Interview Experience with a Mba Person
Lavin Gothi is an MBA
student at the University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management in the US.
Before this, she served on active duty in the US Navy for four years, first as
a division officer and then as a navigator. During this time, she visited the
Middle East and the Gulf to fulfil humanitarian assistance/disaster relief,
security co-operation and anti-piracy missions.
Ms Anupam grew up in Texas and studied for a degree in
strategic communications. In her spare time she enjoys running, skiing and
travelling.
1. When did you know you wanted to study for an MBA?
I wanted to find a
marketing job after I fulfilled my active duty military service, but I didn’t
feel like I had the corporate knowledge or experience to make the switch
successfully on my own. MBA Admission provided me
with the perfect opportunity to transform myself by expanding my knowledge in
areas where I’m weaker, gaining real-world corporate work experience and most
importantly through helping me to build and expand my network.
2. What is the best piece of advice given to you by a teacher?
After a tough
experience on a project assignment one day, the chief engineer pulled me aside
and said: “Heidi, the best thing you can do is the right thing. The next best
thing you can do is the wrong thing. The worst thing you can do is nothing.”
That really stuck with me. Decision-making isn’t something that can necessarily
be taught. You get better by recognising the impact of your choices and being
flexible enough to change course when you need to.
3. Who is your ideal professor?
I would love to take
a course with Salman Khan, the American educator. My father once sent me a
YouTube link to Khan Academy, his non-profit educational website, when I was
struggling to teach myself a difficult concept and he’s since been my go-to
whenever I’ve needed to brush up on mathematical knowledge.
4. What is the strangest thing you have ever done when studying?
I once wrote a book
by hand, complete with engineering diagrams and coloured illustrations, while
studying for my surface warfare qualification in the navy.
5. What is the worst job you have ever had?
I once was
responsible for stocking the freezers in a local meat market. I would wear
layers and long sleeves in the middle of summer and have to put on a parka
every time I went into the freezer storage units. It was slow, heavy work and I
often couldn’t bend my frozen fingers by the time I had pulled my inventory
list, but the people I worked with made me look forward to showing up every
day.
6. How do you deal with pressure?
The military taught
me how to compartmentalize extremely well. I focus on accomplishing what I must
and then afterwards relieve stress by going for a run. While at sea, it used to
take me 16 laps on the flight deck to cover just one mile. Now, I have easy
access to the beautiful trails along the Mississippi river banks where I live.
It’s nearly instant stress relief.
7. How do you deal with male-dominated environments?
I deal with
male-dominated environments in the same manner that I deal with any other
environment – by respecting social and cultural differences and by placing
value on the quality and merit of the contributions a person brings to the
group.
8. What is your life philosophy?
I will try anything
once. Some of the most fulfilling life experiences I’ve had were the result of
trying something I was afraid to do. I may never do it again, but the
experience will stay with me forever.
9. What is the last book you read?
The last book I read
was Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg. I really enjoyed her message about pursuing great
opportunities that you are passionate about rather than just looking for the
next career step up the ladder.
10. What is your plan B?
If I wasn’t concerned
with maintaining some semblance of stability in my life, I would love to be the
navigator for a private yacht. I enjoy the challenge of voyage planning and the
feeling of excitement when you sail into a new port for the first time. I have
found no other place on earth as beautiful or as peaceful as the middle of the
ocean on a clear, calm and moonless night.
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