Stop Writing About Tech: What Stanford Actually Wants Instead
97% of Stanford essays mention the same three things. Let me tell you what actually works instead.
Guides, tips, and tools to help you get in - from someone who's been through it.

97% of Stanford essays mention the same three things. Let me tell you what actually works instead.

This student got into Stanford by doing one thing. No internship. No competition wins. Just *proof*.

Stanford admission officers use this one question to spot real visionaries. Can you answer it?

The real Stanford filter isn't about having a brilliant idea. It's about proof you can execute.

Harvard looks for vulnerability. Yale looks for service. Stanford looks for builders. Here's why.

Harvard gets 1,000+ essays about tragedy every year. Here's why most of them lose.

This essay had Harvard admissions talking. It was all about a potato.

Here are the 3 non-negotiable pillars every Harvard essay needs (hint: grades aren't one)

When Harvard asks for your challenge, they're not looking for trauma. They're looking for growth.

MIT admits students who are *weird*. If your app doesn't mention at least one strange project, you're doing it wrong.

Here's what 80% of students admitted to MIT have in common. And it's not what you think.

POV: MIT is your friend roasting your application

MIT doesn't just want smart students. They want students who *make* things.

Yale literally checks for humility in your essays. Here's how they spot when you're faking it.

Yale has a hidden filter in their admissions. It's called 'public motivation.' Here's what that means.

Yale admissions revealed their 3-pillar framework. Here's exactly what they're looking for.

Yale's definition of leadership isn't about titles. It's about service.

Princeton's motto is literally 'Service to the nation.' And 90% of essays ignore it.

Both want service. But they're looking for different *proof* of it.

Green flag: You mention a controversial conversation at your school. Red flag: You don't mention ANY Princeton traditions.

Princeton's entire residential system is built on conversation. That matters to admissions.

If you're applying to Columbia and don't mention the Core Curriculum, you've already lost.

50% of Columbia essays mention the city. That's why they're rejected.

Columbia has a 'curiosity essay' where they literally list your interests. Most students bomb it. Here's how to ace it.

Columbia's Core trains you to think deeply. They want students ready for that challenge.

UPenn's trickiest essay asks you to thank someone unexpected. 90% of students get it wrong.

Applying to Wharton? That essay about your business idea needs to answer THIS question first.

UPenn's 'thank you' essay is your secret weapon. Here's the exact formula that worked for admitted students.

People think Duke wants basketball fans. They actually want humans who create community. Big difference.

Most Duke essays don't mention Duke Engage. That's why they're losing to students who do.

If Duke was a person, this is how they'd describe themselves

At most schools, applying 'undecided' is risky. At Northwestern, it's actually their MOST popular choice.

Northwestern cares SO much about fit that they've basically told you how to hack it. Here's what they said.

Here are 3 Northwestern-specific things admissions teams look for. Most students miss ALL of them.

Brown's open curriculum sounds amazing. But if you apply and don't understand IT, you'll lose to students who do.

Brown has a reputation as the 'funkiest Ivy.' They literally celebrate the naked donut run during finals week (yes, that's real).

Brown's optional video portfolio is your secret weapon. But 70% of students submit garbage.
Most college essays fail in the first 30 seconds. Here are the 5 mistakes admissions officers notice immediately and how to fix them.