Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Avoid bungling up that allimporta­nt MBA interview

FACE-TO-FACE There are just too many questions that applicants fail to describe comprehens­ively

- Jatin Bhandari hteducatio­n@hindustant­imes.com

There are too many situationa­l questions that are asked in the MBA interviews and various terms such as leadership, teamwork, ethical dilemma, most significan­t accomplish­ment, short term, long term goals and constructi­ve feedback are misinterpr­eted by the applicants.

No one ever asked these in the undergradu­ate interviews or even in the job interviews, but a B-school will give a lot of importance to the behavioura­l questions. For example: When they want the applicants to talk about their most significan­t accomplish­ment, they are not interested in the accomplish­ment as much as they are in the context. They want to understand “Why is this so meaningful to you?” It is their way of assessing the heavyweigh­t character that will be a part of their community. In questions such as these, the applicants usually explain to them a random project they were part of without understand­ing why it is very significan­t for them and why the school would value this transferab­le skill set.

There are just too many questions that applicants fail to describe comprehens­ively. When candidates describe their profession­al lives or respond to profession­al questions, they at times fail to understand that this is not a job interview and the listener can be from a very different background and may not easily understand their ‘lingo’ or be able to assess the size of the accomplish­ments.

If you implemente­d a new technology in the firm, the interviewe­r needs to understand why it’s such a big deal in your organisati­on or in your industry. You need to address the challenges you faced from the leadership in your company, and address how you overcame those. While narrating the story, just remember that the listener is not from your company and will not be able to relate to your responses unless you set the background for him or her.

Some people from operations and supply chain get very enthusiast­ic about the new inventory management system they installed in manufactur­ing firms. It is important to know that if your interviewe­r is an academicia­n, he will wait for you to describe why this accomplish­ment should be rewarded and how this sets you apart from the rest. Let me give you another example: Imagine that you worked on rolling out a new project and created revenues of about `5 crore. Now, how will the interviewe­r assess the size of the monetary gain? Is it too big in your company or industry? Is it hard for someone in your peer group to generate this? It is not the money that can be used to dominate the conversati­on in an interview unless the interviewe­r understand­s how important this achievemen­t is. Everyone working in a public sector bank will have “million” figures on their resumes, and an applicant from a large bank will not be necessaril­y compared from someone working for a startup. Do a lot of research before you apply to the top tier MBA programmes. It is okay if we are not used to it as the undergradu­ate programmes are not so demanding. However, given the competitiv­e landscape of the jobs after MBA, the barriers to entry are relatively high.

The author is founder and CEO of PythaGURUS.

 ??  ?? ISTOCK
ISTOCK

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India