HBS Class of 2027 MBA Admission Application: Joint Degree Application Essays for HKS & SEAS


Aug, 08, 2024


Categories: Essay Analysis | Essays | Harvard KSG | HBS

This will be a five part series of blog posts on the essays and rest of the application for admission to the Harvard Business School Class of 2027:

The first post focuses on overall strategy, the 3 essays and the goals statement.

The second post focuses on the application form questions. It will focus on helping you brainstorm and develop your content.

The third post focuses on the reapplication essay.

This forth post is on the joint degree application essays. This post focuses on the HKS and SEAS Joint Degree programs. 

The fifth post will be on recommendations and is intended to apply to both HBS and other schools.

My three-part HBS interview prep series starts here.

 

My comprehensive service clients have been admitted to HBS for the Classes of  2026, 2025,  2024, 2023, 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2011, 2010,  and 2009. My clients’ results and testimonials can be found here. In addition to providing comprehensive application consulting on HBS, I regularly help additional candidates with HBS interview preparation.  Since I started my own counseling service in 2007 (worked with many admits from 2001-2007 when I worked for a company), I have worked with 95 successful applicants from Canada, Europe, India, the Middle East, Japan, South Korea, other parts of Asia, and the United States on HBS application. I think that this range of experience has helped me understand the many possible ways of making an effective application to HBS. l I can tell you is that HBS takes a truly diverse range of people. Some had high GPAs and a great GMAT or GRE scores, others had GPAs and scores well below the 80% range for HBS, but what they all had in common were strong personal and professional backgrounds that came out in their essays.

HBS offers a number of Joint Degree programs with the MBA, I am only focusing on the two that I am likely to ever advise clients on.  Unlike Harvard Kennedy School, where I have been helping clients gain admission for over two decades (albeit in small numbers),  SEAS is a program that I have only helped a client with once and did not work out post-HBS interview.  The app was solid.  We still start with HKS.
HKS Joint Degree: How do you expect the joint degree experience to benefit you on both a professional and a personal level? (400 words)
My clients admitted to HKS have include both those admitted to the Joint HBS/HKS program, GSB/HKS program,  and Wharton/HKS Dual Degree program. I have also worked with applicants who were applying only to HKS. HKS provides a very different kind of education from an MBA program, more academic and obviously looking at things through the perspective of public policy, international relations, development studies, etc.  For the right candidate, it provides a complementary education to what they will encounter in an MBA program.
The key challenge of writing this essay is to not duplicate what you write in the HBS essays.   Use this essay to explain the synergy that will be gained from doing both degrees. The professional part seems obvious enough (What skills will you gain? What network will you gain? How will it help you with your career objectives?) but the personal part sometimes confounds my clients. I tell them to think about it terms of the perspectives they will gain and from the opportunity to be enriched by a much range of ideas but also by the fact that those who do the HKS Joint Degree are their own tribe and establish close relationships in a very different classroom atmosphere than is offered by HBS. I encourage my clients who apply for this degree to talk with alumni and current students from the program in order to gain these kind of personal insights.  Dig into the HKS program and explain why you think it benefit you.
I think it is especially important that you focus on the synergies created by doing both degrees for your future career.  One need not have political ambitions to attend HKS, though that is certainly possible, but may have a large number of reasons for why it makes sense. For example if you are planning to work in a highly regulated industry, work directly with government (such as the case of some consulting firms), or are interested in solving complex public/private issues, HKS could offer what you need in addition to the MBA.
It is important that you well align the content of your Joint Degree Essay, HBS essays, and HKS essays for your own sanity but do keep in mind that your admission to these programs is separate and each program has own its admissions. At least for HKS, I don’t believe that applying for the Joint Degree has any significant impact on whether one is admitted to HBS, at least I have never seen anything indicating this.  Which is to say that I don’t think applying for the Joint Degree improves or decreases ones chance of admission at HBS.  It is an additional one year commitment, so just make sure you are ready to spend three years in school.

Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) Joint Degree

Essay Question: The MS/MBA program is focused on design, innovation, and entrepreneurship within a technical/engineering context. Describe your past experiences in these areas and your reasons for pursuing a program with this focus.

(Recommended: 500 words)

Keep in mind that your overall personal background should be in the main HBS MBA essays and not here. Make sure you effectively align the MBA essays, the SEAS essay, and the 500 character goals statement so that they support and don’t overly duplicate each other, though some overlap (see below) is inevitable. The SEAS essay consists of two parts:

 

PART 1: Discuss past experiences with design innovation, and/or entrepreneurship within a technical engineering content. If you don’t have any past professional, academic, or other experience in any of these areas, the program is not for you.  Assume that you should be spending at least half if not more of the essay providing an analysis of those experiences. Your resume and application form should back-up what you write about in the essay. My suggestion would be to highlight 2-4 specific ways your past experience demonstrates your fit for the program.

 

PART 2: Discuss reasons for pursing the program. The reasons would relate directly to your post-MBA objectives, so there should be some inherent overlap between this essay and what you write in the 500 character goals statement (see below regarding that). You should certainly justify why the program is right for you based on what you can read about on the program website.   I would also suggest reading a Q&A with the program’s co-chair. When explaining why you want to attend a program, do not just make a series of dumb lists of classes or tell the program about itself, but explains what you want form the program.   You need not mention the names of particular courses as long as it would be clear to your reader that your learning needs align well with curriculum.  If you have a particular interest in a more specialized course or studying with a particular professor, it might be worth mentioning it as long as it is an explanation of why you want to study the subject and not based on circular reasoning;

 

 An example of circular (tautological) reasoning:  “I want to take Integrated Design because I am interested in learning about integrated design.”This kind of circular reasoning is so common. Usually, it takes place within a paragraph consisting of many such sentences. They actually convey nothing about the applicant.  They are just abstract needs and will have limited impact on your reader.  The admissions reader wants to learn about you, not about their own program.
 An example of an explanation for why:  “While I have been exposed to some user design issues,  I presently lack the kind of comprehensive understanding of design issues that are critical to my future goals….”  A complete explanation would include additional details about the kind of issues that the applicant is interested in learning about and/or specific ways the applicant intended to apply what he or she would learn at Harvard to those goals.  By focusing on very specific learning needs and explaining those needs in relationship to one’s goals and/or past experience, the admissions reader will be learning about you.
Just as with HKS, I would not assume any advantage in terms of admissions outcomes by applying for the SEAS Joint Degree.

 

Best of luck with your application to HBS!



-Adam Markus
I am a graduate admissions consultant who works with clients worldwide. If you would like to arrange an initial consultation, please complete my intake form. Please don't email me any essays, other admissions consultant's intake forms, your life story, or any long email asking for a written profile assessment. The only profiles I assess are those with people who I offer initial consultations to. Please note that initial consultations are not offered when I have reached full capacity or when I determine that I am not a good fit with an applicant.

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