2025-2026 MIT Sloan Cover Letter Advice & Application Tips
This article was originally published on January 7, 2021. It was last updated on July 23, 2025.
If you’re applying to MIT Sloan’s MBA Program, your 300-word Cover Letter is your first big test. And the word limit is undoubtedly the most challenging part of this essay. Because it’s so short, you must focus strictly on the experiences that prove your fit with Sloan’s culture.
What MIT Sloan Asks for in its Cover Letter
For reference, here is the prompt:
“MIT Sloan seeks students whose personal characteristics demonstrate that they will make the most of the incredible opportunities at MIT, both academic and non-academic. We are on a quest to find those whose presence will enhance the experience of other students. We seek thoughtful leaders with exceptional intellectual abilities and the drive and determination to put their stamp on the world. We welcome people who are independent, authentic, and fearlessly creative — true doers. We want people who can redefine solutions to conventional problems, and strive to preempt unconventional dilemmas with cutting-edge ideas. We demand integrity and respect passion.
Taking the above into consideration, please submit a cover letter seeking a place in the MIT Sloan MBA Program. Your letter should conform to a standard business correspondence, include one or more professional examples that illustrate why you meet the desired criteria above, and be addressed to the Admissions Committee (300 words or fewer, excluding address and salutation).”
How to Write the Best MIT Sloan Cover Letter
Pay close attention to the language of this prompt because it helps describe the qualities Sloan seeks in a successful applicant. Many of these are similar to those sought by all of the top MBA programs – intellectual strength, track record of accomplishments, and ability to bring dimension to the cohort. However, the critical things to note here are those that make Sloan different – its orientation towards an independent mindset and creative problem-solving. They don’t just want someone who ‘got the job done’. They want the person who redefined the problem and came up with a solution no one had thought of before.
Before you start drafting, take a moment to review these three common MBA essay mistakes. Avoiding them will keep your Sloan cover letter on the right track.
Practice the Art of Omission
With only 300 words at your disposal, you simply don’t have space to separately demonstrate you possess each of the more basic traits. For these, utilize the other components of the application: your GMAT/GPA can help prove your intellect, your resume showcases your history of accomplishments, and your video essays should highlight what makes you unique. In the cover letter, make a solid case – supported by one or maybe two stories – that you are an innovative thinker who isn’t afraid of rocking the boat to enable progress. The ideal story to use is career-focused (given the tone of the prompt), fairly recent, and has a connecting thread with how you will contribute at Sloan if admitted.
Make the Case for “Why You?”
That said, you do need to use this vehicle to provide a higher-level ‘pitch’ of yourself to the adcom. A structure I’ve seen be consistently successful is one that is three paragraphs, maybe four. In the first paragraph, without simply restating your resume, you can lay out the differentiating or notable experience you bring to the table. Then in the second paragraph (or perhaps two paragraphs if needed), dive into a story that supports this ‘brand’ and hits on the Sloan-specific qualities mentioned above. Finally, in the last paragraph, drive the argument home by asserting why these qualities will make you an asset to the Sloan community.
A Successful Sample MIT Sloan Cover Letter
To demonstrate this structure in practice, here is an example from a past client (privatized, of course):
“Dear MIT Sloan Admissions Committee,
Through my role at [consulting firm] and my experience driving positive change in my community—first as a student mentor and now as a founder of a [mentoring program]—I will make a significant contribution to Sloan. I have managed increasingly larger teams, led projects in eight countries, and enhanced both our company’s products and traditional mentoring frameworks.
As a self-described quantitative person, I moved from a trading career out of college to consulting, eventually managing my firm’s [industry-focused] practice. This journey taught me how to leverage data to drive business strategy and how to collaborate with people from diverse backgrounds.
After seeing a need to expand our product offerings to include emerging technologies, I led a three-person team to create a research product. This delivered capability maturity assessments in digital, data analytics, and cloud. I collaborated with [firm] experts and clients to build a framework, scope, and go-to-market strategy.
To date, we have delivered research to over 30 clients, supported four cases with data, and hosted two roundtables that brought together heads of technology from more than 20 firms.
I am confident that the breadth of my experience will allow me to succeed at Sloan while also bringing a unique perspective to the school. The opportunity to be involved in innovation periods and the Entrepreneurship & Innovation Track will provide the skills needed to transition into a bank’s innovation team and ultimately create a FinTech firm.
Respectfully,
[name redacted]”
Sloan MBA Essay Guidance – Video Question Tips
In addition to the cover letter, Sloan asks you to respond to two 60-second video questions.
Video Question 1:
“Introduce yourself to your future classmates. Here’s your chance to put a face with a name, let your personality shine through, be conversational, be yourself. We can’t wait to meet you!“
Sloan introduced this prompt as an optional question in the 2022-2023 cycle. It is now a requirement. Since your cover letter is professionally focused, use the first video to share your life outside of work. Highlight the unique attributes you bring to the class. Specific content will vary from person to person of course, but remember that Sloan values independent thought, fearless creativity, and passion. What about you hits on these notes?
Perhaps the most important thing to do to ensure you submit a strong video statement is to practice. You know the prompt and can record and re-record yourself until you are satisfied with the output. And so can the competition! So, give this application component the thought and attention it deserves to ensure you stand out.
Video Question 2:
“All MBA applicants will be prompted to respond to a randomly generated, open-ended question. The question is designed to help us get to know you better; to see how you express yourself and to assess fit with the MIT Sloan culture. It does not require prior preparation.
This second video prompt is a required component that appears once you complete the other application sections. You will have 10 seconds of preparation time followed by a 60-second response window. Because these randomized video essays are increasingly common, preparing for various scenarios is essential.
You can expect to have a few different buckets of questions that come up.
- #1: Behavioral questions (such as “Tell us about a time a classmate or colleague wasn’t contributing to a group project. What did you do?”)
- #2: Questions about your personality or interests (such as “What is your favorite book and why?” or “What achievement are you most proud of and why?”)
- #3: MBA-specific questions (such as ‘Why MBA?’ or ‘How will you contribute to the school’s community?”)
For any question, remember that the most important thing is to explain the “why” instead of the “what”. Be concise and clear, but also show your enthusiasm. Overall, you can prepare and practice any questions you would expect in a formal Zoom or in-person interview setting for this randomized video essay.
How to Approach MIT Sloan’s “The World That Shaped You” Essay
MIT Sloan originally introduced this prompt as an optional question in the 2022-2023 cycle; however, they now require it for all applicants.
“The Admissions Committee is excited to learn more about you and your background. In 250 words, please respond to the following short-answer question:
How has the world you come from shaped who you are today? For example, your family, culture, and community all help to shape aspects of your life experiences and perspective. Please use this opportunity to share more about your background.“
From your answer, Sloan wants to understand the unique influences that have made you who you are. This is your opportunity to share something personal and formative that hasn’t yet come through in your resume or cover letter. Focus on one or two key traits, values, or perspectives that are core to who you are today. Then show a clear link to your life experiences – whether that’s your family, culture, community, or other meaningful influences like travel, extracurriculars, or personal challenges.
Think in terms of cause-and-effect: what life experience shaped a quality that now defines how you approach work, relationships, or leadership? Why is this important for the admissions committee to understand about you?
Ultimately, Sloan is looking for self-awareness and personal insight. Use this space to round out your application, highlight a side of yourself they wouldn’t otherwise see, and demonstrate the unique perspective you’d bring to their community.
Your MIT Sloan application deserves more than guesswork. Get expert insight and a winning strategy. Schedule an initial consultation with our expert MBA admissions consultants today and get personalized guidance to make your application stand out.




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