I am really interested in MIT LGO - As soon as I read about it, I know that if humanly possible, I will do whatever it takes to get in.
Paul and Amil: I would love to talk to you both offline about my chances and what I can do to improve them.
Here are some general details of my profile for some context, and I do recognize that LGO is a bit of a stretch. Please PM me for some more in depth conversation.
GMAT: 760 (48Q, 47V) - first attempt - should I retry for higher quant?
GPA: 3.2 - doesn't cut it - It was a quantitative major from a respectable but not prestigious school.
Quant and Science Courses I took in undergrad: Calc I & II, Multivariable Calc, Linear Algebra, Differential Equations, Probability & Statistics, Mathematics of Finance, Calc based Physics I & II with lab, Thermodynamics & Statistical Mechanics, Chemistry I & II with lab, Comp Sci with lab, Micro and Macro Econ - no engineering courses - what should I do? Take some grad courses at a state school?
Work Experience: 2+ years in industrial engineering/operations research types of roles for two well known companies. (No consulting or Finance experience) - studied lean, six sigma, and others at work
Career Goals: I am fascinated by process optimization and operations as well as the aviation industry - particularly private and military aviation. I have some great business ideas for aviation, and a degree from MIT in Aero/Astro plus Sloan MBA will give me the technical scientific knowledge to gauge the feasibility of my ideas, the business acumen to implement them, the credibility to market them , and a network of top tier scientists, business people, and companies with whom I can partner.
Additionally, I love the concept of combining my hard/quant/tech skills with my soft/communicative/people skills.
I hope that my passion has come through and that I can find some way to demonstrate to the Admissions department that I have what it takes to succeed in MIT LGO.
Thanks a lot for all the info you posted.