The MBA admissions process is unpredictable and highly subjective. Every year, the applicant pool is packed with highly qualified applicants—too many for the schools to admit, in fact—and as a result, incredible candidates are invariably rejected. Over the past 20 years, we have seen both the good and the bad of MBA admissions, and on a daily basis, applicants ask us, “What is the secret to getting accepted to a top MBA program?”

The truth is that no magic secret exists. No single essay strategy, no specific GMAT score, no stellar achievement on your resume will unfailingly get you into your target program. The true power lies in your deeply honest and personal story about who you are, why earning an MBA makes sense for you right now, and why a particular school is the only place that can help you get where you want to go.
But we also understand that applicants are interested in quantitative data and might find such insight reassuring. So let us walk you through what we saw this past admissions cycle.
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mbaMission’s 2025–2026 Results: The Numbers
mbaMission clients secured 936 total acceptances across 441 candidates in the 2025–2026 admissions season. In total, these candidates were awarded more than $23 million in merit-based scholarships. And results are still coming in: Round 3 is not yet closed, movement is happening on schools’ waitlists, and deferred applications are coming in. Most likely, these numbers have all increased by the time you are reading this.
For many of our clients, getting into an M7 school is their MBA dream. During this past admissions cycle, our clients achieved 592 total M7 acceptances across 357 candidates:
- Columbia Business School: 119
- Harvard Business School: 116
- The Wharton School: 102
- Northwestern Kellogg: 84
- Chicago Booth: 72
- MIT Sloan: 52
- Stanford Graduate School of Business: 47
We are sharing these totals because they are proof of a strategy that actually works. They represent months of thoughtful, dedicated work
—targeting the right schools, figuring out which stories to tell, and engaging in the necessary introspection to understand what makes each candidate’s trajectory unique.
Benefitting from Multiple Choices
Getting even one MBA acceptance is difficult. Getting multiple acceptance is a truly impressive feat—and opens the door to a completely different experience. Suddenly, you have leverage and options.
During this most recent admissions cycle, 117 of our clients got into at least two MBA programs, 72 got into three, and 63 got into four or more. One ambitious applicant pulled off an unheard-of eight acceptances. In addition, 164 clients received offers from two or more M7 schools, and 14 of our applicants earned acceptances at the coveted trifecta of Harvard Business School, the Stanford Graduate School of Business, and the Wharton School.
Again, these successes are not the result of luck. All of these applicants committed to a winning strategy with proven results.
Debunking the “Perfect Candidate” Myth
MBA candidates constantly ask us, “What kind of applicant do the admissions committees want?” They believe that if they present themselves as the “perfect” candidate, that will get them accepted to their dream school. But business school admissions committees do not want to build classes of people who are all carbon copies of each other. Their goal is to construct a student body made up of a variety of different types of individuals.
The mbaMission clients who became admits this past season graduated from 203 different undergraduate institutions, including large public schools such as Texas A&M, Penn State, and UC Berkeley to small liberal arts colleges such as Williams College, Amherst College, and Wesleyan University. These applicants represented 46 countries. Their GPAs ranged from a surprising 2.1 to a perfect 4.0. The average was 3.62, which would certainly qualify as competitive, but our point is that a low GPA clearly does not disqualify you from being accepted.
We worked with 36 nontraditional, first-generation college students this past cycle whose paths were anything but linear—but who will now be enrolling at some of the country’s top MBA programs this fall.
Although many of our successful clients held traditional majors such as economics, finance, mechanical engineering, and computer science, we also had candidates who had specialized in philosophy, art history, nursing, and other less-common areas of study.
Where these applicants had worked also varied widely. McKinsey & Company, Deloitte, and Goldman Sachs were not surprisingly represented, but so were 307 other companies. And candidates hailed from industries no one would consider “traditional” MBA feeders, such as entrepreneurship, healthcare, and government.

The data tell a clear story: no one single profile is the “perfect” one that will get you admitted. Admissions committees do not want cookie-cutter candidates. They want interesting humans who have something of substance they can contribute to a classroom and an MBA community. And the best way to prove that you fulfill these criteria is by hon
estly and compellingly presenting your profile. Submit a test score that reflects your abilities and readiness for the program. Share a compelling professional narrative. Craft an optional essay that tells the truth about an issue from your past without making excuses. In short, being successful requires telling your story the right way.
What This Means for Your Application
Every single one of those 936 acceptances was the product of months of concentrated, tactical effort. We did not just help our clients write essays—we delved into each candidate’s authentic personality, their accomplishments and strengths, their motivations, their goals. Then we devised a personalized strategy to construct an application that reflected all of that honestly and in a way that would resonate with the admissions committees.
These kinds of results cannot be achieved in two weeks or by copying what someone else did or by relying on AI. You have to take a measured, thoughtful approach, and put in the work.
Whether you are targeting an M7 school, hoping to maximize your scholarship options, or struggling to contextualize an unconventional background, we would love to help you map out a plan that will deliver results.
We offer a free 30-minute consultation with any one of our expert MBA admissions consultants—no pitch or pressure, just an honest conversation about where you are, where you want to go, and what you need to do to get there. Sign up today!

