appears to be weakening and rapid advances in technologies like AI, which business schools are now integrating deeply into their curricula. In this environment, applicants need to assemble the strongest application possible across every dimension. And while many schools are now test-optional, the schools we surveyed have clearly indicated that a strong GMAT, GRE, or Executive Assessment score can still serve as a powerful differentiator, giving candidates a meaningful edge in an increasingly crowded pool.”
Contact
*Admissions officers from 86 full-time business schools across the
Test names and other trademarks are the property of the respective trademark holders.
About Kaplan
Note to editors: Kaplan is a subsidiary of
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20251204623967/en/
Press Contact:
Source: