Parents’ Role in MBA Admissions

parents role in mba admissions

Are Mom and Dad actively involved in your MBA application process? It might be time to rethink their role at this critical career crossroads. The admissions committee wants to see applicants who show leadership and maturity. That’s hard to convey with parents chiming in every step along the way. Today we’re weighing in on parents’ role in MBA admissions to head off problems before they start.

No doubt, so-called “helicopter parents” have the best intentions. But, their interfering actions could jeopardize their child’s chances of admission to a top business school. Parents need to strike a balance between taking an active interest in their adult child’s education and career choices and hijacking the responsibilities those choices entail. This is true even if parents are fully or partially footing the bill, which is often the case.

Curious about your chances of getting into a top B-school? Contact us to talk strategy with a free 15-minute advising session with an SBC Principal Consultant.

In undergraduate admissions, parental involvement is the norm. MBA programs, meanwhile, seek to enroll students who are already independent professionals. Business schools welcome parents when they visit enrolled students on campus. They even tolerate those who join their children on a general admissions tour. But when their involvement becomes intrusive, it raises a red flag about the candidate’s ability to succeed in the program.

parents role in mba admissions

This is the Parents’ Role in MBA Admissions

So, what parental involvement is appropriate for the B-school admissions process? In our view as MBA consultants, it’s OK for parents to contact us for information about how admissions consulting works. Parents can also provide helpful insight for their children’s essays (if requested). However, parents should refrain from attempting to guide the process themselves.

We’ve had parents ask for conference calls to discuss their child’s issues—without the applicant on the phone. We’ve also known cases of parents impersonating their children when contacting the school admissions office with questions about financial aid, application status, etc.

This deception will cause irreparable damage to the applicant’s candidacy if discovered.

Parents may know their children very well in some aspects. But they don’t know how to reveal the qualities that will appeal most to business schools. We’ve had many incidents of parents nearly derailing the process when they critique and tear apart the applicant’s MBA essays that our consultants have already determined are good to go. When that happens, we’re left wondering why they paid for expert consulting in the first place.

The urge to interfere with the process likely stems from a desire to protect their children from failure or disappointment. Still, parents can serve their children’s needs better by cheering from the sidelines and offering moral support if a setback or ding does occur.

Independent Decision-Making is Assumed

Even if they still rely on Mom and Dad for advice and financial support, graduate-level students are adults and should be making independent decisions. If you’re the student in this scenario, ensure you set limits with your parents’ involvement to not jeopardize your candidacy by creating a poor impression of your decision-making capacities.

And parents: Trust that you’ve done a great job and that your child is responsible enough to make the right decisions for their future.

***

Stacy Blackman Consulting offers multiple services to meet your MBA application needs. From our All-In Partnership to interview prep, essay editing, resume review, and much more, we’ve got you covered. Contact us today for a free 15-minute advising session to talk strategy with a Principal SBC consultant.

Here’s a snapshot of the caliber of expertise on our SBC team.

With deadlines around the corner, you may be interested in the world-famous SBC Flight Test. Once a full set of application materials for your initial school have been drafted, but not finalized, the application will be sent to a former admissions committee member for a one-time review, adcomm style. You’ll have the benefit of a true admissions committee review while still having the ability to tinker and change.  You will receive written feedback within two business days after submitting.

Contact

(323) 934-3936
info@StacyBlackman.com

Latest Blog Post

Wharton MBA Acceptance Rate, Deconstructed

The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School consistently ranks among the handful of top MBA programs worldwide. In fact, it tied for number one in the latest US News & World Report ranking of the ...