Anonymous wrote:Marketing is a "business" major - it is the toughest major to be admitted to other than STEM/CS. Beware.
Look at these profiles - pivot fast from business/marketing if you can.
https://www.reddit.com/r/collegeresults/comments/1lf88w0/rejectionfilled_applicant_clutches_a_solid/
https://www.reddit.com/r/collegeresults/comments/1slnoki/white_girl_majoring_in_finance_targetmaxxes/
https://www.reddit.com/r/collegeresults/comments/1co64cf/conflicted_business_major_lowkey_disappointing/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apply to Kelley for business. They are clamping down on transfers from other majors. If you are not admitted business or prebusiness you are shut out besides a business minor.
It will be interesting to see admission rates after their first year of holistic admission.
Very well said. Always apply to top business schools to have the recruiting access, brand halo, like-minded folks and practical skill building/real world application available to you at once, and double major or minor in an interest to be well rounded.
And they just finished the first cycle of holistic admissions for the class of 2030. 2000 direct admit seats, assuming 25% yield, given 33,300 applicants = ~24%. Far cry from pre-covid.
I think a business degree is garbage...pure vocational Excel crap. The networking is good, but for a kid who wants access to interest liberal arts classes, its hell.
I personally have an opposing view. Business degrees, by nature of the core curriculum, force you to take liberal arts Gen Eds in various schools on campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apply to Kelley for business. They are clamping down on transfers from other majors. If you are not admitted business or prebusiness you are shut out besides a business minor.
It will be interesting to see admission rates after their first year of holistic admission.
Very well said. Always apply to top business schools to have the recruiting access, brand halo, like-minded folks and practical skill building/real world application available to you at once, and double major or minor in an interest to be well rounded.
And they just finished the first cycle of holistic admissions for the class of 2030. 2000 direct admit seats, assuming 25% yield, given 33,300 applicants = ~24%. Far cry from pre-covid.
I think a business degree is garbage...pure vocational Excel crap. The networking is good, but for a kid who wants access to interest liberal arts classes, its hell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apply to Kelley for business. They are clamping down on transfers from other majors. If you are not admitted business or prebusiness you are shut out besides a business minor.
It will be interesting to see admission rates after their first year of holistic admission.
Very well said. Always apply to top business schools to have the recruiting access, brand halo, like-minded folks and practical skill building/real world application available to you at once, and double major or minor in an interest to be well rounded.
And they just finished the first cycle of holistic admissions for the class of 2030. 2000 direct admit seats, assuming 25% yield, given 33,300 applicants = ~24%. Far cry from pre-covid.
Anonymous wrote:Apply to Kelley for business. They are clamping down on transfers from other majors. If you are not admitted business or prebusiness you are shut out besides a business minor.
It will be interesting to see admission rates after their first year of holistic admission.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t apply to business. She does not have a business application and it would require doing a lot of things between now and next fall.
Apply for an arts and sciences major so it’s easy to pivot to economics.
Lean into the things that make you different. don’t try to be a finance bro.
The things that look different here are the French and the literary /poetry stuff.