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The CAT results have been declared and IIM hopefuls are now focussed on acing the secong leg of the admissions process -- the group discussions (GD) and the personal interview (PI). To help students prepare themselves for all the possible twists and turns a personal interview can take, we publish first-hand experiences of students who managed to breeze through their PI and others who crashed and burned. Here, Bharat Jhurani, a first-year student at IIM Lucknow, shares his interview experience as a part of the CAT selection process. I am an electronics and communications engineer from the GITAM college of engineering (Non-NIT, IIT!), Visakhapatnam [Images] and I graduated in 2007(yup, a fresher!).
My lone IIM call -- after all those arduous AIM CATS -- topping them, working hard and even managing a 99.36 percentile in CAT -- was from IIM Lucknow. One single IIM call! The reason? My slightly low score in the Verbal Ability section.
My group discussion and interview were scheduled on February 17 at 2 pm, the venue being Hotel Monarch, Bangalore. I was made part of Panel II and my number was 9 (why is it always Number 9?). I was called in for the GD and the essay at about 3 pm. There were two panel members presiding and 12 of us within the group. IIM-L is known for assigning abstract topics and it maintained its reputation upon this particular occasion. The topic? 'The most effective way to eradicate poverty is through effective governance'.
As soon as it was dictated, we were asked to write a small essay in about 150 words within 5 minutes. After the stipulated time, the papers were taken away, leaving us to discuss the topic. With such an open-ended topic thrown in, it was literally a fish fight in the beginning -- everyone was hurling in whatever facts they had at hand and I was no exception! I piped up quite a number of times during the process. Overall it was a pretty good GD, but it could have been better. Then came the time for personal interviews -- they were pretty short and I presented myself before the panel at 4:30 pm. It comprised of the same individuals who presided over the GD. My interview lasted for all of six minutes. Following this, I was asked the cliched question -- 'Tell us about yourself' -- which I answered reasonably well, highlighting my background, my hobbies (blogging, basketball) and my accomplishments (class representative etc). Two months later, I found that I have made it -- I got a convert and am presently the first student out here at the Indian Institute of Management, Lucknow. Gathering from my experience, I would say that the interviewers look for passion, ability and enthusiasm in a candidate, coupled with decent knowledge of current events and decent English language skills.
Get in there confidently and you'll emerge victorious! |
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