Rejected by your dream school? This is what you can do

how to handle rejections

Getting rejected hurts. After all that hard work, when you get that ‘we are sorry’ email from your dream school, it is not easy. So, what can you do now? The good news is – there is always a silver lining.

I know the feeling because I have been there. I got 9 rejection letters out of 10 when I applied for MS the first time. And 10th admit was from a university ranked lower than 80 and I don’t even know why I had applied there. So, of course, I decided not to go there and stayed back to work for a year. Next year, I was heading to UIUC for a MS in CS that admitted only 18 students. If I had gotten into a 20-30 ranked school the first year itself, I might have gone and probably missed the chance to be at UIUC. That is how I choose to look at my results.

And that wasn’t the only unfavorable result I had seen, when I applied to MBA programs the first year, I was rejected by them all! Couple of interviews but no final admit – it was heartbreaking and tough. I persisted, applied the second time around and got into NYU Stern! Frankly, I did a lot of introspection the second time around and had a much clearer vision for what I was looking for. And I can tell this with conviction, if I had received an admit in my first attempt, I would NOT have made the most of my MBA because I might have followed the herd, gotten into a stream that I am not that passionate about. When I joined NYU finally, I knew I wanted to work with startups only and had a plan of action. It helped me get a job offer after my first summer itself and I dropped out of the program saving one year of opportunity cost and MBA fee!

So, while our results page is full of glorious admits (which have even caught me by surprise), not every result is a positive one. I have a student who has great potential and he has not received admits at par with his capability. It happens sometimes even though you try your best to improve your success probability. In this post, I am going to talk about rejects and how to deal with them.

I shared my story above to just convey that rejects are not necessarily bad if you do not give up and if you learn from your past experiences. Most of the successful people I know have not been simply lucky, they are just better at dealing with negative results. Did you notice that I haven’t used the word ‘failure’ at all here? It is because these negative results are not a failure by any means. They are only telling you that you should try things differently and get better results. They are telling you to take a breather and punch back harder.

Frankly, I am the kind of person who punches back stronger when I am down. I know you are too. So, cast aside your doubts, ego-bruises and take some time off to relax. And, then get back to work – whatever it is that you need to do to leave these rejects behind.

What to do when you get rejected in your application?

First, let yourself feel disappointed and mourn a little. It’s okay – we need to let our emotions come out. Once you are feeling more composed, it is time to sit down and think of next steps. This is how I would go about it-

1. Re-evaluate your school list

If it is an early reject and you still have time to apply to more schools (assuming there are ones that you are motivated to go to), go for it.

2. Ask for feedback

Do not forget to email the school after you are officially rejected. It never hurts to express that you are disappointed – tell them how much you wanted to attend it. Ask them if they can pass any feedback and what else you can do to improve your candidacy in future. Remember to be polite and nice. It is not a good feeling to receive a reject but it doesn’t justify being nasty on your email. The whole point is to let them think about you in a positive light.

There have been times when the school tells that they could not admit a candidate simply because they did not have funds. That is good to know!

3. Figure your Plan B

We ask our clients to do this at the beginning itself because it forces you to think of alternatives. If the whole season is done and if you haven’t received an admit of your choice, you will have to decide whether and when to re-apply.

  1. If you have an admit that you are not too keen on (ideally, you should not have applied to such a school in the first place), you should request them to DEFER your admission. Not all schools will allow it but give it a try. It will give you a backup next time you apply.
  2. Should you re-apply? That is up to you. If you don’t have very long work-experience, it is always worth to re-apply at least once since you have done most of the work anyway. If you decide to re-apply, the most imp question is applying for Spring or waiting till next Fall. We covered pros and cons of Spring applications in another post.

4. Reflect why you got rejected

Now that your results are out and if you got rejected by seemingly safer schools, you must reflect on your applications and try to figure out what went wrong. Is it wrong selection of schools, weak LORs, rushed SOP that you were not feeling good about or what?

5. Consider working with a consultant if you reapply

We have worked with few people who were simply not good at writing SOPs or telling their stories. With our guidance, they were able to crack their desired schools in their next attempt. A good admissions consultant can easily help you there. It is worth paying an expert than spending another year and more money in your reapplications.


Our counseling is open for next season. Check out our counseling packages here.

Results 2015-2017

Here are the fabulous results for Spring/Fall 2017, we have some great new schools to our portfolio now – UIUC MS CS, UT Austin, MS CS, UCLA MS CS, UC Davis PhD, Wisconsin Madison MS EE, CMU ECE, Berkeley MIS, Foster MIS, Virginia Tech CS, Purdue Mechanical etc etc! If you are applying next year and want to work with us, check out our Counseling Options.

  • Kanagaraj – MS/PhD CS (315, 9, 5 yrs work-ex) – UMN, Virginia Tech
  • Aketh – MS CS (325, 8.6, 3 yr work-ex) – UTD Spring, NEU, SUNY SB, NYU Courant
  • Praneeth – MS CS (311, 0.81, 3 yr work-ex) – UTD, SUNY SB Spring
  • Prateek – MS CS (317, 0.71, 3 yr work-ex) – ASU IT, NEU CS, UC Irvine SE, UTD
  • Arjun – MIS Analytics (316, 6.7, 2 yr work-ex) – Syracuse
  • Sangram – MS CS (319, 7.3, 2 yr work-ex) – TU Kaiserslautern, TU Munich for MS in CS
  • Nitesh – MS CS (315, 0.8, 3 yr work-ex) – Rutgers MBS Analytics, Syracuse CE, NEU MSIS
  • Sneha – MIS Analytics (321, 0.83, 3 yr work-ex) – U Connecticut MSBA, Buffalo MIS, Cincinnati MSBA, Simon Fraser MS BigData
  • Somendra – MS Data Science (317, 8.6, 4 yr work-ex) – NCSU, ASU CS
  • Aashray – MIS Analytics (327, 8.25, Fresher) – Berkeley OR, Dartmouth MEM 40% aid, UMCP MIS, John Hopkins MSEM
  • Harish – MS EE Robotics (316, 0.64, 2 yr work-ex) – Colorado State Uni, Boston U, George Mason U
  • Khushboo – MS CS (319, 0.76, Fresher) – Syracuse 30% schol, Delaware, UTD, IIT Chicago, UNCC
  • Ankan – MS Aerospace (318, 8.23, 2 yr work-ex) – ASU, NCSU, UIUC,Virginia Tech, Penn State MEng
  • Bibin – MS EE Power (323, 8, 10 yr work-ex) – CU Boulder Power Elec Spring
  • Naveen – MS Data Science (315, 7.64, 6 yr work-ex) – NCSU MSA interview, ASU MSBA, George Washington DS
  • Akhil – MIS MEM (304, 0.7, 3 yr work-ex) – UIUC MS IM Spring
  • Sharang – MIS (325, 65% 3.04, 3 yr work-ex) – CMU 12 mon, IUB interview, UMCP, TAMU, Cincinnati with schol
  • Ujjwal – MS Data Science (314, 0.68, 4 yr work-ex) – UTD CS, UMN DS, ASU SE
  • Ela – MIS Analytics (306, 0.78, 4 yr work-ex) – UTD, Syracuse, GSU, NEU
  • Khushboo – MEM (312, 9.21, 2 yr work-ex) – ASU IE, UIC IE, NEU MEM, Rutgers IE, UTD SCM, TAMU MS ESM
  • Vipul – MS Embedded (313, 0.807, Fresher) – ASU CE, CU Boulder Professional MS Embedded
  • Saurabh – MIS Analytics (317, 6.9, 3 yr work-ex) – IUB interview, UMCP MIS, Cincinnati, NYU MSIS
  • Bhargav – MS CS (329, 9.4, Fresher) – UC Irvine, NCSU, Virginia Tech, USC, Stonybrook PhD (funded), UCLA
  • Puneet – MSOR, MSBA (322, 0.73, 3 yr work-ex) – UMN 10K schol BA
  • Monica – MSOR, MEM (323, 8, Fresher) – NCSU MSOR, Purdue IE, Duke MEM
  • George – MS EE Wireless (325, 9.36, Fresher) – USC, Georgia Tech, UCSD, UWashington, CMU MS ECE (Spring 2018)
  • Niket – MS CS (339, 0.525, 7 yr work-ex) – SJSU
  • Raghav – MS IE, OR, MEM (312, 8.34, 2 yr work-ex) – Duke, Notre Dame ESTEEM (25% schol), NYU MoT (4k)
  • Yashovardhan – MS CS ML (318, 8.2, 3 yr work-ex) – ASU MCS Big Data, CMU BIC, KTH Sweden ML, UFL
  • Ashish – MIS, MEM (321, 8.54, Fresher) – UMCP MIS, Duke interview, TAMU, Columbia Applied Analytics, CMU 16 mon
  • Balarama – MS Mechanical (328, 8.12, 3 yr work-ex) – CMU
  • Neel – MS EE Semiconductors (319, 8.76, Fresher) – UPenn MSE in EE, UMN EE, ASU
  • Valliappan – MIS, MEM (315, 8.27, MBA, 2 yr work-ex) – John Hopkins – Carey(Dean’s schol $16K ~25%), UMCP, TAMU, GSU, Utah, UFL, USF
  • Vinayak – MEM, MS Finance (320, 7.88, MS Econ 3 yr work-ex) – Georgia Tech MFE, Columbia MFE
  • Karttik – MIS, MEM (320, 8.8, 3 yr work-ex) – Syracuse, Cincinnati, IUB interview, TAMU, CMU 16 mon
  • Jayeeta – MIS, MEM (313, 7.75, 4 yr work-ex) – GSU, Syracuse, UIC, UTD, UT Austin MS IS
  • Manoj – MS CS (313, 8.1, 2 yr work-ex) – ASU MCS, UTD, NEU
  • Tushar – MIS, MEM (315, 8.9, 1 yr work-ex) – Notre Dame ESTEEM 20K schol, USC MEM, CMU MISM 16 mon, John Hopkins MEM, Dartmouth MEM
  • Sreedev – MS Mechanical (319, 3.77, 2 yr work-ex) – UC Davis PhD (full schol), UMCP PhD
  • Kartika – MS CS (311, 7.13, Fresher) – Syracuse, RIT HCI, UWashington HCDE
  • JVN – MS IE, Data Sc (321, 8.9, 1 yr work-ex) – UT Dallas(MS in CS), UIUC(MS in IE with concentration in analytics)
  • Nimish – MS CS Data Sc (320, 7, 4 yr work-ex) – CMU 12 mon MISM, NCSU
  • Kovuru – MS Embedded (311, 7.9, 4 yr work-ex) – ASU CE, CU Boulder Professional MS Embedded
  • Amogh – MS CS (313, 7.34, 3 yr work-ex) – Stonybrook, Colorado, ASU MCS
  • Mayank – MSBA (323, 0.73, 3 yr work-ex) – UMN MSBA (after interview), CMU BIDA
  • Ayush – MS CS, MIS (320, 7.87, Fresher) – UMCP MIS, Syracuse MIS, UTD MIS, NEU CS, NYU Poly CS
  • Navya – MS EE Comm (327, 9.2, 2 yr work-ex) – UCSD, UMich Ann Arbor, ASU, UCI
  • Adithya – MS EE (324, 8.3, 1 yr work-ex) – Virginia Tech, MSU with RA, ASU, UTD Power Systems, TAMU Power Systems, Utah
  • Mariyah – MIS, MEM (306, 8, 3 yr work-ex) –CMU 12 mon, UIC, UMCP, UIUC MSTM, NEU MEM, Duke MEM
  • Raghav – MIS Analytics (312, 0.583, 2 yr work-ex) – Syracuse, UTD 50% schol
  • Abhijith – MS/PhD ECE (323, 9, 2 yr work-ex) – UPenn MSE EE
  • Arun – MS EE Power (320, 7.3, 3 yr work-ex) – NCSU, ASU, TAMU, Wisconsin Madison
  • Shripal – MS CS (320, 7, 3 yr work-ex) – ASU SE
  • Ayesha – MS Data Sc (304, 8, Fresher) – IUB DS, CMU MISM global, USC Data Informatics
  • Priyanshi – MIS/MEM (303, 0.67, 2 yr work-ex) – IITC, Stevens
  • Siddharth – MS CS (329, 0.715, Fresher) – Stonybrook
  • Shravya – MS CS Networks (325, 9.3, Fresher) – CMU MSIN (with fellowhip), Georgia Tech, UCLA, USC (CS and Networks)
  • Anmol – MS Mechanical (324, 7.9, Fresher) – Purdue
  • Sushruth – MS CS (306, 0.7, 2 yr work-ex) – RIT, UCF, Santa Clara, Syracuse
  • Payal – MS Analytics (720, 0.72, 2 yr work-ex) – CMU BIDA, UT Austin interview, USanFran interview, UCSD MSBA & NYU MoT (14k)
  • Abhinav – MS CS Data Sc (327, 9.94, 4 yr work-ex) – UIUC, USC Deans scholarship, UT Austin, UCSD, Columbia, UC Berkeley (MEng)
  • Adarsh – MSIE, MEM (320, 7.9, 4 yr work-ex) – NYU MoT, NCSU IE, Duke
  • Palash – MS Software Engg (301, 0.649, 2 yr work-ex) – IITC CS, NEU, UT Arlington, SE, UNCC MSIT, Southern Methodist SE
  • Arihant – MS CS (317, 7.4, Fresher) – UIC
  • Gursimran – MS CS (325, 7.3, 4 yr work-ex) – UC Davis PhD, U of Alberta MS (full funding), Purdue MS CS, ASU MS
  • Yash – MSOR (317, 7.9 MBA, 6.9 BTech, 8 yr work-ex) – Oklahoma State PhD, NYSU, Buffalo
  • Krushab – MS CS, MIS (, 0.617, 2 yr work-ex) – BU, Washington State MS CS, Syracuse, UIC, Stevens, NJIT MIS
  • Siddhant – MSBA (322, 5.2, Fresher) – Penn State Great Valley, UTD
  • Nymisha – MSBA (650, 8.4, 2 yr work-ex) – UIC, UConn, IE Spain
  • Abhishek – MSBA (310, 7.6, 4 yr work-ex) – NEU MEM
  • Nitasha – MS Analytics (310, 7.4, Fresher) – ASU MSBA, Stevens BI, RIT Stats, Rutgers MBS
  • Priyasha – MIS, MEM (710, 0.82, 12 yr work-ex) – MIT SDM, UWashington Foster MSIS, Berkeley MISM, UMCP, Cincinnati, TAMU, UIC, Syracuse
  • Ronak – Analytics (333, 7.6, 6.5 yr work-ex) – Columbia Applied Analytics

Here are Spring/Fall 2016 results (awesome, isnt it? 🙂 )-

  • Akash B – MS ECE (332, 9, 3 yrs work-ex) – Georgia Tech, UC San Diego ($5K scholarship), UMN Twin Cities, NCSU
  • N Saxena – MS/PhD CS (332, 75%, Fresher) – Harvard, Columbia, UC Santa Cruz, Buffalo, Syracuse
  • Souptik S – MS CS (338, 76%, 3 yrs work-ex) – UPenn, U of Wisconsin Professionals MS, UMass Amherst (with RA), CMU INI (with graduate fellowship), NCSU, SUNY SB
  • Shashank R – MS CS Data Science (324, 9.6, 2 yrs work-ex) – Georgia Tech, UCSD, CMU BIDA, USC, U of Washington MSIM, NYU MS Data Science, SUNY SB, NCSU
  • Anirudh R – MIS/Operations Research (334, 7.5, 2 yrs work-ex) – U Berkeley MSOR, Dartmouth MEM, Columbia MS&E, Duke MEM
  • Nikita K – MIS/MEM (324, 9, 1 yr work-ex) – Dartmouth MEM, Columbia MS&E, Duke MEM, TAMU MIS, UMCP MIS, USC MEM, UIUC MSTM
  • Kanagaraj – MS/PhD EE (315, 9, 5 yrs work-ex) – Rutgers PhD, Columbia MSEE
  • Keshav S – MS CS (324, 9, 2 yrs work-ex) – UCSD, UMN Twin Cities, NCSU
  • Ishan M – MS CS (319, 9.4, 4 yrs work-ex) – UCSD, Ohio State, NCSU, ASU Polytechnic
  • Gayathri J – MS ECE (325, 8.7, 3 yrs work-ex) – UMN Twin Cities, UFL, Gatech Shenzhen, Portland State
  • Sharan S – MS Business Analytics (324, 9.2, 5 yrs misc exp) – UIUC – Spring 2016
  • Rafi A – MS CS (78%, 3 yrs work-ex) – Waterloo – Spring 2016
  • Akshata M – MS Business Analytics (323, 8.9, Fresher) – UT Austin, CMU BIC, CMU MISM, IUB Data Science
  • Sheelabhadra D – MS CS (326, 8.4, 1 yr work-ex) – TAMU MSCS, CU Boulder, NCSU ECE, UFL CS, WPI
  • Chakshu M – MIS (700 GMAT, 78%, 6 yrs work-ex) – CMU, UMCP, Cincinnati, TAMU
  • Neha A – MIS (710 GMAT, 3.6, 2 yrs work-ex) – CMU BIDA, UIC MSBA, Connecticut
  • Suvrodeep G – MIS (650 GMAT, 7.6, 5 yrs work-ex) – TAMU, UMCP, SUNY Buffalo
  • Deepika A – MS CS (317, 80%, 3 yrs work-ex) – NCSU, SUNY SB, USC, NEU
  • Anshul G – MEM (325, 8.2, 2 yrs work-ex) – Cornell MEM, Duke MEM, Tufts with $15K schol
  • Sanchit M – MS CS, MEM (318, 7, 2 yrs work-ex) – Duke MEM, NYU
  • Pritesh R – MS CS (320, 64%, 2 yrs work-ex) – U of Utah, NCSU
  • Vinod S – MS Mechanical (332, 7.9, 2 yrs work-ex) – UIC, NCSU
  • Tariq I – MS CS (322, 7.2, 4 yrs work-ex) – ASU, UC Irvine
  • Sathwik N – MS CS (313, 7.7, 2 yrs work-ex) – ASU, NCSU
  • Ravi T – MS Industrial/Financial Eng (311, 7.7, 3 yrs work-ex) – ASU
  • Samantha S – MIS (301, 8.7, 4 yrs work-ex) – CMU MISM
  • Shubham S – MS CS (311, 7.2, 4 yrs work-ex) – NEU
  • Shilpi K – MS CS (312, 8.5, 6 yrs work-ex) – UTD, USF, NEU, SUNY SB PhD
  • Karthik T – MS ECE (318, 9.2, 3 yrs work-ex) – TAMU, USC, UTD, CU Boulder ITP
  • Yasho V – MIS (318, 6.5, 1.5 yrs work-ex) – UMCP, Cincinnati, CMU MISM, USF, UTD, Syracuse, UIC
  • Selina B – MS CS (320, 9.2, 1 yr work-ex) – USC, Waterloo
  • Sanjana W – MS CS (313, 8.3, Fresher) – UC Santa Cruz, ASU, UTD
  • Srikanth M – MS ECE (323, 8 in MS, I yr work-ex) – UC Santa Cruz
  • Piyush P – MS CS (318, 73%, 3 yrs work-ex) – ASU
  • Apurva P – MS CS (325, 69%, 2 yrs work-ex) – NYU
  • Ankita S – MS CS (318, 8.4, 2 yrs work-ex) – ASU, CMU MSISPM
  • Melvin T – MS EE (314, 8.2, 2 yrs work-ex) – Clemson, UTD, Portland State
  • Aashish D – MIS (314, 61%, 3 yrs work-ex) – UMCP MIS, SUNY Buffalo, Syracuse, UIC, USF, UTD, UMCP MIM
  • Shivam S – MS CS (317, 8.2, 2 yrs work-ex) – NCSU, NEU, UTD
  • Nitesh G – MIS/MEM (320, 8.2, Fresher) – Notre Dame, CWRU with 13k scholarship, UTD MIS (instate tuition fee scholarship), NEU MEM
  • Nitesh G – MS Telecommunications (320, 8.2, Fresher) – CU Boulder ITP
  • Sumanth N – MS EE Robotics (303, 79%, 4 yrs work-ex) – UC Santa Cruz, WPI, University of Bonn
  • Aditya V – MS EE Robotics (322, 7.7, 3 yrs work-ex) – WPI
  • Rajdeep K – MIS (310, 60%, 5 yrs work-ex) – UFL (ISOM), UTD (ITM)
  • Siddharth N – MS CS (319, 8.2, 1 yr work-ex) – CMU MSIT – Privacy Engineering, ASU MCS, NEU, TU Munich
  • Manika B – MS CS (312, 7.75, Did ME) – NEU, SJSU, NJIT
  • Aditya K – MIS (321, 6.3, 3 yrs work-ex) – NYU, USF, UTD, Syracuse
  • Mohit V – MS EE Embedded (317, 9.1, Fresher) – SUNY SB, NCSU, UTD, UNCC
  • Suchitra D – MIS (316, 77%, 2 yrs work-ex) – Syracuse, Cincinnati, Buffalo, UNCC Data Science, UIC MIS, UTD MS CS
  • Hari N – MS ECE (314, 7.9, 5 yrs work-ex) – UMCP ENTS
  • Saloni S – MS Data Science (311, 7.1, 1 yr work-ex) – IUB
  • Ranadeep G – MS CS (314, 7.7, 3 yrs work-ex) – Rutgers, NEU MS IT
  • Sanjana E – MIS (308, 8.45, 2 yrs work-ex) – Rutgers, USF, UIC
  • Priyank J – MS CS Cybersecurity (303, 61%, 1 yr work-ex) -RIT, IIT, Drexel, De Paul, George Washington University
  • Aroushi S – MS CS (313, 73%, Fresher) – UTD, Houston Main Campus, U of Glasgow, U of Manchester
  • Hemant P – MS CS (310, 80%, Fresher) – UTD, SUNY SB, NEU
  • Supraba M – MS CS (316, 8.4, 1 yr work-ex) – UTD, IUB Data Science
  • Preethi T – MIS (313, 7.5, 1 yr work-ex) – USF, UTD
  • Ram K – MIS (314, 7.4, 3 yrs work-ex) – Utah, USF
  • Mohit G – MS CS (312, 77%, 1 yr work-ex) – UTD
  • Sajin S – MS ECE (325, 7.3, 1.5 yrs work-ex) – UNCC
  • Rucha K – MS CS (310, 70%, Fresher) – UNCC
  • Tushar A – MS CS (319, 66%, Fresher) – NYU Poly
  • Pallavi K – MS EE (310, 9 in MS, Fresher) – NYU Poly
  • Asha A – MS EE (312, 7.8, Fresher) – U of Rochester ECE, CU Boulder Power Electronics, SUNY Bufallo ECE, UTD Energy Mgmt, Rochester Entrepreneurship Mgmt, IIT
  • Varun C – MS CS (329, 76%, 1 yr work-ex) – ASU IT, RIT
  • Adarsh S – MEM (317, 8.2, 1 yr work-ex) – NYU MoT, NEU MEM
  • Sujay P – MS ECE (305, 75%, 6 yrs work-ex) -Southern Methodist, NEU, Stevens, Pittsburgh
  • Chandrakala J – MIS (305, 64%, 5 yrs work-ex) – USF

And here are the results from Fall 2015-

  • Sadavath S – MS in Business Analytics (325, 80%, 2 yrs work-ex) – UT Austin
  • Akash S – MS in Mechanical (319, 9.55, 1 yr work-ex) – UC San Diego, Columbia, CMU, USC, U of Washington Seattle, ASU
  • Mohnish P – MS in ECE/CyberSecurity (325, 8, 2 yrs work-ex) – NYU Poly, CMU MS IT, John Hopkins, Columbia MS&E, Columbia MS in Computer Engg
  • Arushi A – MS in Data Science (320, 84%, Fresher) – Columbia
  • Arushi A – MS in CS (320, 84%, Fresher) – USC, UC Irvine
  • Hari P – MS in CS (314, 8.5, 2 yrs work-ex) – SUNY Stonybrook, NCSU (MS CN), NYU Poly
  • Karandeep – MS in Civil Engg (337, 8.7, 1 yr work-ex) – UIUC, TAMU, U of Colorado Boulder, Colorado State Univ
  • Navaneeth R – MS in ECE (307, 8.1, 1 yr work-ex) – UMCP ENTS, ASU, UIC
  • Vipul M – MS in CS (315, 65%, 4 yrs work-ex) – CMU BIC, ASU, NEU MS in Information Assurance
  • Vini G – MS in CS (321, 8.98, 3 yrs work-ex) – Cornell MEng, USC (Data Science)
  • Vini G – MISM (321, 8.98, 3 yrs work-ex) – CMU
  • Pragya T – MIS (650 GMAT, 68%, 3 yrs work-ex) – CMU, TAMU, U of Cincinnati, SUNY Buffalo, UIC
  • Pratik C – MS in EE (Robotics/Embedded) – CMU Robotics, Tufts, KTH Sweden
  • Anirudh S – MS in EE (324, 8.61, Fresher) – Ohio State University, NCSU, Virginia Tech non thesis, TU Delft
  • Sushma G – MS in CS (318, 9.5, 1 yr work-ex) – USC, Cornell MEng
  • Nishad S – MS in Embedded/EE (329, 7.98, 3 yrs work-ex) – UNCC, NCSU
  • Vikas S – MS in Mechanical (315, 9.08, 1 yr work-ex) – CMU, USC, U of Washington Seattle, ASU
  • Kevin G – MS in Mechanical (322, 9.1, Fresher) – U of Washington Seattle
  • Kevin G – MEM (322, 9.1, Fresher) – Cornell MEM
  • Indona V – MS in CS (325, 82%, 4 yrs work-ex) – NCSU, TAMU, UC Irvine
  • Anas S – MS in CS (324, 8.0, Fresher) – NCSU
  • Hardik J – MS in Mechanical (313, 68%, 5 yrs work-ex) – TAMU, U of Washington Seattle, UNCC
  • Shantanu K – MIS (317, 65%, 2 yrs work-ex) – U of Cincinnati, UMCP MIM, UIC, USF, UTD (50% tuition waiver)
  • Sahil N – MIS (312, 9.0, 2 yrs work-ex) – CMU, UMCP, NEU, USF, UTD, UIC
  • Neyaz S – MS in CS (331, 7.27, 4 yrs work-ex) – UFL, NYU Poly, Vanderbilt, SUNY Buffalo, IUB
  • Kalyan C – MS in CS (319, 8.3, 4 yrs work-ex) – UFL
  • Pranjal – MS in CS (303, 71%, Fresher) – RIT, U of Delaware
  • Ankita D – MIS (300, 8.92, 2 yrs work-ex) – Syracuse, NEU, IIT Chicago, NYU Poly, Stevens
  • Srishti S – MS in EE/CE (Robotics) (321, 66%, Fresher) – WPI, UNCC, Colorado State, NYU Poly
  • Yash G – MIS (321, 7.37, 2 yrs work-ex) – U of Arizona Eller, UIC
  • Vikrant M – MS in EE () – NYU Poly, U of California SantaCruz, Vanderbilt, SDSU, Utah State Uni
  • Vivek J – MS in Business Analytics (322, 7.24, 2 yrs work-ex) – Drexel with 12K scholarship, Louisiana State U, Waitlisted at University of San Francisco, University of Virginia
  • Deepthi V – MIS (314, 8.5, 2 yrs work-ex) – UMCP, Georgia State University
  • Alok S – MIS (322, 8, 3 yes work-ex) – TAMU, SUNY Buffalo
  • Saumya G – MS Chemical Engineering (314, 75%, Fresher) – Ohio State University, Columbia, ASU
  • Vinayak R – MIS (319, 72%, 2 yrs work-ex) – UIC, Syracuse, UMCP, U of Cincinnati, CMU, U of Arizona Eller
  • Jaskaran K – MEM (320, 8.36, 2 yrs work-ex in Mech) – Case Western Reserve University with 40% scholarship, UIUC MSTM, Duke
  • Srishty P – MIS (316, 78%, 2 yrs work-ex) – UT Dallas
  • Mohnish P – MIS (325, 8, 2 yrs work-ex) – CMU MIS
  • Samiksha R – MIS (294, 58.8%, 1 yr work-ex) – RIT, IIT Chicago, Texas Tech
  • Lokesh A – MS in CS (314, 60%, 2 yrs work-ex) – RIT
  • Ramya – MS in EE (304, 7.36, 1 yr work-ex) – NYU Poly
  • Sanket K – MIS (304, 63%, 2 yrs work-ex) – Stevens, WPI, USF, U of Florida, NYU MoT
  • Prakhar M – MS in Construction Mgmt/Environmental Engg (296,  , Fresher) – Steven, Bradley, IIT Chicago
  • Rohit A – MIS (299, 73%, 3 yrs work-ex) – NJIT, NEU, UNCC

And for all the graduate and to-be-graduate students, your academic life is incomplete until you read all the PhdComics. Here’s one for you-

How to get more admits in your MS MBA applications

how to ensure success in applications

Although the outcome of our study abroad applications is not entirely in our hands, you can plan to get more admits when applying to MS/MBA programs.

Your mental attitude is important

Psychology is an important factor and a big one when it comes to distinguishing between successful and not so successful people. At the end of the day, skills can be developed. Anyone can tirelessly work towards a goal but what matters for long term success is one’s mental fortitude and mindset of dealing with failures.

When we look at successful people, we wish to be like them, we wish we could get advantages like them. We even think they got things their way, perhaps they were lucky. But do you think they didn’t have to deal with failure? Everyone – every single person – has to deal with failures and its how you deal with it that can make all the difference.

Now, why am I talking about this all of a sudden amidst the application process is simple. You will plan a lot and put your best foot forward while applying to world’s best universities. The fact is you will still get few/many rejects. You play to win and you shall apply to succeed. BUT – yes, there is that big but – sometimes, you will face rejections. Those who can accept failures gracefully without giving in to it will be the ones who will make it bigger in the end.

How can you get more admits?

This is why you should apply to a combination of schools – its like diversifying your portfolio which is the first basic rule of investments. You distribute your eggs in different baskets hoping that at least one basket will remain safe. Usually for MS, you shall apply to 8-12 schools spread between ambitious (high rank, erratic ones), moderate and safe schools. Some people do apply to more but it can get cumbersome managing so many online applications, asking recommenders to fill so many LORs etc.

Apply to good mix of schools

So while you are gearing up to seeking success in all your applications, do take a good look at the list of schools you are applying to. Getting more admits is a matter of applying to right kind and number of universities.

Keep a good mix in there – don’t be too aggressive or defensive. This will also be determined by how desperately you wish to go abroad this year itself (also known as your risk profile). Is this a make or break situation for you or do you have back up options.

What’s your Plan B?

For graduates – do you have a good job offer in hand that you can go to if you don’t get your dream admit? The more desperate you are to succeed in your applications, more defensive you will have to be. And this is why solid school research is necessary. Being aggressive (applying to more than 4 ambitious schools) is okay if you can afford the risk – after all who wouldn’t want to get an admit to a super awesome high ranked school! But just in case you don’t get into those, what’s your Plan B? If you haven’t thought about it, think about it now.

Your school list should be aligned with your risk profile. Make sure it is.

I have seen some super smart students applying very aggressively but then left distraught with rejections. Don’t reach that stage. Know the risk when you apply aggressively and be prepared if things don’t work out in your favor. If admit is so critical for you, do apply to some safe schools as well and be prepared to go there if needed. Nothing is worse than applying to a school but not feeling comfortable in going there (why would you apply to such a school at all?)

Stay prepared for the best

As always, Gita said it best – “do what is in your hands, don’t fret about the outcome”. But yes, what you can do is be emotionally mature and plan accordingly. If you are prepared, you would know what lies ahead of admits as well as rejects. Reject is not the end of this world. You can do something meaningful this year and reapply – perhaps get into much better school anyways (called a blessing in disguise and it had happened with me). Its how you look at things that matters.