Talents aren't things developed. One is born with talent -- a natural propensity for accuracy and efficiency in particular tasks. A knack for a certain intellectual task. Skills, on the other hand, are things learned, practiced, and known; they're the result of schooling, training, and experience. I believe that skills can be thought of, in a sense, as the theory behind reality. In other words, skills are most appropriately consolidated and built upon one's talents, and one excels at his profession when he marries the two. Conversely, one is pushed into mediocrity when she doesn't use her skills to flex her talents.
I've done the opposite. Through my formal education and my three years of experience as a retail manager at T-Mobile after graduation, I've built my skills -- creating innovative solutions to traditional problems, strong leadership capabilities, and customer care -- upon my talent -- business intuition. In other words, I consistently pursue skills that I know will enhance my natural ability to discern the correct path and make sound business decisions that will take my company to more profitable levels.
What, then, might be the best path for me to choose, if I wish to build upon what I believe is my natural talent -- efficient, decisive management? Naturally, I've come to the decision that the MBA at graduate program will greatly enhance my technical foundations in business, problem solving, teamwork, diversity, and more. The MBA, I feel, will consistently enable me to exercise my intuition, cultivating it, in a sense, among a diverse group of peers and an array of professional contexts. In sum, I believe that the MBA will widen the area that my technical foundation covers while refining my talent into a significant asset that will enable me to accomplish my goals in the way I want them to be realized.
My goals, then: immediately after the MBA at graduate program, I want to secure a position in the U.S. As an investment banker in the banking sector. I had struggled -- before considering an MFA -- to acquire a position in the U.S. banking sector; around the time that I was pursuing banking opportunities, the stock market took its initial turn for the worst. On top of that, I was a foreign resident, which made my search considerably more difficult. Visa issues can be tricky to navigate. However, I believe that my experience as a retail manager at T-Mobile -- selling my company's products and distinguishing them from our competitors, on a daily basis (essentially 'raising capital') -- has prepared me for a position in investment banking. Moreover, I feel this brand of experience will be a necessary component in the development of my professional savvy, knowledge of the workplace, place in corporate culture, and business strategy. Obtaining an MBA from graduate program will provide that last needed incentive for my future employers to hire me.
None of these goals are going to come easy, and they'd be pretty tough without the technical expertise I'll build upon and gain from the MBA. Through what I expect to be a vigorous regimen of business exercises, professional activity and hands-on experience, the MBA will develop my natural propensity for decision making. It will prepare me for something that seemed to lack at T-Mobile -- a corporate culture that consistently engages in high-profile decision making and planning. It will help me to marry my talents with important business aspects such as diversity, teamwork, and technical skill. It will moreover cultivate and refine the skills -- creative problem solving, leadership, and customer care -- that my experience pursuing a bachelor's in accounting at the University of Sharjhah and as a retail manager at T-Mobile for three years has afforded me. Finally, although it almost goes without saying, I believe that an MBA from graduate program -- because of its exceptional reputation -- will distinguish me from my fellow job candidates, ultimately giving potential employers the final push they need to hire me instead of someone else.
I currently work at T-Mobile. Over the course of three years, I've become an innovator. I've introduced various, original techniques that addressed traditional business dilemmas, implemented new systems in response to corporate competition, reached out to and successfully created relationships with new target demographics, and as a result, was a key player in doubling the my retail location's monthly revenue. All this wouldn't have been possible if I hadn't focused on innovation as a personal characteristic that I wanted to enhance and develop within my professional career.
My experience in innovation came...
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