arvindr92
Hi there - I quit my job in March 2020 (yes - terrible timing!) to prepare for GMAT full time, but unfortunately my GMAT plans got delayed. After taking the GMAT 3 times between August and December, the I scored 640, 650 and 640. As my score will show, I am pretty weak at Quant. After deciding to settle for nothing less than the top 100 B schools, I have now decided to compromise and move on to a slightly less demanding B school.
The problem is that I have exhausted all the good will possible by asking my former bosses to fill in recommendation letters for me. I worked in a small law firm and I had three attorneys to whom I reported. I asked each one of them to fill up two recommendations (and I asked one to fill up three) to a total of five universities, all of whom rejected me. I could ask them to fill up one or two more, but only if absolutely necessary to apply to a good university which has a realistic chance of accepting me. My initial target was Jan 2021 intake, but now I want to apply for fall 2021. Can anyone provide me with options for Universities at my GMAT range and those who don't require a recommendation letter. I understand that some universities only require a recommendation letter if they are actively considering you offering a place on their program. If any of you guys know such a place, that would be appreciated.
Happy Holidays to all!
I was in a very similar situation, spent (or rather, wasted) days making up my mind about approaching one of my employers. He is tough to deal with and needs excessive coaxing to get things done. So I completely understand your position. Here are some tips, based on my experience:
1. I had informed all three recommenders of mine that I might be applying to more schools in R2, some time in Jan. This helps immensely in going back to them if/when required. I know this may not be an option now, but you could tell them that you're preparing R2 applications as a safety net and hence you would soon be sending them the recommendation requests. Gives them some time to come to grips with your request. It's likely that they will oblige.
2. I considered asking a senior on my team who often mentored me, but he wasn't my reporting manager. In my completely uninformed opinion, if you are one hundred percent sure that you cannot ask a supervising/reporting manager to write another recommendation, then you might wanna consider approaching a senior or a team member of sorts, preferably someone at a designation above yours. Needless to say, you should have worked together in some manner, else it may lose value. Adcoms are really busy right now, but it would definitely help to clarify from them if your recommender *must* be a reporting manager.
3. Some schools also accept an academic reference. Usually the ones outside the top 5 in Canada. I have an excellent relationship with a professor, so I leveraged that relationship for two of my five applications. You might wanna consider something like that. Some of them (especially ones who are ready to give you a recommendation but don't remember you well enough now) may even ask you to write the recommendation yourself and send it to them. This would be a great opportunity. If this is doable, research well and you can easily write a truthful yet strong recommendation. I used my employer's year end evaluation as inspiration - it was in bullet points, so that helped me convert them into sentences and weave in specific examples from college.
4. The last and most viable option - crawl back to the same people, explain to them that the unexpected spike in applications dented your chances at your R1 schools. Not only Covid, but also the negative immigration rhetoric in the US has meant Canadian schools have received more than 3x the usual applications. Sometimes when you genuinely show that you need help, you get it. You just gotta be nice and explain why you are in need of help. It should do the trick. Plus, recommenders must understand - we wouldn't ask them if we could help it

I would hope your recommenders wouldn't want the guilt of derailing the career of a former colleague.
I think it's wise of you to "settle" for a smaller brand school, but my belief is the Canadian job market will be rewarding when you have 1-2 years of any Canadian work experience irrespective of your MBA school brand. Good luck!