GMAT & MBA Admissions Blog

Mark Skoskiewicz

Mark Skoskiewicz holds a B.S. in Business Administration with a Major in Finance from the Indiana University Kelley School of Business, (he received additional minors in Philosophy and History). At IU, Mark was an undergraduate economics instructor teaching supplemental small group sessions for the department’s introductory economics course. During his junior and senior years, he was a private economics, finance, and accounting tutor. After Indiana, Mark spent 8 years working for Marakon Associates before creating MyGuru in 2009 while earning his MBA at Northwestern Kellogg to make it easier for parents and students to find high quality yet affordable tutors. While Mark wants MyGuru to always be known as a source for excellent tutors, we also aim to be a thought leader on how to improve academic performance through shifts in mindset, well-defined study plans, improved study habits, and even stress reduction strategies. Mark believes these ideas are a powerful, critical complement to working with an expert private tutor. Mark currently shares insights, advice, and information about how to improve academic performance in MyGuru’s improving academic performance blog and in an eBook Plan, Prepare, Perform: A Personalized Approach to Test Preparation.

Recent Posts

GMAT Combinatorics 1.1: Practice Problems

Posted by Mark Skoskiewicz on December 27, 2011 3:45:00 AM CST

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This post will give you some GMAT practice problems related to the post GMAT Combinatorics 1.0: Introduction. These will not be GMAT type problems as MyGuru takes a bottom-up approach to test prep. We want out students to learn the fundamentals first. At a later point we'll focus on useful tricks and traps to avoid in the problems solving and data sufficiency format.

1. Suppose you perform the following experiment - You flip a coin 5 times and record the results. How many different outcomes are there?

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Tags: GMAT, GMAT Blog, Combinatorics

GMAT Combinatorics 1.0: Introduction

Posted by Mark Skoskiewicz on December 26, 2011 6:34:00 AM CST

This is an introductory post on combinatorics - the art of counting. Combinatorics is one of the most difficult parts of the GMAT because it is not part of the standard American high school curriculum. With many other troubling types of problems, such as rate questions, fraction / decimal / percent problems, etc., a bit of review and a lot of practice will do the trick, but, in general, to get a handle on combinatorics problems students have to learn something new.

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Tags: Probability, GMAT, GMAT Blog, Combinatorics

Getting into a Top Ten Business School - An Introduction

Posted by Mark Skoskiewicz on December 16, 2011 12:00:00 PM CST

Applying to business schools is a daunting exercise. For many of you, this may be the first time you come in contact with extreme competition. By the time you are contemplating business school, you will have already been successful in your career – graduated from high school with stellar grades, landed in a top-tier undergrad program, and got the highest paying jobs out of college! However, in most cases, you were the big fish in a small pond compared to what you are going to encounter while applying and studying in business school (think Lake Michigan vs. Pacific Ocean). Many of you will experience failure for the first time as in not getting into your top choice school - in no way this is a reflection of your capabilities, but is purely a numbers game – the total openings in all elite schools combined is miniscule compared to the number of applicants!

This is the first in a series of articles where we will de-mystify the entire application process and share with you the tools that will enable you to succeed. The same tools will help you succeed during business school and also your career!

First, let’s distill what we mean by the APPLICATION PROCESS. Is’nt it just taking the GMAT, filling out a few forms, writing a few essays and voila!... you get admitted to Harvard? You could not be more wrong!!

It all starts with understanding what you want to do in your career, what critical skills gap that you currently have, which school will help you bridge that gap, and how do you successfully get into that school. While most of us (including yours truly) focus on how to successfully get into a school, we do not pay enough attention to the other aspects which strangely enough is the “magic” that helps you land in the right school.

So, in other words, the APPLICATION PROCESS broadly has the following steps:

    • Introspection and truthful self-assessment

    • Identify your “personal narrative”

    • Identifying and selecting the school(s)

    • Preparing the application package (GMAT, essays, etc.)

    • Finalizing the school to attend (for all the lucky ones who will have multiple admissions)

In a perfect world, going through the above steps will help you get into a right school. But, we need to be pragmatic and smart about b-schools. After all, we do not have all the time in the world and need to move on with life. We will be sharing with you here on how to achieve your goals without compromising on the integrity of the above approachWith regards to planning and timing, you will need to start approximately 2 years in advance to the start of the school term. i.e., if you need to start your MBA in August 2014, you should begin your self assessment and school selection (steps a & b) by mid 2012! You will be taking the GMAT in early 2013 and begin preparing the application packages to submit by late 2013. It is a long drawn out process!!

In future posts, we will dive into each of the five steps discussed above.

To listen to MyGuru's podcasts on the MBA school admissions process, visit MyGuru's Podbean Podcast site on the MBA School admissions process.

 Good luck!

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Tags: GMAT Blog, MBA Admissions

Random Business School Information

Posted by Mark Skoskiewicz on November 23, 2011 8:10:00 AM CST

MyGuru recently came across a site with a healthy dose of information about a wide range of business school topics. It includes everything from study tips, to lists of top business schools, to an online glossary of business terms. The site appears to be designed to lead students to consider an online MBA, which we at MyGuru caution against given the high cost and questionable market value compared to top tier traditional programs. However, in the right situation, an online MBA can make sense for some students, and so given the other information on this site, we’re happy to post a link to it (which we’ve done in the above text). Enjoy.

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Tags: GMAT Blog, News

Excellent GMAT Prep Materials

Posted by Mark Skoskiewicz on November 19, 2011 3:12:00 AM CST

When studying for the GMAT, most students correctly purchase the Official Guide to the GMAT from GMAC.org as their first test prep book. Whether to use a private tutor vs. a group class or go it alone is a decision we address throughout this site.

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Tags: GMAT Blog

GMAT Blog Launch

Posted by Mark Skoskiewicz on June 16, 2011 5:32:00 PM CDT

Mark here, co-founder and Managing Tutor of MyGuru.

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Tags: GMAT Blog

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