School Selection Guides
Clear Admit School Selection GuidesUnderstand career-specific offerings at leading MBA programs and identify the schools that will best support your career goals with the Clear Admit School Selection Guides! Available for Consulting, Investment Banking, Entrepreneurship, Marketing, and Healthcare.

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ADMISSIONS DIRECTOR Q&A

Below are links to Clear Admit's exclusive interviews with MBA admissions directors at leading programs.


More Admissions Director Q&A's
CAREER SERVICES Q&A

Below are links to Clear Admit's exclusive interviews with MBA career services at leading programs.


More Career Services Q&A's

Application Deadlines

Below are the upcoming deadlines for admission to the leading MBA programs.

Categories

Interview Reports

A selection of interview field reports from fellow applicants posted to the MBA Admissions Wiki. Add your reports when you are finished with your interviews.
Chicago
Columbia
Dartmouth / Tuck
Duke / Fuqua
Harvard
Kellogg
Michigan / Ross
MIT / Sloan
Stanford
UNC / Chapel Hill
Virginia / Darden
Wharton
London Business School

MBA Tipline

We encourage admissions officers, students and applicants to alert us of interesting news and developments, please send an email to news@clearadmit.com so we can blog it.

Program Rankings

Rankings are a good way to start your research on various MBA Programs. Keep in mind each uses a different methodology.
Business Week
Economist
Financial Times
Forbes
USNews
Wall Street Journal

Industry Compensation

B-School Resources

The following are business resources offered by a variety of leading Business Schools. It's useful to subscribe to these resources, especially for the schools to which you are applying.
knowledge@wharton
INSEAD Knowledge
Harvard Working Knowledge
Knowledge @ Emory
Columbia Ideas @ Work
knowledge@ W. P. Carey
Stanford Knowledgebase
Ross Thought in Action

MBA Programs: The Rest of the World

As there is some variety in the length of international MBA programs, we have denoted the length of the program next to its name (1 = one year; 2 = 2 years). If an MBA Program is not listed, please e-mail and we will be happy to list it.

Additional Resources

Archives

Clear Admit School Snapshots

Free, objective overviews of top MBA programs
The School Snapshots provide introductions to 27 MBA programs in the United States and abroad, making them the perfect resource for determining which business schools’ you would like to research further. Each Snapshot offers an overview of faculty, curriculum, campus life, job placement statistics, and more.

Wharton's Official Statement on the BW Rankings Issue

Here is the full text of Dean Harker’s statement:

—–Original Message—–
From: Dean Harker
Sent: Tuesday, April 06, 2004 9:59 AM
Subject: Important announcement regarding rankings

The Wharton School, after very careful consideration, has decided that we will not be distributing our student or alumni e-mail lists for surveys from commercial enterprises in the future, including the upcoming MBA BusinessWeek survey. The Board of Overseers endorsed this course of action at its recent meeting in San Francisco.

Harvard Business School will announce today that it has made the same decision.

REASONING
Currently, there are many external surveys conducted by commercial publications that rank business schools – more than a dozen annually, in fact. This plethora of rankings, and the wide variety of results they produce, yields little useful data for the schools in shaping their strategic agenda. There is also a widely growing consensus, not only among business schools, but also among colleges and universities, that rankings can be misleading to consumers. Many in the academic community have questioned the methodologies employed in some rankings, as well as the fact that some publications change methodologies from year to year, leading to speculation that some rankings are driven more by editorial agendas than by objective data. We share these concerns, as do our Harvard Business School counterparts.

With regard to collecting useful data to shape our strategic direction, we conduct annual stakeholder surveys of our students, and are about to launch a similar type of annual stakeholder survey of our alumni network of nearly 80,000 graduates. The multiple requests for survey data for outside rankings not only diminish the return rate of the surveys conducted by the publications, but also reduce the response rate on the more critical internal stakeholder surveys. It is critical that the return rates on our internal stakeholder surveys are high to reflect the broadest possible range of views from our students and graduates.

A final reason for not providing e-mail addresses for this purpose is our growing concern for the privacy of our alumni and students, and preventing the possible misuse of our e-mail lists.

ALTERNATIVE SOURCES OF USEFUL DATA
We recognize that applicants need information from which to compare business schools so that they can make the best choice about which program is right for them. Recruiters, as well, must have thorough information about each school’s programs to help determine whether students are the right fit for their companies. We believe the external rankings fall far short of supplying the type of objective comparative material from which prospective students or recruiters can make the most informed choices.

Wharton, Harvard and many other business schools are actively working with the Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC) to develop a service that will provide objective, comparative and audited data to prospective students, recruiters and the media. The project’s primary goal is to enable individuals to examine and analyze information of interest to them personally, from which they can draw their own conclusions.

In addition, there are many opportunities for students and alumni to share their experiences at their schools – and for potential applicants to ask questions of specific interest. Discussion boards, such as our own student2student discussion board, are open and unfiltered. These resources are profoundly helpful in enabling applicants to make the right decision regarding where they would most like to study and which school will help them achieve their professional goals.

DEFINING OURSELVES AND OUR BRAND
In some ways, we, along with our peer institutions, have allowed rankings to define us, not only to the outside world, but to ourselves as well. It is time to measure our institution’s excellence, not from rankings, but by the achievements of every program and by the accomplishments of our students, faculty, staff and alumni.

It is our most fervent hope that we can move forward secure in the knowledge that we have reached an extraordinarily high level of excellence and will continue to lead business education in the years ahead. We will project this image into the world, defining our brand by the true quality of our community.

Patrick T. Harker
Dean
The Wharton School
The University of Pennsylvania

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