Your profile is exceptionally strong and presents a highly differentiated narrative for the ISB PGP programme. Coming from an "Indian Engineer" demographic—the single most competitive pool in Indian business school admissions—your specific path completely breaks the typical IT/software mold.
The admissions committee (AdCom) values non-traditional profiles that bring unique industry perspectives into the classroom. Your background in building science, climate transition, and public-sector energy infrastructure makes you a standout candidate.
An objective assessment of your candidacy across the areas you highlighted is detailed below.
Profile Evaluation & Competitiveness
1. Competitiveness Relative to Recent Admits
Your profile is highly competitive. The ISB PGP Class of 2026 cohort has an average age of 26 and an average of 4.02 years of work experience. By the time you matriculate for the 2027 intake, you will have roughly 6 years of experience, placing you comfortably in the upper-middle bracket (~25–30% of the class). Your academic pedigree is stellar: a 3.97 GPA and Salutatorian honors from a US institution, a full undergrad scholarship, and recognizable national-level accolades (Viksit Bharat 2026) instantly validate your cognitive horsepower.
2. Gaps & Potential "Red Flags"
There are no glaring red flags, but there are a few areas the AdCom will double-check:
The Class 12 Drop: Your Class 10 CGPA (9.8/10) and your Master’s GPA are excellent, but your Class 12 score sits at 80%. In India's hyper-competitive landscape, this is a slight dip. However, your subsequent full undergraduate scholarship in the US and near-perfect Master's GPA more than compensate for it.
Employability in India: Because your entire professional career and higher education have been based in the US, the AdCom may question your real-world understanding of the Indian regulatory, corporate, and infrastructural landscape. You must use your essays to prove your transition plan is grounded in reality.
3. Alignment with Career Goals
Your stated goal—the intersection of enterprise strategy, infrastructure finance, and climate transition in India—is perfectly aligned with your resume. You aren't someone randomly pivoting to climate tech because it's a buzzword; you have spent 5 years conducting energy audits, working with early-stage startups like Cadence OneFive, and publishing peer-reviewed research.
ISB is highly focused on post-MBA placement viability. Your narrative bridges your past experience directly to consulting or advisory roles at top firms (like McKinsey, BCG, or Bain, which recruit heavily at ISB) that are expanding their sustainability and infrastructure practices in India.
Strategic Preparation
What GMAT Score Should You Target?
The official average GMAT Focus Edition (FE) score for the recent ISB cohort is 669 (equivalent to a 720 on the legacy GMAT scale), with a middle 80% range of roughly 635 to 710.
reevmk
Hello,
I am planning to apply to the ISB PGP programme for the 2027 intake and would be grateful for a detailed evaluation of my profile in terms of competitiveness and positioning.
By way of background, I hold a Bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering and a Master’s in Sustainability in the Urban Environment from the City University of New York (CUNY), where I graduated as Salutatorian (Silver Medalist) with a 3.97 GPA. During my time at CUNY, I was awarded the Association of Energy Engineers (AEE) Scholarship, and was selected as both a Northeast Sustainable Energy Association (NESEA) Scholar and a Waterfront Scholar.
I currently work in building science and infrastructure engineering and have experience conducting Level 1 and 2 energy audits for public-sector facilities, including projects associated with CUNY, SUNY, and New York City agencies such as the Department of Citywide Administrative Services (DCAS). In total, I have 5 years worth of full-time experience so far.
I have also worked with an early-stage building science startup (Cadence OneFive), where I developed automated analytics for retrofit project evaluation and cost–benefit models for infrastructure monitoring initiatives. My research experience includes collaboration with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory on Synthetic Aperture Radar datasets for inundation mapping (NASA-ISRO NISAR mission), and I have co-authored a peer-reviewed conference paper on building energy efficiency estimation.
Additionally, I was selected from over five million applicants to represent Assam at the Viksit Bharat Young Leaders Dialogue 2026, where my team presented our work on Small Modular Nuclear Reactors to cabinet ministers and the Prime Minister of India.
My long-term goal is to work at the intersection of enterprise strategy, infrastructure finance, and climate transition in India—either through consulting or advisory roles in energy and industrial decarbonization. I am aiming round 1 applications for 2027 intake and plan on taking the GMAT sometime during the summer.
My academic scores:
1) Class 10: 9.8/10 CGPA
2) Class 12: 80% (PCM + Comp Sci)
3) Bachelor's: 3.3/4.0 GPA, North Dakota State University (attended on full scholarship)
4) Master's: 3.97/4.0 GPA, City University of New York
I would appreciate your assessment of:
• My competitiveness for ISB PGP relative to recent admits
• Any gaps or potential red flags in my profile
• How well my experience aligns with my stated career goals
• Areas I should strengthen before applying
• What GMAT score should I be aiming for?
• Recommendations on positioning my narrative
Please let me know if any additional information would be helpful.
Thank you for your time.