A 595 GMAT. A GPA nobody would brag about. B− average at LBS. Zero bulge bracket internships. And then Morgan Stanley. This is that story, and why it matters for yours.
The full picture
Getting in is step one. This is what happens after, and why it starts before.
Beyond masters
A good SOP will not save a weak profile.
Writing is the final 20%. The other 80% is how you've positioned your experience, your narrative, and your school list. If the foundation isn't there, no amount of polished prose fixes it.
Networking matters more than your GMAT at most schools.
A 730 GMAT with no network gets you an offer letter and a blank contact list. A 620 with the right people in your corner gets you the internship before the semester ends. Both things matter. People obsess over the wrong one.
Admissions is a sales process. Treat it like one.
You are the product. The school is the buyer. The application is your pitch deck. The interview is the final meeting. If you're approaching it as an academic exercise, you are already behind.
The offer letter is not the finish line.
Day one at your program, everyone around you is already networking. The students who get the jobs aren't the ones who started in Week 1. They're the ones who started six months before arrival.
Your numbers don't disqualify you. Your story does. If you let it.
I got into LBS with a 595 GMAT and a sub-8.0 GPA. The numbers were bad. The application wasn't. That gap is exactly what Prepmaster exists to close.
Ready to start
30 minutes. No obligation. I figure out if this is the right fit, and what the next step looks like for your specific profile.
Get in touch
If you have a specific question, want to get a sense of whether this is right for you, or just want to talk through your situation. You can reach me directly. No form. No waiting.