¶ … long-term success in your specific area of interest. How have your previous experiences prepared you for this professional career? What areas of specialization within the Carroll School of Management do you believe will be most valuable in achieving your goals? What specific short-term career objectives have you set to assist you in achieving your long-term career plans?
I will never feel successful if success means putting up my feet and feeling satisfied. I don't work that way. I will only feel successful for small moments, like when I solve a huge problem in my company or when we avert trouble: when we can turn around a failing operation or stay afloat in spite of falling stock prices. Personally, I could be working in a behind-the-scenes managerial position in a company that I cared about and even if my salary was not great I would be successful because every day I enjoyed my work and I was a part of a team of motivated people like myself. Doing business is something I enjoy and I don't look to my future as so much of a hard uphill climb as I see it as a pleasurable road of continual progress.
Right now at this very moment success for me would of course mean admission to the MBA program because I need to take this next step in my academic career in order to progress and fulfill my long-term goals. I would very much like to work as a financial analyst specializing in information systems for a multinational company of any size and in any sector. However, I have experience in service industries and in philanthropy and charity organizations. I also have experience working with the executive leaders of multinational firms, as their assistants in businesses in Taipei. With my combined understanding of the international business market demands, my understanding of several different languages, my understanding of several different cultures, and my understanding of a variety of business sectors, I already have a lot to bring to the MBA program.
However, I need more: I need to meet new people. I came to the United States on my own and did not depend on anyone for emotional or financial support. Now it is time for me to branch out here and meet new people in graduate school. I will interact with people from around the world at Boston College, which I very much look forward to because of my multicultural background. I also look forward to meeting the professors who can offer me guidance and I can hopefully assist them in pursuing their areas of specialization just as they help me pursue mine.
My intended area of specialization in the MBA program is the financial information management concentration. The program description has my name written all over it, as they say. My main areas of interest are financial analysis and information systems. No other graduate school in business that I have investigated offers a program so tailored to my interests and so potentially valuable for me to achieve my goals.
With the concentration in financial information management I can learn more about information management systems, their evolution and their development as well as their key functions in business. At the same time I can learn more about the process of financial analysis in general as well as how technology can make financial analysis more efficient, accurate, and powerful. Because I already have some knowledge and experience in this area I believe I will thrive in the classroom and contribute as much as I possibly can to the coursework involved. Hopefully we can create group projects in which we demonstrate ways businesses can use the information systems available to tap into new global markets; that way I can also include my core goal of applying my MBA toward multinational companies. If internship opportunities are available for me that would be even better because that way I could apply what I learn to the real world right away. Thank you for your consideration.
MBA Question 4.Please provide any additional information that will highlight unique aspects of your candidacy to the Admissions Committee. The Committee welcomes additional comments you may wish to provide in support of your application.
Unfortunately, some of my life experiences are not so unique or special that I can avoid using a cliche, but it's true: I am following the American dream. In fact, I began pursuing the American Dream before I even arrived in the United States, while simultaneously holding down a job and a hard-working high-school career in Taiwan. It was a struggle; I would run...
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