💥 Myth-Busters

Myth #38: Extracurriculars Matter Only If Impressive | GDPIWAT Myth-Busters

Panels don't need national-level achievements. Learn how to present ordinary extracurriculars—reading, fitness, volunteering—as meaningful stories that reveal character.

🚫 The Myth

“Extracurriculars only matter if they’re impressive—state-level sports, national debating championships, founding NGOs, significant artistic achievements. If you just read books, go to the gym, or play casual cricket with friends, don’t bother mentioning it. Panels want to see exceptional achievements, not ordinary hobbies. Either you have trophy-worthy activities or you have nothing worth discussing.”

⚠️ How Candidates Interpret This

Candidates without “impressive” achievements either leave the extracurriculars section blank, fill it with inflated claims they can’t defend, or mention activities apologetically: “I just read… nothing special.” They assume panels are looking for Olympians and TEDx speakers, not regular people with regular interests. The result: wasted opportunities to show personality.

🤔 Why People Believe It

This myth is reinforced by several common experiences:

1. Profile Comparison Anxiety

When candidates see peers listing “State-level Basketball” or “Founded an NGO serving 500 children,” their “reading books” or “playing badminton” seems trivial. What they don’t realize: panels don’t compare your extracurriculars to other candidates’. They evaluate what YOUR activities reveal about YOU.

2. LinkedIn and Success Story Bias

Successful MBA profiles often highlight exceptional achievements. But these represent the highlights reel, not the full picture. Many converts had ordinary hobbies—they just presented them well. The exceptional stories get shared; the ordinary-but-well-presented ones don’t make headlines.

3. Misunderstanding What “Matters” Means

Candidates think “matters” means “impresses” or “adds points.” Actually, extracurriculars “matter” because they give panels a window into who you are beyond academics and work. Even simple hobbies reveal personality, values, and how you spend discretionary time.

4. Coaching Center Pressure

Some coaching centers push candidates to “build profiles” with impressive-sounding activities—start a blog, volunteer somewhere, join Toastmasters. This creates the impression that authentic, existing hobbies aren’t enough.

Coach’s Perspective
In 18 years, I’ve seen candidates convert at IIM-A talking passionately about cooking, about their morning running routine, about collecting stamps. Panels aren’t looking for trophy collections. They’re looking for authenticity, depth, and what your interests reveal about your character. A candidate who reads one book a month and can discuss it thoughtfully is more interesting than one who claims to “love reading” but can’t name what they read last. Depth beats impressiveness every time.

✅ The Reality: What Panels Actually Look For in Extracurriculars

Here’s what B-school panels genuinely evaluate when they ask about hobbies and extracurriculars:

Authenticity
Is this genuinely YOUR interest, or resume padding?
Depth
Do you know enough to have a real conversation about it?
Insight
What does this activity reveal about who you are?

What Panels Are Actually Thinking:

❌ NOT What They’re Thinking
  • “Did this person win anything?”
  • “Is this activity prestigious?”
  • “Will this look good in our batch brochure?”
  • “How does this compare to other candidates?”
  • “Do they have enough activities listed?”
✅ What They’re Actually Thinking
  • “Is this person interesting to talk to?”
  • “Do they have genuine passions outside work/study?”
  • “Can they articulate WHY they do this?”
  • “What does this tell me about their personality?”
  • “Do they have depth or just surface claims?”

The Authenticity vs. Achievement Matrix:

🏆
Impressive but Shallow
What panels see through
Red Flags
  • Listed “State-level debate” but can’t discuss any arguments
  • Claims “photography” but last photo was 2 years ago
  • “Volunteer at NGO” but only went once for a photo
  • Mentions activity but deflects deeper questions
  • Answers feel rehearsed, not genuine
Panel Verdict
  • “Resume padding—not authentic”
  • “If they’re dishonest here, what else is inflated?”
💎
Ordinary but Deep
What panels actually value
What Works
  • “I read” → can discuss 3 recent books with insights
  • “I run” → knows their pace, tracks progress, has running stories
  • “I cook” → has signature dishes, can discuss techniques
  • “I follow cricket” → genuine analysis, not just watching
  • Speaks with enthusiasm and specific details
Panel Verdict
  • “Genuine person with real interests”
  • “Interesting to talk to—will add to classroom”
💡 The 3-Question Test

Panels often ask 3 follow-up questions about any hobby you mention. Before listing an activity, test yourself:

Question 1: “Tell me more about this.” (Can you talk for 60 seconds with genuine enthusiasm?)
Question 2: “What specifically do you enjoy about it?” (Do you have a real answer, not a generic one?)
Question 3: “What’s something interesting you’ve learned/done recently?” (Do you have specific examples?)

If you can answer all 3 comfortably, the activity belongs on your profile—regardless of how “impressive” it sounds.

Real Scenarios from Interview Rooms

📢
Scenario 1: The Inflated Achiever
Candidate: Engineering, CAT 97%ile, IIM Calcutta Interview
What Happened
Panel: “I see you’ve listed ‘Photography’ as a hobby. Tell me about it.”

Candidate: “Yes sir, I’m interested in photography. I like capturing moments and landscapes.”

Panel: “What camera do you use?”

Candidate: “Mostly my phone camera… sometimes my friend’s DSLR.”

Panel: “What’s the most interesting photo you’ve taken recently?”

Candidate: “Um… I took some photos at a friend’s wedding last month… nothing specific comes to mind.”

Panel: “Do you know the difference between aperture and shutter speed?”

Candidate: “Aperture is… the light… and shutter speed is how fast… I’m not very technical about it, I just enjoy clicking pictures.”

The panel moved on, but the damage was done. Three questions revealed zero depth.
Listed
Photography
0
Depth Shown
Low
Credibility
Reject
📢
Scenario 2: The Authentic Ordinary Hobby
Candidate: Commerce, CAT 94%ile, IIM Indore Interview
What Happened
Panel: “Your hobbies say ‘cooking.’ That’s interesting. Tell me more.”

Candidate: “I started cooking during lockdown when my mother was unwell and I had to manage the kitchen. What began as necessity became genuine interest. Now I cook dinner 4-5 times a week. My specialty is South Indian food—I’ve mastered dosa batter fermentation, which is trickier than it sounds. Getting the right sourness takes practice.”

Panel: [Smiling] “What makes dosa batter fermentation tricky?”

Candidate: “Temperature and timing. Too warm and it over-ferments—becomes too sour. Too cold and it doesn’t rise. I learned to adjust based on weather. Summer needs 8 hours, winter needs 14-16 hours in Chennai. I actually failed my first 6-7 batches before figuring this out.”

Panel: “What did cooking teach you?”

Candidate: “Patience and process respect. You can’t rush fermentation. Also, that following a recipe exactly doesn’t work—you have to adjust for variables. It’s actually similar to how I approach audit work—frameworks matter, but real-world application needs judgment.”

Panel was engaged, nodding, asking more food questions. Conversation became natural.
Listed
Cooking
High
Depth Shown
Strong
Authenticity
Convert
Coach’s Perspective
See the pattern? The 97%ile candidate with “photography” got rejected. The 94%ile candidate with “cooking” converted. It wasn’t about which hobby was more impressive—cooking isn’t inherently more impressive than photography. It was about depth, authenticity, and the ability to have a real conversation. The photography candidate had a hobby for their resume. The cooking candidate had a genuine interest that revealed their personality. Panels can tell the difference in 60 seconds.

⚠️ The Impact: How This Myth Hurts Candidates

Behavior Believing the Myth Understanding Reality
What you list Inflated activities you can’t discuss deeply Genuine interests you can talk about passionately
How you present “I read books… nothing impressive” (apologetic) “I read about 2 books a month, mostly behavioral economics” (specific)
Follow-up handling Stumble when asked basic questions about listed hobbies Engage naturally because you genuinely know and care about the topic
Interview energy Hobby section becomes stressful—hoping they don’t dig deeper Hobby section becomes a chance to show personality and build rapport
Panel perception “This person is either dishonest or has no genuine interests” “This person is interesting and authentic—I enjoyed talking to them”
🔴 The Padding Backfire

Here’s what happens when you list activities you can’t defend:

1. Credibility damage: When panels catch shallow claims, they question everything else on your profile.

2. Wasted interview time: Instead of discussing your strengths, you’re fumbling through hobby questions.

3. Negative impression: You’ve shown you’re willing to exaggerate—not a trait B-schools want.

Better to list “reading” and discuss it brilliantly than list “mountaineering” and admit you went trekking once.

💡 What Actually Works: The DEPTH Framework

Here’s how to present ordinary extracurriculars compellingly:

The DEPTH Framework

D
Details Matter
Replace vague claims with specific details.

❌ “I like reading”
✅ “I read about 2 books a month—mostly non-fiction. Last month I finished ‘Thinking Fast and Slow’ and ‘Atomic Habits.'”

❌ “I play cricket”
✅ “I play cricket every Sunday with my colony friends—been part of this group for 4 years. I’m a medium-pace bowler, getting better at inswingers.”
E
Evolution Story
How did this interest develop? What’s your journey?

“I started running during lockdown to lose weight. First, I could barely do 1 km. Now I do 5 km thrice a week at 6:30 pace. Planning my first 10K next month.”

Every hobby has a story. Find yours—even if it’s simple.
P
Personal Why
What do you genuinely enjoy about this activity?

“I cook because it’s my de-stress mechanism. After a long day of audit work, spending 45 minutes in the kitchen making something from scratch feels meditative. The creativity is different from my job.”

The “why” reveals personality. Generic answers don’t.
T
Tangible Examples
What’s ONE specific thing you did/learned/experienced recently?

“Last week I tried making chicken biryani for the first time. The rice was slightly overcooked, but the masala layering was perfect. I’m attempting it again this weekend.”

Specific recent examples prove you’re actively engaged, not just listing.
H
Honest Limitations
Acknowledge what you’re NOT—it builds credibility.

“I’m not a serious photographer with professional gear—I just enjoy capturing everyday moments on my phone. But I’ve taken over 10,000 photos in the last 2 years, and I have a folder of my favorites.”

Honesty about level makes your genuine engagement more believable.

Transforming “Ordinary” Hobbies into Compelling Narratives

Ordinary Hobby Weak Presentation Compelling Presentation
Reading “I like reading books.” “I read about 25 books a year, mostly behavioral economics and business biographies. Currently reading ‘Poor Charlie’s Almanack’—Munger’s mental models framework is something I’m trying to apply to my audit work.”
Fitness/Gym “I go to the gym regularly.” “I’ve been consistent with strength training for 2 years now—4 days a week. Started at 50 kg bench press, now at 75 kg. It taught me that progress is non-linear and consistency beats intensity.”
Watching Cricket “I follow cricket.” “I analyze cricket quite deeply—I track match-ups, field placements, and how captains adapt strategies. I predicted SKY’s emergence as a T20 specialist 2 years before his India debut based on his strike rotation patterns.”
Casual Gaming “I play video games sometimes.” “I play chess online—about 500 rated games this year on Chess.com. Started at 800 rating, now at 1200. I study openings for about 30 minutes on weekends. My favorite is the London System because it’s principle-based rather than memorization-heavy.”
Music Listening “I listen to music.” “I’m deep into Hindustani classical—specifically khayal. I’ve been following Rashid Khan’s work for years and can identify most common ragas. I can’t perform, but I appreciate the mathematical structure in how compositions are built.”

What If You Genuinely Have No Hobbies?

❌ Don’t Do This
  • Invent hobbies you don’t have
  • Inflate occasional activities into serious interests
  • Leave the section blank and hope they don’t ask
  • Copy generic hobbies from sample profiles
✅ Do This Instead
  • Reframe regular activities: “Following news” → specific news interests
  • Consider what you do with free time—even small things count
  • Think about what you spend money on besides necessities
  • Be honest: “I’ve been focused on CAT prep, but I’m looking forward to…”
  • List 1-2 authentic activities rather than 5 shallow ones
💡 The Quality Over Quantity Rule

1 hobby you can discuss for 3 minutes > 5 hobbies you can’t discuss for 30 seconds each.

Panels ask about 1-2 hobbies at most. They’d rather discover one genuine interest than expose five fake ones. Be strategic: list only what you can defend deeply. If that’s just “reading” and “running”—that’s enough.

Coach’s Perspective
My best advice: Practice your hobby stories out loud before the interview. Not scripts—just practice talking about what you do, why you enjoy it, and one specific recent example. If you can talk enthusiastically for 90 seconds about your hobby, you’ll pass any panel’s test. If you struggle to talk for 30 seconds, either go deeper into that hobby or remove it from your profile. The interview is not the time to discover you have nothing to say about something you listed.

🎯 Self-Check: How Would You Present Your Hobbies?

📊 Your Extracurricular Presentation Assessment
1 For each hobby on your profile, can you talk about it for at least 2 minutes without struggling?
For some hobbies yes, but others I’ve listed I’d struggle to discuss in depth
Yes—every activity I’ve listed is something I genuinely engage with regularly
2 Can you give a specific example of something you did related to your hobby in the last month?
For most hobbies, I’d have to think hard or the example would be from longer ago
Easily—I have recent, specific examples ready for every hobby I’ve listed
3 If someone asked “What specifically do you enjoy about [your hobby]?”, your answer would be:
Generic—”It’s relaxing” or “It’s fun” or “I find it interesting”
Specific—I can articulate exactly what aspect I enjoy and why
4 Your selection of hobbies for your profile was based on:
What sounds impressive or what I’ve seen other candidates list
What I actually spend time on and can discuss authentically
5 If the panel started asking detailed follow-up questions about your hobbies, you would feel:
Nervous—hoping they don’t dig too deep into certain activities
Comfortable—this is actually a chance to show my personality
Key Takeaway

Extracurriculars don’t need to be “impressive”—they need to be authentic and deep. Panels aren’t looking for Olympians and TED speakers. They’re looking for genuine humans with real interests they can discuss passionately. A candidate who reads books and can discuss them thoughtfully is more interesting than one who claims “state-level debate” but can’t defend a single argument. Stop comparing your hobbies to others’. Stop inflating activities you can’t discuss. Start going deeper into the interests you actually have. One genuine hobby discussed with enthusiasm and specificity will serve you better than five impressive-sounding activities you listed for your resume.

🎯
Want to Present Your Profile with Confidence and Authenticity?
Learn how to transform ordinary hobbies into compelling narratives, present your authentic self effectively, and connect with panels on a personal level—through personalized interview coaching.
Prashant Chadha
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