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Re: Attn Indian Applicants- It's Time to Step it up! [#permalink]
Expert Reply
Hey Healthcare Guy -

Happy to share our source with ya! We found that information in an article on Poets and Quants back in November. This was before the GMAC study came out... however that study DID say that the third highest group reporting their GMAT scores for b-schools is in fact India. So the competition is definitely up! And even if you disagree with the fact that there are increasingly more applicants from India, the advice in the article still stands true.

Indian applicants face some unique struggles when it comes to admissions, and it's important they know what those obstacles are so they can overcome them up front!

healthcareguy wrote:
I'm curious about your source for the opening facts. The latest Application Trends report from GMAC says specifically "...two-year full-time MBA programs have seen India volumes drop the most". This is corroborated by another 2012 GMAC report which indicates GMAT tests taken by Indians have dropped for two years in a row now, reaching pre-2008 levels.

Sources:
https://www.gmac.com/~/media/Files/gmac/Research/admissions-and-application-trends/applicationtrends2011_sr.pdf
https://www.gmac.com/~/media/Files/gmac/Research/Geographic%20Trends/asiangeotrendty2011_online.pdf

Your bigger point about the Indian applicant pool being the single most competitive one is, however, a well established fact. :)
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Joined: 16 Aug 2011
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Re: Attn Indian Applicants- It's Time to Step it up! [#permalink]
cheetarah1980 wrote:
Oh lawd, not this again. Didn't this exact same topic already cause enough controversy the first time it was posted?


Tell me about it... However it is true that a disproportionate number of applicants are Indian, and it will be harder for them to get in on average.
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Re: Attn Indian Applicants- It's Time to Step it up! [#permalink]
JonPrecisionEssay wrote:
Fact: The number of MBA applicants coming from India is up.
Fact: The number of MBA admissions for applicants coming from India is down.

.....

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Cool story bro! I totally buy the advertisement, where can I sign up?

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Re: Attn Indian Applicants- It's Time to Step it up! [#permalink]
healthcareguy wrote:
I'm curious about your source for the opening facts. The latest Application Trends report from GMAC says specifically "...two-year full-time MBA programs have seen India volumes drop the most". This is corroborated by another 2012 GMAC report which indicates GMAT tests taken by Indians have dropped for two years in a row now, reaching pre-2008 levels.

Sources:
https://www.gmac.com/~/media/Files/gmac/Research/admissions-and-application-trends/applicationtrends2011_sr.pdf
https://www.gmac.com/~/media/Files/gmac/Research/Geographic%20Trends/asiangeotrendty2011_online.pdf

Your bigger point about the Indian applicant pool being the single most competitive one is, however, a well established fact. :)


One trend that is very noticeable is that Chinese and Indians average the highest with the GMAT with the Chinese nearly average a 600 and the Indians at around a 580, which is brought down because of the low average of Indian women. Koreans, Taiwanese, and Japanese GMAT test takers also averaged well above 500 and were at least around the GMAT median of 540-550. Koreans in particular attend American universities at very high rates, but it seems that Korea doesn't value the MBA as highly as China and India do which may partly explain why many Koreans aren't taking the test in high droves for admission at an American business school.

I saw some interesting things here. One Chinese GMAT administrations are sprawling despite an overall downturn in MBA apps, so it's harder for them to get in than before. Next most Chinese GMAT test takers are women, which is a big departure from the norm. Women tend to have it easier for MBA admissions because there are fewer applicants, but Chinese women will NOT get that opportunity from seeing these trends along with a high GMAT average.

With the number of score reports sent per exam, it looks like every Asian group only average 2 or 3 score reports per exam, while Indians nearly maxed out on them. I'd think that most test takers should pick five programs regardless, unless the GMAT take was specifically done to improve one's score to get off a waitlist or something. Maybe most of these test takers were just applying to domestic programs? Just my two cents and conjecture here.
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Re: Attn Indian Applicants- It's Time to Step it up! [#permalink]

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