@Varun - here goes the more elaborate post.
Must caution you that I am likely to sound sarcastic and caustic - primarliy this is because I don't know you enough; second, because I have my own set of prejudices around non-conservative profiles (wildcards in the Indian mileu). You are as wild a card as any.
Lets talk ISB app strategy first - you will have to get invited to the interview to present your case effectively. Your invite will depend on your application, your CV and your answers to the essay questions. Check out the application page once it becomes active for Co2013 (late April), the essays had a 300w limit (for Co2012), the CV has to be a one / two pager, and there are specific pages where acads need to be mentioned.
When you write your application, where / how will you justify your low academic scores? You backpacked during your 12th and used your experience to start your venture sounds like a good theme - but how do you substantiate this in a set of 300 word essays. Remember you will have to use the same essays to outline your candidature as an ISB fit, to justify your decisions to become and entrepreneur, justify your decision to fold up, outline your post ISB goals and so on. ISB are pretty sharpish about the academic rigour. Perhaps, you will have to score a 700+ in GMAT, or even more - maybe 740+.
You have done a lot of EC work - but standalone EC would not cut much. It has to be academics plus EC. This is completely contrary to what you believe now, ask me questions if you have any.
When reading your application, would the admission office feel convinced enough to interview you? The ISB board is likely to recieve apps from entrepreneurs with ventures in different stages of gestation, or monetization and realisation - would you, as a candidate, be compelling enough?
Lets talk about 'compelling' - personally, I get impressed if I am presented conservative rationale to prove that you have 'grown' in your vocation/profession/job. Its easier to talk about growth for someone who has a salaried job - a promotion is growth, awards/recognition is an affirmation of growth (growth being an outcome of competitive processes leading to quantifiable or non-quantifiable gains). It is difficult for entrepreneurs to prove 'growth' - because you cannot compare and easily benchmark. This may becocme more difficult for you given that you have unplugged yourself in a short timeframe. The other challenge is that the ISB essays are just 300 words and it makes it very difficult to explain all that you need to, to present yourself well.
Would suggest that you focus on what your venture achieved - i.e. how many of the 650 concepts were you able to sell, how many partners were you able to get, how much money did you generate in the process, etc.
Repeating, Sukhoi Sortee, Auschwitz incarceration, Glenfiddicch pilgrimage -- sound great, but you thought your product out when you were a UG, 'growth' is what you did with the product. Focus not on your product but on the results.
ISB is also notorious for its quest for a good 'what after ISB' - in your answers I did not see a lot of content around it. Think you should action that.
Finally, all this tangential advise is being given for your interview invitation. Invitation is tollgate 1 - the actual interview is going to be tougher.
H.
P.S. Views, opinions, prejudices, errors - all my own.
@ Harsh
Thanks for the reply man, appreciate it.
I am looking at this as a mock interview. Of sorts, atleast. So I will answer accordingly.
I think the 'Why ISB' and 'Why MBA now' are the two questions I have a fairly easy answer for. ISB because of the experience peer group and the incubation cell to continue with my entrepreneurial aspirations. Why MBA now? I just do not see a better timing. Sold my venture and finished my responsibilities of integrating our portfolios. Going back to a job does not add value and I do not want to start another venture until I plug the gaps I found in my skill set during my first venture.
A bit about my venture - Trippy. We are a B2B service provider to the Outbound Travel & Leisure Trade. We offer a portfolio of around 643 experiences in 51 countries across the globe. These 'once-in-a-lifetime' experiences help our partners to stand out from the crowd in the extremely cluttered travel space and offer a value proposition which otherwise was considered to be inaccessible.
Simple examples. Arranged a Sukhoi - 30 MKI sortie over Moscow for a client of our partner. Arranged a 6-hr stay in an Auschwitz Concentration Cell. Got access to the cellars of the Glenfiddich guys in Scotland.
Coming to the rather important question of why sell out so soon?
1. The model is easily replicable and there is almost no 'FMA' as bigger players with deeper pockets can enter into contractual agreements with the service providers at better rates making us irrelevant in the game.
2. Bottlenecks had begun to appear and our founding team is completely made up of BBA freshers with no significant experience.
3. Lack of financial resources. Our venture was offline with a, lets say, simple business model and hence not visibly scalable at a fast rate. Hence lack of VC interest.
4. Travel occupies 70% of e-commerce transaction. We reckon online is the place to be and hence would like to pick up skills in that specific direction during my MBA.
Hence, selling out when the price is right made sense. We can now offer our portfolio to the buyer who can further drive down rates with committing numbers and capitalize on the first movers advantage.
So it is not like we grew exponentially and hence became a target. More like we had a good product and almost zilch resources and decided to exit at moderate profits to ensure the idea is not shot in the process. The founders are not more important than the idea itself - something I believe in.
Acads -
10th - 88
12th - 67 (No regrets. Backpacked almost the entire year. Not sure how the panel would take it though.)
BBA - 77
Apart from all this, I am banking heavily on my well rounded extra curriculars. Highlighted the important ones in the previous post. Headed/Presided a couple of other clubs (Toastmasters) and events as well.
Basically, I am at a weird juncture where I am almost compelled to finish my MBA now because job is out of the equation and launching something new does not make sense. I also cannot write (I am not sure if its that) like Chetan Bhagat. So few options here.
I know I am asking for a lot here, but are US/European schools even a possibility?
Appreciate your work in this forum. Better than paying a bomb just to get our 'profiling' done.