<p>The resume book is designed to both help you identify students who fit your candidate profile and better target outreach efforts. Resume books may be ordered as a Web-searchable database through an external vendor, MBA Focus.</p>
<p>You can search for student resumes based on career interests, work experience, undergraduate degrees, foreign language skills, and location preference.</p>
<p>Would they sell that to me? Im no recruiter or anything. I'm trying to gain an idea about the qualifications of HBS students</p>
<p>Or maybe you can hang out by the campus and say to people as they walk by…
‘Hey, I want to be like you, please tell me about yourself… because I have no individuality what so ever’.</p>
<p>Apply with an above average GPA / GMAT score of the admitted students. I am positive that schools will emphasized the “importance” of work experience, essays, ECs, recs, etc., and that one criteria will make or break the admission process. Schools will also state that there were students who were denied with nearly perfect scores. </p>
<p>It’s extremely difficult to turn away a 3.8 GPA / 770 GMAT applicant. He might not get into his top choice, but he will get into a top 5 somewhere.</p>
<p>^^^^^
A friend of mine was rejected from Florida with a 750 GMAT, Masters in chemistry and a degree from Duke. His work experience wasn’t deep enough. Poor him though, he had to settle for an NYU MBA and Cornell PhD. Things that make you go hmmmmm…</p>
<p>Well then again, guess it depends on your definition of success.</p>
<p>But if that includes CEO of a Fortune 500 (but probably a Fortune 10 lol) and having your share of a sold hedge fund be in the $136 million range, then yeah worked for him.</p>
<p>hard to belive, i know but Florida was his first choice school (i think, anyway), so you’re wrong. He went on for a Phd in accounting and now tweaches at a top 10 accounting school the south.</p>
<p>sorry for being out of topic… I know a person who got his MBA from Harvard… and decided to do PHD in Computer Science at University of Illinois after his MBA…now he is at google research doing nothing related to his MBA</p>