What You’ll Learn
🚫 The Myth
“WAT essays should be formal and academic. Using personal examples like ‘In my experience…’ or ‘When I worked at…’ is unprofessional and makes the essay seem like a diary entry. Stick to facts, statistics, and general examples. Personal anecdotes don’t belong in a professional assessment.”
Candidates strip all personal voice from their essays. Instead of “In my two years in banking, I’ve seen how digital payments transformed small businesses,” they write “Studies show that digital payments have transformed small businesses.” Every candidate quotes the same statistics, uses the same textbook examples, and sounds identical. The result: a sea of forgettable essays that blur together in the evaluator’s mind.
🤔 Why People Believe It
This myth has understandable origins:
1. Academic Essay Conditioning
Throughout school and college, we learned that formal essays avoid “I.” Research papers and academic writing prize objectivity. “The author believes” replaces “I think.” Candidates assume WAT follows the same rules.
2. Professional = Impersonal Assumption
There’s a belief that professional writing means removing yourself from it. Business reports, policy documents, formal presentations—these often use passive voice and avoid personal reference. Candidates think WAT expects the same formality.
3. Fear of Seeming Self-Centered
“Who cares about my experience? I’m nobody important.” Candidates worry that personal examples will seem self-important or irrelevant. They think evaluators want to hear about Elon Musk, not about their summer internship.
4. Playing It Safe
Generic examples feel safer. Everyone knows about climate change statistics and GDP figures. Personal stories feel risky—what if the evaluator doesn’t find your experience relevant? Better to stick with what “everyone” uses.
✅ The Reality: Personal Examples Are Your Competitive Advantage
Here’s what evaluators actually experience:
What Evaluators Actually Value
- “According to World Bank statistics…”
- “Experts suggest that…”
- “In today’s globalized world…”
- “Take the example of Apple/Amazon/Tesla…”
- Generic facts everyone else also uses
- “In my two years in rural banking…”
- “At my company, we faced exactly this…”
- “Growing up in a small town, I saw…”
- “During my internship at [Company]…”
- Specific experiences only you can share
Why Personal Examples Work Better
1,000 candidates might quote the same McKinsey stat. Only YOU can share what you observed in your village, your office, your family business. This uniqueness makes your essay memorable.
Generic = forgettable. Personal = distinctive.
When you write about something you actually experienced, the details are specific and credible. Generic examples can be Googled; personal stories demonstrate genuine engagement with the world.
Evaluators can sense authenticity vs. copied content.
When you use a textbook example, you can only repeat what you’ve read. When you share personal experience, you can provide nuance, context, and insight that shows real understanding.
Lived experience = deeper analysis capability.
Your essay doesn’t exist in isolation—it’s evaluated alongside your profile. Personal examples that connect to your background make your entire application more coherent.
Consistency across application components = stronger candidacy.
Real Examples: Generic vs. Personal
Topic: “Impact of digitalization on rural India”
The Memorability Factor
Essays with generic examples: Blurred together. “Something about GDP growth and government initiatives…”
Essays with personal examples: Vivid recall. “The one about the uncle’s grocery shop.” “The girl who worked in microfinance and saw how loans changed women’s behavior.” “The guy whose father’s textile business struggled with demonetization.”
The personal examples created mental anchors. I could recall specific essays even days later. The generic ones? Couldn’t distinguish one from another.
⚠️ The Impact: What Happens When You Avoid Personal Examples
| Aspect | Generic Examples Only | Personal Examples Included |
|---|---|---|
| Distinctiveness | Sounds like 85% of other essays; completely interchangeable | Unique voice and content; impossible to confuse with others |
| Credibility | Facts that could be Googled in 30 seconds | Lived experience that demonstrates real understanding |
| Memorability | Forgotten immediately after reading | Recalled even days later due to specific details |
| Insight quality | Surface-level; repeating what everyone reads | Nuanced; observations only experience provides |
| Evaluator engagement | “Here’s another standard essay…” (low attention) | “This is interesting—different from the others” (high attention) |
When everyone uses the same examples, no one stands out.
On any given WAT topic, evaluators will see:
• The same McKinsey/BCG statistics quoted 50+ times
• The same Apple/Amazon/Google examples 40+ times
• The same government initiative references 60+ times
• The same “In today’s globalized world…” opening 100+ times
By using only generic examples, you’re actively choosing to blend in. In a selection process, blending in is failing. The candidates who get selected are the ones evaluators remember—and evaluators remember specific, personal, authentic content.
What Counts as “Personal Experience”
Personal examples don’t require dramatic stories. They include:
Work experience: “At my company, I observed…” “In my role as…”
Internships: “During my summer internship at…” “The project I worked on showed…”
Family observations: “My father’s business faced…” “Growing up, I saw my parents…”
Hometown/region: “In the town I grew up in…” “My state has a unique…”
College experiences: “Our college fest taught me…” “A classmate’s startup showed…”
Daily observations: “The local kirana store owner…” “My apartment complex recently…”
You have MORE material than you realize. Use it.
💡 What Actually Works: Using Personal Examples Effectively
Here’s how to incorporate personal examples without seeming unprofessional:
The Professional Personal Example Framework
Don’t share random personal stories. Choose experiences that directly support your point. The example should make your argument stronger, not distract from it.
Test: Does removing this example weaken my argument?
Bad: “I’ve seen businesses struggle with digitalization.”
Good: “My uncle’s 20-year-old grocery shop in UP—₹5,000 smartphone, basic accounting app, transformed his supplier relationships.”
Specific details prove the experience is real.
The story itself isn’t the point—the insight is. After sharing the example, explain WHAT it reveals about the broader topic. Connect the personal to the universal.
Pattern: Specific story → General insight.
2-3 sentences for the example, then move to analysis. Don’t turn WAT into autobiography. The example is evidence for your argument, not the argument itself.
Ideal ratio: 20-30% personal example, 70-80% analysis.
The Integration Formula
| Element | Unprofessional Use | Professional Use |
|---|---|---|
| Introduction | “Let me tell you about my uncle’s shop…” | “Digitalization’s impact is visible even in India’s smallest businesses. In my village in UP…” |
| Detail level | Full backstory, family history, tangential details | Just enough detail to establish credibility and relevance |
| Transition | No connection back to topic; story just ends | “This illustrates a broader pattern…” “What this reveals is…” |
| Balance | Entire essay is personal stories; no broader analysis | Personal example + data/research + analysis of implications |
Sample Paragraph Structure
1. Topic sentence (your point):
“Digital payments have particularly transformed small-scale retail, where cash management was historically a major constraint.”
2. Personal example (2-3 sentences):
“In my father’s hardware store in Lucknow, daily cash reconciliation used to take 45 minutes. Since adopting UPI in 2019, we’ve eliminated cash handling for 60% of transactions, reduced accounting time to 10 minutes, and—unexpectedly—increased average transaction size by 15%.”
3. Broader insight (what this means):
“The hardware store’s experience reflects a pattern: digital payments don’t just improve efficiency—they change purchasing behavior. Customers freed from ‘how much cash do I have?’ constraints make different decisions.”
Total: One strong paragraph that’s specific, credible, and insightful.
Mixing Personal and General Examples
- All personal examples (reads like diary)
- All generic examples (reads like Wikipedia)
- Personal examples without connecting insights
- Generic examples presented as if original
- 1-2 strong personal examples per essay
- Support with relevant data/statistics where needed
- Personal experience → universal insight structure
- Let personal examples carry the distinctiveness
🎯 Self-Check: Are You Hiding Your Best Material?
Personal examples aren’t unprofessional—they’re your competitive advantage. Evaluators read 200+ essays filled with identical McKinsey stats and Amazon references. The essays they remember—and score higher—are ones with unique, authentic content that only that candidate could provide. Your work experience, family observations, hometown context, and daily life observations are material. 85% of essays are forgettable because they’re generic; the 15% with personal examples get recalled even days later. Use the professional formula: specific personal example → broader insight → topic analysis. 1-2 strong personal examples per essay, supported by data where needed. Your experience IS relevant. Stop hiding your best material.