Your ISB application has taken over your nights and weekends. First the GMAT, then the essays, the recommendation letter, the interview, and the fee. And above all this, the low chance of getting in. It feels like a high wall between you and the ISB cohort everyone talks about.
Here is the part no one tells you. That wall is not blocking the cohort. The wall is what builds it.
Why a High Wall Builds a Strong Network
In 1959, two researchers ran a simple test. Some people joined a group through an easy process. Others had to go through a painful, embarrassing one. The group was the same for everyone. The people who got in the hard way valued the group far more.
The reason is simple. When something is hard to get, your mind decides it must be worth it. You do not want to believe you suffered for nothing.
This is not just an old study. It is your own mind at work, and the ISB wall is high on purpose. Every hard step filters the crowd, so the people who reach the other side are the most serious and capable in the room.
What the High Wall Does to Your Cohort
A group that is easy to join is easy to leave. There is no shared story holding it together. So look at what a high wall builds instead.
First, it gives everyone the same hard story. Around 900 people climbed the same wall to get in. Same late nights. Same fear. Same big bet. That shared struggle is the glue that turns strangers into a real group, fast.
Second, you protect what cost you a lot. You worked hard to get in, so you do not let it go. That is why a classmate still picks up your call years later, long after the degree stops mattering.
Third, the wall also saves you time. Because everyone paid the same high price to climb it, you trust people fast, without the slow work of figuring out who is worth it. That is why the people, not the classes, are the real thing you buy.
Stop Treating the Application as a Wall
See the trap. If you treat the application as just a wall, you rush it and hate every step. You walk in on day one tired, and you see classmates as names to collect.
Flip it. The hard work is your first payment into the network, not a fee before it. Every tough hour is now shared with 900 people who paid the same. The ones who keep waiting for "next year" never make that first payment at all.
What to Do This Week
One. Stop wishing it were easier. The difficulty is doing its job. Let it.
Two. Talk to other applicants now. In forums and groups, help one of them with something small. You are meeting future classmates.
Three. Write down why you are doing this. On a hard night, read it. That note keeps you going.
Not sure ISB is really within reach for you? That is the exact doubt worth testing in a calm, honest way, and we can help you do that.
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