vcruz80
forteology
Denied this AM by email.
Stats on me:
I Banking for 4 years
660 GMAT
I applied to Chicago, IE, Maryland and USC. Maryland and USC have a special place in my heart (family legacy).
Got accepted to all except Chicago. I am 98% sure I am going to IE. I am making my final decision within the next week.
For all of you not admitted, to make it a little easier I'll share with you what I told my brother this morning after finding out the news. I told my brother after being rejected from Chicago that I am going to use this denial as motivation. I am going hold this against the U of Chicago for the rest of my life just like Kobe Bryant holds it against the 12 odd teams that passed on drafting him.
Hope this helps some of you deal with the frustration. Just laugh at the schools that denied you and in 20 years when you give a big donation to the school you do attend make sure to let Chicago know what a exceptional candidate they missed out on.
Cheers
I think that using failure as motivation or as a catalyst for future success is a great idea. However, there's no need to be bitter or to have so much resentment. It's not Booth's fault that you were not able to portray yourself as a compelling enough candidate. They just based their decision on the information they had to work with...that you provided. You're not a victim, you just need to work harder...and now you have more motivation to draw from.
Just to add to that, I think we get too caught up in the ding/admit process (albeit the wait is painstaking), that we forget why we applied to business school in the first place - our passions. Failure can be an effective motivator in the short-term but from personal experience, it is not sustainable. Besides, your success won't be fulfilling until you prove whatever point you are trying to make.
Lastly, whether it's HBS or Loyola University's Sellinger school of business you get into - in the end, its what you do with the degree that counts.
*p.s not saying Sellinger is a bad school, used it for contrast because it is not as widely known as HBS* ...
.... Just my 2 cents