Beyond the Traditional: Exploring MBA Programs that Value EA Scores alongside GMAT/GRE
In short
The Executive Assessment (EA) is a standardized exam designed for experienced professionals and is accepted by some MBA-format programs as an alternative to the GMAT or GRE. The EA can be a strong option when your profile already demonstrates leadership and progression and you want a testing path that aligns with executive-level readiness. But acceptance policies vary by school and program type—so the strategic move is to confirm each program's policy and then decide whether EA, GMAT Focus Edition, GRE, or a waiver pathway best supports your application timeline and readiness signal.
What is the Executive Assessment (EA)?
The Executive Assessment (EA) is a specialized test designed for experienced professionals seeking admission to top MBA programs. Unlike the GMAT or GRE, the EA assesses executive-level skills and readiness for business school.
In other words, it's intended to show you can handle MBA-level rigor and decision-making—especially if you have meaningful work experience and progression.
EA vs GMAT Focus Edition vs GRE: how to think about the choice
The "best" test is the one that strengthens your overall application signal without derailing execution. Your decision typically depends on your experience level, your academic/quant evidence, and the policies of the programs you're targeting.
- EA can fit candidates who want to demonstrate readiness with an executive-oriented assessment.
- GMAT Focus Edition (and GRE) can be useful when you need a stronger standardized signal or when programs clearly prefer them.
- Waiver/test-optional pathways can make sense when your readiness evidence is strong and program policy supports it.
Merchant MBA does not provide test tutoring or test prep services. We treat testing as a strategy and timeline input only.
This is the core positioning logic: if your experience already shows leadership progression, the EA can complement your story by reinforcing readiness without forcing a test strategy that takes over your calendar.
The key is to ensure the rest of your application still provides clear evidence of quantitative comfort and academic readiness.
How to confirm whether a program accepts EA scores
Program policies vary. Don't rely on secondhand lists. Instead:
- Check the program's official admissions testing page for the exact program format you're applying to.
- Confirm whether EA is accepted as a full substitute or only in certain cases.
- Ask admissions directly if language is unclear, and document the answer.
This protects you from building a testing strategy around an assumption.
What MBA programs evaluate when you submit an EA
Submitting an EA score doesn't remove the need for strong fundamentals. Programs will still evaluate your academic readiness, leadership, and goals clarity through the full application:
- Resume impact: progression, ownership, and outcomes.
- Transcripts: evidence of academic readiness and quantitative comfort.
- Essays: a credible "why MBA, why now" and program fit logic.
- Recommendations: third-party proof of leadership and growth.
Choosing the right program: factors beyond test acceptance
Even if a program accepts the EA, it still must be the right platform for your goals. Evaluate:
- Outcomes pathways: internships/recruiting access in your target roles and geography.
- Curriculum and experiential learning: where you'll build proof points, not just knowledge.
- Alumni density: whether the network is usable for your path.
- Culture and fit: where you'll thrive and stay engaged.
A testing decision should protect your overall application quality. If test planning consumes essay time and recommender management, you've traded one "signal" for weaker execution everywhere else.
Pick the path that keeps your application coherent and on time.
How Merchant MBA supports EA-based applicants
Merchant MBA supports applicants who are considering the EA by aligning testing choices with an admissions-first strategy: school selection, timeline planning, narrative clarity, and execution quality across essays, resume, recommendations, and interviews. We do not offer test prep; we focus on the application system that determines outcomes.
Is the Executive Assessment easier than the GMAT or GRE?
Will submitting an EA score hurt my chances compared to a GMAT/GRE score?
How do I decide between EA and a test waiver or test-optional policy?
Should I submit both EA and GMAT/GRE scores?
How do I protect my admissions timeline while deciding on an EA strategy?
Choose the right testing path without losing application quality
We'll pressure-test whether EA fits your profile and target programs, then map a timeline-safe admissions plan that keeps essays and recommendations strong.