Dr. Christine Ganguly, Founder of My Interview Clinic

Dr. Ganguly is the founder, backbone and most importantly the mentor behind My Interview Clinic. Holding a Ph.D. in Communication from Purdue University, she has taught students at the University of Nevada, Reno, Purdue University, and in the University of Texas system. As a professor, Dr. Ganguly co-led a BSMD program and is acutely familiar with all aspects of the medical school application process. She founded My Interview Clinic after discovering her love for helping pre-med students prepare for medical school interviews. 

Her workday starts early — rising to care for her daughter before pre-school, a ritual that anchors her in what matters most. Over a quiet breakfast and a warm beverage, she mentally maps the day ahead, balancing the weight of student lives and her own family’s rhythm.

During peak seasons — from mid-April to mid-June — Dr. Ganguly’s calendar is packed with back-to-back meetings, strategy sessions, and feedback reviews. These are not ordinary check-ins. Each is an intentional engagement designed to move a student one step closer to acceptance into medical school. She spends these hours poring over student profiles, evaluating experiences, identifying narrative gaps, and anticipating what medical schools will want to see. But even when the pace is relentless, she never skips saying goodbye to her daughter in the mornings — a small but sacred gesture of balance.

Outside of meetings, Dr. Ganguly manages a host of responsibilities that keep My Interview Clinic running smoothly. She collaborates with her team to streamline internal operations, creates reference materials, maintains detailed contact records for clients, and never stops reading — from evidence-based productivity guides like Atomic Habits to materials on emotional intelligence. These resources fuel her efforts to help students build not only strong applications but also create sustainable habits and a better sense of self.

Much of her work is also rooted in emotional awareness. In her forthcoming book, Dr. Ganguly explores how emotional needs intersect with high-stakes preparation. Her writing reflects the same philosophy she applies in coaching: students are not just applicants — they are whole people navigating formative years. Supporting them requires attentiveness not only to GPA and hours but also to mindset, family dynamics, and stress.

One of Dr. Ganguly’s most defining traits is her belief in personalization. Her process begins with a full analysis of each applicant’s background, even including parents at times in this key conversation, to help her understand the broader context behind a student’s path. The questions she asks are deceptively simple — “What are your goals?” — but the answers become the blueprint for every application strategy, essay draft, and mock interview that follows.

Her view of student success is grounded in character. The applicants who stand out are those who show a deep-rooted passion — even beyond medicine — and take ownership of their progress. Responsibility, internal motivation, and a genuine willingness to learn matter far more than polish or prestige. Dr. Ganguly sees every stage of the application as a learning opportunity. Students who engage thoughtfully in primary applications tend to approach secondaries with more precision. Those who master their secondaries are usually better prepared for interviews. In her view, the best outcomes emerge when students embrace the full journey — not just the end result.

Yet, it’s not just the students who grow. Over the years, Dr. Ganguly has found herself transformed by the very clients she mentors. They’ve taught her how to be a better parent, how to stay current with technology, and how to adapt to the evolving needs of each generation. She is consistently struck by the diversity of her clients — how similar and yet distinct their paths can be — and views this as one of the most rewarding aspects of her work. What some call a job, she calls a window into the best parts of humanity.

Far from the myth that “kids these days aren’t what they used to be,” Dr. Ganguly holds a different truth. Today’s premeds are sharp, reflective, and filled with quiet courage. And as she puts it, they give her hope. Not just for the future of medicine, but for the future of everything.