The answer

Here’s what I saw.

You read three essays. Identical profiles, one spot. You made the call. Here’s what an admissions officer actually sees when they put the file down.

Essay C is well written.

Polished, even. But after reading it, I can only fill in one blank:

This applicant loves their parents and works hard.

So does every other student in the pile. The essay confirms what the transcript already showed. It adds nothing the file didn’t already say.

Essay B is the trap.

It sounds thoughtful. It uses words like “intersection” and “delayed success.” It’s the essay that feels like it’s saying something.

It isn’t. Read it again and try to fill in the blank:

This applicant is ___________.

Smart. A good writer. Which I already knew from the 4.3 GPA.

Essay A gets in.

Not because it’s the most polished. Because I can fill in the blank immediately — and what fills it in is specific, human, and not on any other application in the pile.

This applicant is someone who fixes problems before they become someone else’s problem.

Responsive. Accountable. Self-correcting. Someone who builds systems and then makes them better when they fail.

In 150 words.

An essay doesn’t describe the applicant.
It makes the admissions officer feel like they already know them — and want to know more.

Here’s the thing most students miss: this isn’t a writing problem.

It’s a thinking problem.

Once you know what the essay is actually supposed to do — fill in that blank, clearly and memorably — everything changes. The topic matters less. The word count matters less. What matters is the signal.

Now watch what happens when Essay A gets better.

Three small revisions. Same story. Same voice. Completely different signal.

Original
“I factored shipping costs with a small markup as well as a ten percent profit above the cost of goods sold. Everything was humming along smoothly.”
Revised
“I factored shipping costs with a small markup as well as a ten percent profit above the cost of goods sold; my goal was to sell at a profit, but still below market prices.”

One clause added. Now we know something specific about how she thinks — she wasn’t just trying to make money. She was thinking about her competitive position. That’s a different applicant than the one who just wanted a profit.

Original
“When I learned that I needed to collect sales tax, I nearly had a heart attack. Eight and a half percent to the state.”
Revised
“When I learned that I needed to collect sales tax, I nearly had a heart attack. Eight and a half percent to the state. I paid it — not the first person to have a heavy heart giving the government hard earned money.”

That added sentence is the funniest line in the essay. But it’s not just funny — it tells us she absorbed the hit without complaining, without blaming anyone, without spiraling. She paid it, made a joke about it, and moved on. That’s character. That’s signal.

Original
“While I technically didn’t lose money on those sales, it wasn’t quite the win I thought I had achieved. Ah. Taxes.”
Revised
“While I didn’t lose money on those sales — 10 is still greater than 8.5 — it wasn’t quite the win I internally bragged about. The pricing model has been updated, and SheSellsShoes is now more profitable.”

Three changes. Each one small. Together they move the blank from:

This applicant is funny and self-aware.

To:

This applicant is funny, strategic, self-correcting, and runs toward problems instead of away from them.

Same story. Same voice.
Completely different signal.

That’s not a writing lesson. That’s a thinking lesson.

And once you know how to think about it this way, you can apply it to every essay, every supplemental, every line on the activities list.

That’s what EssaySecrets™ is built around.

Get the system.

The framework, the templates, and the exact thinking that makes essays fill in the blank — for every kid in your family, one payment.

Get EssaySecrets™ → $497 · 14-day refund · Less Stress. Zero Guess.™