IIFM BHOPAL ADMISSION SCENES
They sell dreams in glossy brochures and Instagram posts, but step inside and you’ll see the reality.
More than 65 students are still unplaced.
Yes, unplaced. After paying lakhs. After trusting the promises. After believing that an MBA here would secure a future.
The average package? Around 7 LPA for FM and 8 LPA for SM. Sounds decent until you realize how many students are still struggling without jobs, without PPOs, without hope.
And internships? What a joke.
The Summer Internship Committee proudly releases posters, but half the companies are brought by students themselves because the college and the committee cannot arrange enough opportunities. And among those internships, more than half are unpaid.
Unpaid.
Imagine going to:
- Mumbai
- Delhi
- Kolkata
…to work for free while paying rent, food, transport, and surviving in expensive cities on nothing.
Even the “paid” internships give an average stipend of barely ₹10,000. Ten thousand. In metro cities. That isn’t opportunity , that’s exploitation dressed up as experience.
And PPOs? Most companies simply refused.
Now imagine the future. A batch of 300 students running after the same shrinking number of opportunities. Competition, desperation, anxiety all increasing while the institution quietly protects its image.
But placements are only one side of the nightmare.
Let’s talk about the hostels.
Forty-six degree heat… and students sleeping without proper AC. Sweating through nights while management talks about “student welfare.”
Broken windows. Trash everywhere. Wi-Fi that barely works. Six boys sharing one filthy washroom. No proper shower. No geyser. No dignity.
And the worst part?
Snakes crawling out from washroom holes.
This is not a hostel. This is survival.
Students come here with ambition and slowly learn helplessness instead.
And if you dare to speak? If you question the system? If you defend yourself?
You are threatened with being debarred from placements.
Silence becomes compulsory. Fear becomes policy.
So before taking admission, don’t just listen to advertisements and placement posters. Talk to the students who are actually suffering behind the walls of the campus.
Because once you enter, the dream they sold you may become the regret you carry.