« Stanford to Receive $100 Million Gift | Main | MBA Essay BlastOff Teleseminar »

Haas 2007 MBA Application Essay Questions, Deadlines

I intend to post the deadlines, essays questions, and tips on responding to the questions for a number of the top b-schools.  My tips will be in red. I will start with Haas' 2007 essay questions and deadlines, which are now available. All but one are the same as last year.

Kudos to Haas for readying these questions so early! Thanks to Dave at Journey to my MBA for alerting me to the questions' availability.

All but one of the questions are from last year and my advice is very similar to last year's. I've tweaked it a little, though. 

 

Haas 2007 MBA Application Deadline & Decision Schedule

Round:Online Application submitted by: GMAT and TOEFL taken on or before deadline:Decision posted/emailed by:
One
November 6, 2006November 6, 2006January 29, 2007
Two
December 11, 2006December 11, 2006March 19, 2007
Three
January 31, 2007January 31, 2007April 30, 2007
Four
March 12, 2007March 12, 2007May 14, 2007


Haas 2007 Full-time MBA Essay Questions

Fall 2007 Essay Questions

Listed below are the supplemental questions, short answer questions, required essays, and optional essays that you will need to provide when completing the fall 2007 application.

Supplemental Questions:

  1. If you have not provided a letter of recommendation from your current supervisor, please explain; otherwise, enter N/A.
  2. Keep it short and sweet. This is primarily for those of you who don't want to tell your boss yet that you intend to leave.
  3. List in order of importance all community & professional organizations and extracurricular activities in which you have been involved during or after university studies. Indicate the nature of the activity or organization, dates of involvement, offices held, & average number of hours spent per month.
  4. Whenever possible try to also quantify your impact or contribution.
  5. List full-time and part-time jobs held during undergraduate or graduate studies, indicating the employer, job title, employment dates, location, and the number of hours worked per week for each position held prior to the completion of your degree.
  6. Please explain all gaps in your employment since earning your university degree.
  7. Provide the explanation, but again, be succinct. If you were laid off for three months as part of a restructuring, say so. No harm, no foul. If the layoff was much longer, try to also indicate how you spent your time, other than job-searching. Community involvement or extra-curricular activity, if true, would be great to mention here.
  8. Please identify the course(s) you have taken or intend to take to demonstrate quantitative proficiency. Provide the course name, date, grade if any, and institution at which the course was or will be taken. If you wish, you may discuss other ways in which you have demonstrated strong quantitative abilities.
  9. This is particularly important if you are a "poet." Clearly Haas expects you to prepare quantitatively for b-school. You engineers should have an easy time providing the requested information.
  10. If you have ever been subject to academic discipline, placed on probation, suspended or required to withdraw from any college or university, please explain. If not, please enter N/A. (An affirmative response to this question does not automatically disqualify you from admission.)
  11. Please, please, please don't "forget" to respond to this question if it applies to you. It's far worse to forget, than to answer it.

Short Answer:

  1. What is your favorite quote, and why is it meaningful to you? (250 word maximum)
  2. The why is much more important than the what. Try not to be too much in the air, too philosophical. Keep yourself and the essay real. If you can tie the reason to a specific experience, your essay will be more powerful.
  3. Tell us about your most significant accomplishment. (250 word maximum)
  4. You don't have a lot of room here. Describe it. Show your impact through a succinct use of numbers. Given the length restriction for this very important essay, a PAR approach could work well.
  5. At Haas, we value innovation and creativity. How have you demonstrated these qualities in your professional or personal life? (250 word maximum)
  6. **NEW QUESTION** This is the new question for this year. I assume that last year's set did not quite bring out as much information on creativity as Haas would like. So now they are asking about it. This is one more example of how schools' essay questions are great indicators of school values (and what they want to know). Back to the question...Creativity and innovation. When have you looked at a situation or problem and seen it in entirely new light, from a different angle than you had seen it before or others had seen it? That's creativity. When have you created something new and different. It's OK to build on the work of others, but have you take an idea or concept farther than anyone around you or applied it in an innovative way?
  7. If you have visited Haas, please let us know what about your visit made the most lasting impression on you. If you have not visited Haas, what steps have you taken to familiarize yourself with our MBA program? (250 word maximum)
  8. This essay should complement the required essay 2. Have you done your homework about Haas? If you live in California, you should really make the effort to visit Haas if you want your application to be taken seriously. Haas is very proud of its community and wants to know that you want to be a part of it, not something else. If you reside far from the West Coast, you can learn about Haas in other ways: Their publications, communicating with current students, blogs, info sessions, and receptions.

Required Essays:

  1. Give us an example of a time when you displayed leadership. (500 word maximum)
  2. This question reflects a common b-school value: leadership. Schools want to see it because employers want to see it. Leadership is going to come up again and again. When have others followed you? When have you taken initiative and persuaded others to go in your footsteps? Discuss the impact you had, the challenges you faced, how you overcame them, and what you learned.
  3. What are your short-term and long-term career goals? How do your professional experiences relate to these goals? Why do you want an MBA from Berkeley at this point in your career? (1000 word maximum)
  4. Standard goals question. How do your goals flow from your professional experience? What are you short-term and long-term goals? How will the Haas MBA at this point in time  help you achieve your goals.

Optional Essays:

  1. (Optional) Please feel free to provide a statement concerning any information you would like to add to your application that you haven’t addressed elsewhere. (500 word maximum)
  2. A bonus!  If there is some facet of your experience, be it professional, academic or personal, that you have not discussed elsewhere and would like the adcom to know about, include it here. Give them another reason to admit you, but don't submit the grand summary, appeal, or closing statement. Keep it focused and cogent. Obviously, you could use this essay to explain a weakness, but that would leave your application ending on a weakness, which is less than optimal. Try to fit the explanation in somewhere else in the app or if necessary tuck the weakness into this  essay, but have the main focus of this essay be something positive.  An Example: Your pride in working your way through undergrad, the challenges, and the ultimate satisfaction of learning to manage your time.  This essay will explain a slightly less than stellar GPA; it won't justify a 2.0.
  3. (Optional) If you wish to be considered for the Haas Achievement Award (for individuals who have achieved success in spite of significant economic, educational, health-related and/or other obstacles), please use this space to address the obstacles you have overcome. (750 word maximum)
  4. Include enough description of the obstacle so the reader understands its magnitude, but then focus on how well you have overcome and achieved despite the challenge.
    If you would like help with your Haas MBA application, please consider Accepted.com's MBA essay editing and admissions consulting or a Haas Comprehensive Package, which includes essay editing, interview coaching, consultation, and a resume edit for the Haas MBA application. 

 

Posted on Wednesday, May 24, 2006 at 03:48PM by Registered CommenterLinda Abraham in , | Comments32 Comments | References3 References

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

References (3)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.

Reader Comments (32)

Great insights!

I wonder whether it's ok that responses to short essays 1 (quote) and 2 (accomplishment) can be personal and not work or business related (i.e. family, hobbies etc.).

Thanks,
Shimon.
August 3, 2006 | Unregistered Commentershimon
If the long essays and other short essays convey your professional qualities and goals, then it's a good idea to use these two to convey your non-professional side. The adcom wants to meet you, not just the professional "you," but "you." So definitely introduce yourself as a human being with non-professional interests and background. If these two essays best allow you to present that side of you and the others to present your professional qualifications, then it is preferable to use them in this way.

Good luck!
August 4, 2006 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Hi Again!

Do you think that for those who haven't visited the campus short essay #4 asks not only what they have taken to familiarize themselves with Haas but also what they have learned from each source? I thought the latter is more for Why Berkeley but the question asks those who've visited what they were impressed from so maybe those who haven't visited should follow...

Thanks!
Shimon.
August 19, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterShimon
Shimon,

If you have room, you would strengthen #4 if you also include some indication of what you gained by taking the steps you have taken to learn about Haas. Obviously minimize overlap with "Why Haas," but given the length restrictions, it shouldn't be hard.

Good luck!
August 21, 2006 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Thanks!
August 24, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterShimon
I am interested to apply for Haas MBA program...

But my academic background isn't strong enough..I have a Masters in Public Personnel Management( 2 Yrs distance program) and a 1 Yr Bachelor of Arts( equivalent to 3 Yr Bachelors program) with 55%...
How can I make my application strong.
Presently I am working as the Center Head of one of the startup American software firms in India.
August 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commentersundar
I am interested to apply for Haas MBA program...

But my academic background isn't strong enough..I have a Masters in Public Personnel Management( 2 Yrs distance program) and a 1 Yr Bachelor of Arts( equivalent to 3 Yr Bachelors program) with 55%...
How can I make my application strong.
Presently I am working as the Center Head of one of the startup American software firms in India.
August 24, 2006 | Unregistered Commentersundar
You can take business-related classes and earn A's in them. You can also get a high score on the GMAT. Both will mitigate the impact of a low GPA. For more info, please see http://www.accepted.com/mba/lowstats.aspx .
Good luck!
August 31, 2006 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
In response to Q4 of the supplemental questions - what type of 'extracurricular activities' are typically listed? ... Sports? book clubs? travel? cooking? other interests? How much is too much, or too personal?
October 22, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterHeather
I assume you mean #2 of the supplemental questions. All the above could be possible, but they are not looking for something you do once very six months. They are looking either for something you enjoy regularly and or something you have made a time commitment to. Too much would be when you list memberships in organizations where you are not active or activities that you do infrequently. Too personal... that's hard to define. Probably if you would not tell a professional colleague, you shouldn't discuss it in an application.

Good luck!
October 23, 2006 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
About question 6:
I've never been suspended or put on probation, but I had 1 semester where i did pretty awful and failed a class due to family problems. Should explain that in Q6, or use the optional essay?
October 25, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterBrenn
Using a strict interpretation of the question, you shouldn't use this question to explain that bad semester and you should use the optional. However, if you wanted to use the optional for something more positive and important and avoid ending your essays on a low note, I would use a broader interpretation of these instructions and use this question to explain the F and the bad semester. Frankly, although I never asked Haas the question you are raising, which is a good one, taking the risk and using the liberal interpretation sounds like a good way to go. Even better, you can write Haas and say "I had a really bad semester as an undergrad but was never subject to academic discipline, placed on probation, suspended or required to withdraw. Can I use #6 to address the bad semester which included an F." Your risk here is that they will say "no" whereas if you had just done it, they would have not been upset. Your upside is avoiding the possibility of ticking them off.
October 25, 2006 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
As part of their application, Haas has an optional question asking about the other MBA programs that I am applying to. Is it best to just leave that blank? They do state that it plays no part in the admissions decision, but its a tricky one to answer!
October 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commentercalguy
They use it for marketing purposes to see who their competition are.

Applicants have asked them about it on Accepted.com chats, and they say it has no bearing on their admissions decisions. I believe them. They are proud of their program. They know you are applying to other programs, and they have no idea whether you will be accepted at other places that may be preferable to Haas. They just try to put together the best class they can.
October 29, 2006 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Hi,
I think there're some confused questions.

1. Weather there is words-limit of Supplemental Questions or not
2. In Supplemental Q.4, if I have no gaps in my employment, I don't need to answer it?
3. In Optional Question 2 the meaning of 'Success' is restricted only in works or some professional field? Or it can include all of life aspect such as making happy home, love story in spite of obstacles
November 5, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterwonny
1) I couldn't find stated word limits, but keep it short.
2) Just write "N/A" (Not applicable.)
3) They haven't restricted it, but my guess is that they are talking about educational or professional success since it is an essay for a scholarship to a professional school. I doubt for example someone who was an abused child and is now a model parent would receive a Haas achievement award. The abused child might receive a Haas achievement award by writing about his or her background and how it motivated him or her to start an organization to help abused children.
November 7, 2006 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
I am tempted to write about same achievement/incident of my life for innovation and leadership essay. Is it a good idea to do so.

Also I have filed some patents. Can i include those in innovations? Asper the Haas chat and ur feedback on this essay, it seemed that this essay looks for innovation in improving a team or a situation. But not a technical innovation.
November 15, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterdk
I can't respond to the first part of the question without knowing anything about the particular incident. Details make the difference.

You definitely want to include somewhere in the application that you have earned patents. In terms of this essay, certainly a patent might qualify. The question is whether it is the best example. Listen to the Haas podcast on innovation.
November 15, 2006 | Registered CommenterLinda Abraham
Thanks Linda
November 18, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterdk
Linda,

I have one more question regarding the most significant accomplishment essay.

Since this essay is relatively short, and I am not able to fit in my extra curricular achievement anywhere else, I have a temptation to write about community service in this essay. But that really is not my "most significant" accomplishment.

What will you advice me on this? Also can I speak at length about my extra curricular activities in 2nd supplementary question.

Thanks a lot for all advice
November 19, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterdk
Comments for this entry have been disabled. Additional comments may not be added to this entry at this time.