Hi,
I'm also in a similar situation. My undergrad GPA was pretty pathetic. I worked through my undergrad because of money constraints. At one time, I was working full time as a Web Developer for Siemens Corporation and studying part time. I wasn't involved in any clubs/organizations in college to show any leadership experience. I graduated with a BS in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Rutgers University, New Brunswick.
Six months before graduation, I was already working for a consulting company which was also a teaching facility, working on in-house projects and teaching E-Commerce. They introduced that course after hiring me and I designed the curriculum from the ground up. Later, somehow I managed to get into a decent master’s program (part time) in Management of Information Systems at New Jersey Institute of Technology (state university). Apart from the core technical courses, I’m concentrating on Knowledge Management and Decision Analysis type courses. This time around I figured the importance of the grades and maintained a GPA of 3.5. I’m more than half way done and hope to maintain my GPA if not increase it.
For the past 3 years, I’ve been working as a consultant for NYC Dept of Education. I’ve gone from being a developer, to a senior developer to a team leader for my project almost doubling my compensation. My manager is willing to write a recommendation for me, in fact he wrote me one when I applied for my MS program.
So, in summary, I have a BS in Computer Engineering (very low GPA), MS in Management of IS (maintaining a good GPA), 4-5 years of full time work experience (showing growth and leadership). I can get one professional and one academic recommendation letter.
Now my $64,000 question to you is, with a GMAT score 700 or more, do I have a shot at a Top 10 Business school? Can a MS degree overshadow my undergrad mishap? I know the importance of essays and interviews in the admission process. What should be my game plan?
I’m more interested in going to Europe because the programs are only a year. I understand the European schools tend to prefer older crowd. I’ll be 27 by the time I apply. According to Forbes magazine, the salaries of graduates from top European schools are comparable to top US schools. Would I still have good opportunities in US? I want to come back home to work.