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This 28-year-old wrote an MBA admissions essay in the voice of an ESPN SportsCenter anchor — and got accepted to Harvard

Ross Galloway answered Harvard Business School's sole essay question like an ESPN SportsCenter top 10 list. "Fortune favors the bold," he says.

Ross Galloway turned initial rejection into success.

The student: Ross Galloway, 28

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Hometown: Mission Viejo, California

Undergraduate: California Polytechnic State University, 2011; majored in finance and minored in Spanish

Work experience: Deloitte consulting; ESPN

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His best admissions advice: "Understand what pool of applicants you are likely to be in and distinguish yourself amongst that pool."

To sports fans everywhere, ESPN's iconic SportsCenter theme song, which welcomes in the daily sports news program, is a highly recognizable melody. But the theme song, and sports highlight program, usually has little to do with the high-stakes admissions process at top business schools.

Enter 28-year-old, Ross Galloway, who decided to answer Harvard Business School's (HBS) sole essay question in the voice of an ESPN anchor on SportsCenter.

"I took a swing for the fences approach with my essay," Galloway told Business Insider. "The prompt was: 'Introduce yourself to your section mates,'" so I wrote my essay as if it was the script," he continued. "I tried to create this picture for readers."

That picture looked something like this, Galloway explained:

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He had some doubts about this approach, especially as he received some advice to stick to a more traditional response to the question. But he wanted to remain authentic to himself. "I knew that I was going to be me," he said. That bet paid off. Galloway finished his first year at HBS in May.

"Fortune favors the bold," he said.

After graduation from Cal Poly in 2011, he started at Deloitte, working in technology consulting. Business school was heavily on his mind. "I wanted to prove to people that I was smart ... business school would prove that," he said.

His next move was part good fortune, and part a personality trait that has allowed success to come easily to Galloway. On a six hour flight from from New York to San Francisco Galloway was seated next to a woman who was working on a financial model in Excel. When he struck up a conversation with her she told him she worked at ESPN.

"I'd love to work for ESPN," he recounted saying, without any hesitation. A phone interview and four in-person interviews later, he was offered that job despite being up against more qualified candidates. He attributes that to both the passion he held for working at a "dream company" like ESPN, and work ethic he was able to communicate to interviewers.

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Galloway ended up working in distribution strategy, figuring out how to convince households to pay for cable TV amidst a world where Netflix, Hulu, YouTube are all becoming stronger competitors for people's time, he explained.

And despite the fact that he was in his so-called dream job, the wheels of how to get into a top business school never stopped turning for Galloway.

All during that time he also said he "telegraphed" to managers that business school was a desire. Having a running dialog about future goals made conversations with senior managers easier when he eventually required their help with recommendation letters.

It's another skill that he employs while at work. He tries to connect with managers, or even more senior members of a company, every few months, even if there is no immediate agenda, having face-to-face conversations about work and goals.

Eventually, when there is the need to communicate components to emphasize in a recommendation letter, the conversation is much more fluid because it isn't a surprise.

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Galloway finished his applications at the end of 2015, and got interviews at Columbia, Kellogg, Wharton, and HBS. He gained acceptances to all but Columbia.

Now, as he finishes up his first year at HBS, he has already experienced first-hand the benefit of on-campus recruiting at a place like Harvard. He had final round interviews for summer internships with Netflix, Facebook, Apple, Under Armour, and Nike. This summer he'll be working in global strategy at Nike in Portland, Oregon.

Despite having the grades, scores, and work experience that seemingly made Galloway a competitive applicant at HBS, he believes the most important thing he did was to distinguish himself from similar applicants.

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