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kimchuri
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Hi Chulhee,

Thank you for your kind words and follow-up note. I am glad that the detail helped, and I apologize if my response made you feel a little depressed about the two-year programs. That definitely was not my intention. My intention was to offer detail, nuance, and candor. I think you have a great background and great experiences, so from an optimistic perspective, I think the next step is figuring out how to translate that into the right type(s) of programs, or right school strategy / combination of programs.

I am very much an optimist in life, and I happen to believe that it is never too late for anyone to do anything. But in this case, we have to marry that optimism against the realities of the application process and admissions filters that are beyond our control in order to devise an optimal strategy -- the very strategy that (again optimistically) enables you to achieve the goals you want to achieve and take the next steps you want to take in your life and career : )

The military experience is helpful to know, and I think that the experience itself and growth / lessons / failures from that experience will likely offer interesting perspective within your applications (in part, and properly sized). Military experience can help mitigate age outlier status in the eyes of admissions committees a little bit, but starting a full-time, two-year program at age 35 is still pretty rare. Still, you are free to shoot your shot at as many of those programs as you'd like, and in all cases you will want to be super proactive about why you are seeking a full-time MBA now (and even why a two-year experience is necessary over alternative types of MBA experiences).

I think that if you dug in on school research and strategy -- and you still really wanted to include some two-year programs -- that you might well end up with an interesting but very well considered mix of program types... some full-time two-year programs (to test your chances if that's where your heart lies), some one-year programs, and still some Executive-style Programs (as there are some out there designed for people at pretty much exactly your career juncture, which sponsor people for student visa purposes, and which are still essentially residential in nature). If you're open to looking outside the U.S., you might encounter other full-time programs that trend slightly older than U.S. programs.

In many cases, you will also find schools that allow you to apply to one program variation but indicate openness to attending certain other of their programs. This policy and the level of formality associated with it varies by program, so you'd almost want to start an online application for programs you're considering to see if they ask this question (e.g., "If the Admissions Committee determines that you would be a better fit for our Executive MBA program, would you be interested?" OR "Would you also like to be considered for our one-year MBA program?"). (And/or you can reach out to adcoms for clarity.)

For Columbia, I think you'd have a better chance of getting into the J-Term program, but I have heard of cases where the CBS adcom receives a two-year app and then pretty much tells the candidate they like them, but they'd be a better fit for J-Term. (I do not believe that CBS asks this question in the app, but even if they don't, you could apply Early Decision, state your preference for the two-year program and specific rationale for why, while also indicating openness for being considered for the J-Term. You would do this in the Optional Essay.) In doing so, you're sort of giving them an "out," but I think that in this case, that openness would be to your strategic benefit. (If you really only want to be considered for the two-year program, then do not do this, but you would in doing so be reducing your overall chances at earning some sort of admission to CBS.)

I would be more than happy to chat with you, so please feel free to reach out at your convenience / after you've retaken the GMAT. You would speak with me directly, and if we were to work together, you would work with me directly as well. You can email me at [email protected] or sign up via the Free Consultation link below. I wish you the best of luck with next steps, and I hope we have the opportunity to speak soon!

Kind Regards,
Greg
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Dear Greg,

Thank you again for the detailed response. But, you shouldn't apologize for your first comments since I wouldn't want to hear someone saying things that would just make me feel good. I was definitely expecting some negative feedback and was disheartened to actually have someone confirm the hard truth, but I can now see more clearly where I stand and decide how I should proceed.

All of your comments are insightful and helpful, and I'm very tempted to ask you more follow-up questions but will save them for later because it would be a nonsense to keep asking you in this forum.

If I may, I'd like to ask one more quick one. If I happen to score the exact same score of 730 on my second GMAT, should I cancel it or keep it? FYI, I just got my official scores with 4.0 in AWA. I heard 4.0 in AWA is the minimum that wouldn't raise any concerns in adcom but concerns me a little, and it would be much appreciated if you could give me your thoughts.

I will stop now and will certainly contact you after I take the exam and get myself more organized/determined with my approach to MBA.

Best regards,
Chulhee Kim
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Thank you, Chulhee. If I were to receive a 730 again, my personal inclination (or default) would be to keep the score. For starters, it's an excellent score about which you should feel proud, and it shows consistent performance on a high level on your part. Second, if you ever had to upload an unofficial document that showed the 'C' for a canceled score, adcoms would assume you underperformed the 730, and probably by some margin. Third, when you get the same or similar overall score, your sub-scores are usually moving up and down a little bit. That could mean that your best Q or best V or best AWA or best IR come by way of this exam, even if the overall score stays flat or goes slightly down.

While schools "officially consider" your best overall score, they do still observe your sub-scores, so seeing a higher sub-score in one of the other areas has value (even if it did not come on the same exam when you received your highest overall score). In other words, they see from that sub-score that you have a higher degree of capability in a given area. So even if your overall score goes down a little, if you receive your highest sub-score in any of the four areas, I would keep the score.

I would personally only cancel it if (a) the overall score AND all four sub-scores went down, or (b) you got your highest ever sub-score in one of the areas, but it was very very marginal, and the overall score went down by "more" than it's worth to show (i.e., if the "con" of the overall score decrease was clearly more detrimental than the "pro" of the sub-score increase). You sort of have to make a judgment call in that case.

Regarding the AWA, I would agree that a 4.0 is something of a de facto baseline. Adcoms definitely take international and linguistic context into account, so while a little higher is always nice, I would not be too worried about the 4.0. You can clearly perform well in an English-speaking academic setting, you conduct business internationally, and you did really well at an elite U.S. university as an undergrad, so they have their real-life proof points on that front : )

Best Regards,
Greg
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Thank you, Greg. Your answers are always more than satisfying. I will talk to you again soon.

Best regards,
Chulhee Kim
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Thank you again, Chulhee. Best of luck with your upcoming GMAT. Please feel free to reach back out to me whenever is convenient for you. I look forward to reconnecting with you then!

Kind Regards,
Greg