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This review was written by Nirvan Gandhi on 9th april 2026

MBA Interviews Done? Don’t Just Wait, Do This Instead

You’ve given your interviews.

Some went great.

Some… not so great.

Some you’re still overthinking at 2 AM.

And now?

You’re stuck in this weird phase where:

  • there’s nothing officially left to do
     

  • but it doesn’t feel like you’re done
     

So what do most people do?

They wait.

They refresh their inbox.

They stalk LinkedIn.

They replay answers in their head like:

“I should’ve said that differently…”

Let me save you some time.

That doesn’t help. At all.

This phase feels passive. It’s not.

Here’s what no one tells you:

The time after your interview is not dead time. It’s positioning time.

Because while you can’t redo your interview…

You can still influence:

  • how prepared you are if things go well
     

  • how quickly you recover if things don’t
     

Most applicants waste this window.

Smart ones don’t.

First, stop doing this

Before we get into what to do, let’s kill a few habits.

Stop replaying your interview answers

You’re not going to “figure out” the outcome by overthinking.

You said what you said.

Move on.

 

Stop comparing timelines

Just because someone posted:

“Admit from XYZ”

Does not mean anything about your result.

Different schools. Different rounds. Different pools.

Stay in your lane.

 

Stop assuming the worst (or best)

“I nailed it.”

“I completely messed up.”

Both are usually wrong.

You’re not the best judge of your own interview.

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So what should you actually do?

Let’s break this down properly.

1. Lock your story (again)

Most people think:

“Interview ho gaya. Story done.”

No.

This is the best time to refine your narrative.

Because now you’ve:

  • said it out loud

  • seen where you struggled

  • noticed where you were unclear
     

Ask yourself:

  • Which answers felt weak?

  • Where did I ramble?

  • What questions caught me off guard?
     

This is gold.

Because whether you:

  • get another interview

  • get waitlisted

  • or reapply
     

This clarity compounds.

 

2. Prepare for the “good outcome” (no one does this properly)

Let’s say you get in.

Then what?

Most applicants figure this out after admits.

That’s too late.

Start thinking now:

  • Which school would I choose if I get multiple admits?

  • What does the financial picture look like, tuition, living costs, and how much loan I’m actually comfortable taking on?

  • What factors actually matter to me, geography, role, visa, network?

  • What conversations do I need to have before deciding?
     

Because when admits come, everything moves fast.

And people make rushed decisions.

 

3. Quietly prepare for the “bad outcome”

Not in a negative way.

In a smart way.

Ask:

“If I don’t get in, what’s my move?”

Not:

  • “I’ll try again next year”
     

That’s not a plan.

Think:

  • What will I change in my application?

  • Was my story actually clear?

  • Did my goals make sense?
     

This is where most people mess up.

They assume:

“Bas thoda aur improve karna hai”

No.

Sometimes you need to rethink, not just improve.

And if you’re not able to clearly pinpoint what didn’t land, that’s usually the biggest gap.

 

That’s the kind of work we spend time on at Applicant X, breaking things down properly before rebuilding anything.

 

4. Stay warm with your network

If you’ve already spoken to:

  • current students

  • alumni
     

Don’t disappear.

Stay in touch.

Not in a forced way.

Just:

  • follow up

  • update them when results come

  • keep the relationship alive
     

Because this helps in:

  • decision-making

  • future opportunities

  • building genuine connections
     

 

5. Get out of the MBA bubble (seriously)

This might sound counterintuitive.

But right now, don’t make your entire life about MBA results.

Go back to:

  • work

  • routines

  • normal life
     

Because if your whole identity becomes:

“MBA result”

This phase will drain you.

The part no one talks about

This phase is emotionally messy.

You’ll have days where you feel:

“I think I did well.”

And days where:

“There’s no chance.”

That’s normal.

What’s not helpful is letting that swing control your actions.

Stay steady.

Because at this point, there are only three outcomes:

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If you get the admit

Great.

But remember:

Your job is not over.

Now the question becomes:

“Is this the right admit for me?”

And that’s a completely different decision.

 

If you get waitlisted

This is where things get interesting.

Because now:

  • you still have a shot

  • but you need to act
     

And this is where clarity matters even more.

 

If you get rejected

We’re not going to sugarcoat it.

It hurts.

But here’s the thing:

The interview already gave you feedback.

You just haven’t processed it properly yet.

Most reapplicants ignore this.

They:

  • tweak essays

  • retake GMAT

  • apply again
     

Same mistakes. Same outcome.

Don’t do that.

Final thought

This phase feels like waiting.

It’s not.

It’s a checkpoint.

Most people pause here.

A few people use it to get sharper.

Be in that second group.

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