Berkeley Haas MBA Interviews
First, at your Berkeley Haas MBA interview, be prepared to demonstrate deep understanding of Haas Defining Principles (HDP)
- Question the Status Quo
- Confidence Without Attitude
- Students Always
- Beyond Yourself
Also be prepared to share examples of how you have demonstrated HDP in professional and personal life.
Second, be prepared to connect your long-term goal to Haas professors, programs, people. In other words, customize your “Why Haas?” answer to fit your career plans. Show that you know Haas programs deeply and can explain why and how Haas best prepares you to change the world.
Third, be ready to prove, with logic and passion, why you would choose Berkeley over other options. Haas usually loses to Stanford GSB and alumni interviewers are sensitive to applicants applying to other, higher ranked schools. Have some criteria by which Berkeley beats other schools. For instance, a former consultant client who wanted to pursue a career in the healthcare industry mentioned that he wanted to pursue a Health Management Certificate at the Haas School of Business. Stanford, by contrast, does not offer such a certificate.
Fourth and finally, review your written application. Think through the kinds of questions you are likely to be asked, and think about your responses. Practice interviews can be very helpful, but be sure not to over-rehearse your answers. Your responses should always sound natural and conversational, not scripted and memorized.
A former client told me that sometimes alumni interviewers receive “tailor-made instructions / check-points” from the admission office about what kinds of points he should ask me and check. Therefore, we encourage you to review your application and ask yourself “What issues might the admissions office ask my interviewer to confirm at the interview?”
Might they be concerned, for example, about my:
communication skills (can I explain complex issues in simple words?)
teamwork skills (can I handle disappointments? can I unite diverse peers)
career goals (are they realistic? do I have a “plan B”?)
Berkeley Haas MBA Frequently Asked Interview Questions
- Tell me something about yourself?
- Walk me through your resume?
- Why MBA? Why Berkeley Haas school?
- Why MBA now or Why MBA at this stage of your career?
- What is your short & long term goals?
- What is your Plan B if consulting/Investment banking does not happen?
- What are your key strengths? Can you give some examples please?
- What is your biggest weakness ? Can you give some examples please?
- How can you add value to the Class?
- Why should we take you?
- One reason that we should not select you?
- Interests and Hobbies – Be prepared!.. questions as basic as “Why do you do poetry (or any other activity” may be asked.
- Some Situational & Behavioral Question
- What would you describe are your greatest achievement to date?
- Give me an example of a time you faced a conflict while working on a team. How did you handle that?
- Give me an example of a time when you did not meet a client’s expectation. What happened, and how did you attempt to rectify the situation?
- Case questions are fairly common in MBA interview especially for consulting aspirants. Below are a few sample for to practice for:
- How many Golf balls can fit in a Boeing 747?
- What’s the global market size for smartphones?
- Do you have any Question for us?
Berkeley Haas MBA Interview Questions – 1
I just had my interview last night. It ended up being over the phone with a 2nd-year student. It seems like my situation was a bit unusual, and they are usually on-campus with 2nd-years, or off-campus with alums. Could be wrong though!
The interview was very relaxed and conversational, with a strong focus on fit. My interviewer spent about two minutes explaining her situation to give some context. The interview was blind; she only had my resume. As best I remember, her questions for me were:
– Walk me through your resume
– Why an MBA, and why now?
– Why Haas specifically?
– What groups would you participate in at Haas?
– Which of the defining principles are most important to you? Please link them to your experience and goals [no right answer here!]
– How would you like to be remembered or known by your classmates at Haas?
– What are my short- and long-term career goals
My interviewer also asked some additional questions specific to my situation. She really listened well to what I had already said and formed additional questions based on my earlier responses, and it was clear she was not just reading off a list. We had some open conversation based on my responses as well.
She also gave me the opportunity to ask her questions and gave very thoughtful responses to each. None of the questions were strictly behavioral, and most of what she talked about was related to the culture of the school.
Overall, a really pleasant and engaging interview. I imagine that the questions will vary depending on your interviewer but it wouldn’t surprise me if the general theme (cultural fit) is the same.
Berkeley Haas MBA Interview Questions – 2
- Tell me something about yourself which is not mentioned in your resume.
- Till date you might have taken a lot of decision of your life and career. Which one you are most proud of?
- Discuss about a time when you were a part of a group of peers & you failed to meet your objective. How did you deal with this?
- Tell me your views on the economy (where the markets are headed, Greece, Facebook IPO, how does a company have a sustainable competitive advantage, etc.)
- If you get admitted to Haas, how you are going to contribute to Berkeley Haas?
- Tell me something about the non-profit organization co-founded by you that has been mentioned in your application.
- Tell me about a challenge you have faced at your work.
- Do you have any questions for me?
So, overall I had a very good Berkeley Haas interview experience.
Berkeley Haas MBA Interview Questions – 3
- Why you have chosen Berkeley Haas for your MBA? Why you think this is the right time to go for MBA?
- As I am from a rotational leadership program, so the interviewer asked to describe my best and worst rotations.
- If I could take a 1-month sabbatical from work, how would I choose to spend it (Here I Choose to talk about my extracurricular)
- When have you had to deal with a difficult inter-personal relationship at the office and how did you deal with it?
- What do you think is the most important aspect of leadership? What is your leadership style?
- Where do you see yourself after 5 years or 10 years (short term goals and long term goals)?
- Do you want to ask me anything?
Berkeley Haas MBA Interview Questions – 4
I interviewed last night with an alum based in Seattle. She chose a local coffee shop in her neighborhood. This was my 8th and final interview of R1. It was also the most casual (Berkeley, go figure). She started off by explaining that the Haas interview was a way for the school to keep the alumni involved and also a way for Haas to market the school to the interviewee. This really set me at ease. She spent 10 minutes telling me about her path to Haas and what she has been up to since (she was an 01 grad). She let me in on some idiosyncrasies of the program. The next 30 minutes were spent on answering the typical questions: Tell me about yourself? Why MBA? Why Haas? ST/LT goals? How will you contribute/participate at Haas?
She was really interested in digging a little deeper into answers. She wanted to ensure that I was ready to become an active member of the school. She specified that since Haas is a public school that it was not privy to a lot of the lavish extras that other top schools are. The school depends on student-led initiatives, events, planning, etc.
She ended by telling me what happens next in the process – she provides her feedback to the ADCOM and she doesn’t hear anything again unless I am admitted. Once admitted, she and many others will turn on the charm offensive to ensure that you accept the offer. She closed by saying that she gets the opportunity to do just that.
My overall impression is that the Haas interview plays only a marginal role in the assessment process. Much like GSB, it seems that you can do more harm than good during an interview. That said, the interaction with this particular alum worked on me as I am excited to hear back from Haas!
Berkeley Haas MBA Interview Questions – 5
I had an interview with a Haas admission officer on Monday. The interview was 50-minutes long and a blind one. I felt that the interview was kind of “Behavioral Event Interviews”; the interviewer often dug into details and asked me what, how, why so often. Therefore, you will have questions special to you. Here are the questions I had. Additional BEI-type questions followed some of the questions below.
Walk me through resume
Why did you move to other functions within the company?
Why Haas.
STG and LTG.
If you could change one thing relating to your professional topic, then what would it be? (This is like Short Answer 1 in Haas’s essay.)
Difficult teamwork experience
Teamwork failure
Your contributions to Haas
Lesson from your international work experience. How did you resolve a difficult situation in an international project?
What are you going to do if you have extra 4hrs a day?
Anything that you want the adcom to know?
Questions.
Berkeley Haas MBA Interview Questions – 6
I have just finished my Haas interview with a member of admission. My interview was truly conversational and most of the questions were ordinary ones. Also, at the beginning he mentioned that Haas invites approximately 30% of the applicants to interview….For your reference, followings are the questions that I was asked at the interview. I hope it helps you and your clients.
Walk me through your resume
Short and long term goal
Why MBA, Why Haas, Why now?
Team work experience
What do people around you mention about you
Why do you think people will say about you in the way you said
What is the biggest risk that you take currently
What do you want me to ask you
Any questions?
Berkeley Haas MBA Interview Questions – 7
Hey everyone,
I’m gonna break up the monotony of the interview invite jitters and provide a debrief of my interview. I interviewed the other day on campus with a current student. I thought my interviewer was really awesome, and I was super impressed by the questions asked + dialogue that ensued. I didn’t feel like there was a standardized set of questions during this interview. Instead, everything was very free flowing. My advice is to really know your story and what your future outlook is. Have specific examples of failures, success, friction with a boss, friction with peers, leadership moment, regrets, what makes you unique, etc etc… basically all the typical behavioral questions. Make sure your stories are air tight because we dove pretty deep with each one. As long as you’re being genuine and witty (if the conversation permits), there shouldn’t be any issues. I actually enjoyed this interview a lot more than any other interview.
Overall, I feel great about the interview but who knows what metrics are really involved. Now it is just a waiting game. I am going to forget about all of this by focusing on other things until mid March rolls around. Hope this helps!
Berkeley Haas MBA Interview Questions – 8
Has anyone else completed an on-campus interview that has any tips to share? It seems like the interview is pretty straight-forward and conversational, but I have heard from a couple of friends that they got grilled on their long term goals (like what exactly you’d be doing, what stakeholders you would engage with, what would your day to day look like, etc.) I have also heard that they ask you about the defining principles but have not seen these questions come up on the clear admit forum. Any ideas?
Yes, they can get very specific. It’s hard to give you advice on this because they don’t follow a template that fits everyone. Really know your story and goals. For example… tell me about a time you had friction with a boss… be prepared to be followed up with: how did your boss react when you did that, what did your peers think, did that affect morale in your workplace, what would you do differently, how is everything now between you and your boss, what did you learn, etc etc. Yes, you’re right about defining principles. Be prepared for a question asking which is your favorite + a situation where you exemplified one.
Just relax and be yourself. I personally didn’t over prepare for this interview because I felt the nature of the interview would hurt me if I did. I simply thought up some recent scenarios to fit what they might ask me and went from there. Big picture stuff. I think one reason they’re prodding is to verify how genuine you are with your stories. Think of it as a first date where your common ground is you both think Haas is a super cool place. Dress nice, be polite, and be genuine.