Hi. Congratulations on your admit! That’s a fantastic result. Frankly, the hard part of the MBA program is getting in. you should totally put on your resume that you got into Warden. When people see Wharton on the résumé, are they impressed that you’ve been able to graduate or that you’ve been able to get in? It’s really beginning in part that decides everything… Staying in is the easy part…. Have you ever heard of anyone getting kicked out? 😂
Having lived through the pandemic and the biggest land war in Europe since WWII, in the last two years, I would suggest siding on the option of pursuing the green card.
1. If you got into Wharton this year, there’s a good chance you’ll be able to do it next year or the year after. Even if not, you can probably count on booth or Yale in case you’re application degrades for some reason which I kind of doubt about too much of a degradation.
2. Age and work experience, as they progress they do tend to push you out of the traditional business school recruiting path. By delaying your MBA by two years, you are potentially delaying your promotion and growth by two years and the biggest concern would be being overqualified and stuck in limbo after graduation. At that time, you can always do the one-year Stanford MSX program. That will be right up the venture-capital and tech alley. In other words, you will have options that will open up even if some close.
3. I think the opportunity and the long-term cost of your partner not working for three years will be fairly detrimental. I know people get kids and leave work force and this could be the time to do that but it’s challenging to explain employment gaps and they stand out on the résumé.
4. I have a feeling that Wharton may be open to deferring you this year. I feel you have a very strong case and it’s a good cars two get a deferral even from such a high ranking school. Many programs have been quietly offering deferral‘s to people, giving extensions to deadlines and have been very understanding about personal situations. I have been very pleasantly surprised. I do not want to set your expectations hi but I would say the chances are higher than zero.
Bottom Line:
Between the risk of losing the green card, delaying the process, and highly likelihood that you can repeat your success in the coming year or two with some improvement to your profile, I feel the better choice would be to ask for a deferral and regardless of getting it, to continue pursuing the green card. That’s my read 😇
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