Hi Peter,
You definitely have a good profile: good undergrad, good undergrad gpa, and finally, interesting work experience. You seem to have thought through your career goals as well. Congratulations on all this.
Going forward, I can see two things holding you back:
1) the GMAT score. A good school will likely buy that your quant background is good, regardless of how you place on the GMAT. But the kind of competition we are facing, most of the M7 gets very competitive applications, that include stellar GMAT. There is the possibility that you would lose out there, unless your profile is counterbalanced by something spectacular - and as of how, we don't know if that unicorn factor exists in your background.
2) The second point is not so much a drawback, as it is a point of concern. Make sure you can connect your career goals to your past background as well - a smooth narrative looks good. Not to say that career switching is bad - just explain how you moved from there to here in a way that the adcom can appreciate.
I would peg you at a T15.
Reach out to us if you want to discuss further.
Best wishes,
Karthik
PeterJames87
Hi All - First time poster to these forums, long time lurker. I'm planning to move forward with MBA applications and I'm hoping to get your feedback.
Background
I hold a BS in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from UMass Amherst (3.87 GPA). During my undergraduate years I had a couple internships including my final summer where I was at Pfizer. I really enjoyed working in biopharma and have pursued a career in the industry since graduation.
I have now been working for a little over four years in biopharma on projects ranging from early drug discovery, preliminary pre-clinical development, all the way through the late stage development/clinical trials/manufacturing side of things. During these years I have gained experience with both small molecule/biologics in disease fields including infectious/oncology/genetic. My goal has been to gain experience through the entire drug development pipeline/value chain leading up to approval and going to market. While my work experience has primarily been in the lab I also have gained some experience with project management and business development through cross-training opportunities. I have also pursued professional education in business topics, project management, strategy, etc.
Moving Forward
While I've enjoyed the science I really want to transition over to the business side of things in the near future. I am considering two main career paths, both of which include getting an MBA.
1) My primary objective is to try and pivot into consulting over this summer. I love tackling tough problems, coming up with new solutions, and teaching. I am from the Boston area so I will be targeting larger firms (i.e., BCG) as well as smaller ones focused on the biopharma industry.
2) My secondary objective is to get into an MBA program for the coming cycle. I'm quite interested in Berkeley, Booth, Sloan, etc. Post MBA my goal would still be to break into consulting and possibly even venture capital. Same end result as the above, just getting an MBA first.
GMAT
Since I plan to get an MBA within the next two years or so I've studied for an taken the GMAT twice this past spring. In practice exams I typically score in the 690-750 range, for my live exams I've scored 690 (Q42 V42) and 710 (Q44 V44). The first time I had a cold so definitely felt the retake was necessary, at the same time I'm concerned that a 710 is simply not competitive enough.
Feedback Request
Based on my background and career goals I'm hoping to get some feedback regarding which programs I should target (M7, T15, T20?). In addition I'm wondering if it might be worth taking the GMAT a third time to try and bump the quant score up to >75th percentile (achieved on practice exams but never live). The one caveat to my low quant is that I have taken and done well on numerous quant courses in undergrad (trig, calc I/II, stats all with A/A-) as well post-graduation (I completed Harvard Business School's HBX|CORe program with high honors).
I appreciate your feedback and assistance. All the best!