I understand that work experience is given significant weight in the admissions decision. However, I seem to be in a bit of dilemma regarding whether to stay at my current job (which I don't mind but it is in a field I know I don't want to stay in) for the sake of increasing my work experience vs. starting the application process this summer to enroll Fall 2015 (by then I'd have been at this job for 23-24 months). In other words, if you know you want to use the MBA to switch careers, why wait?
I know some advise to switch careers before B-School, but if that backfires (i.e., unemployed for several months, can't "break in" to my field of choice, etc.) then I'm still left with a low amount of work experience.
Quick background:
25 years old, US citizen, liberal arts from midwest Big 10 (3.3 gpa) class of 2010, law school at a "middle-tier" school (ranked in the 60s by USNews, 3.4 gpa/top 30%) class of 2013, taking the GMAT in March (scored a 680 on my most recent practice test [Kaplan CAT], shooting for something in the 670-700 range), would like to go Top 30 if possible.
Work experience situation:
I'm currently working at a top tier regional law firm (not international firm though) in the middle east. However, I am not passionate about law. My favorite classes in law school were my corporate finance courses that involved very little law. I applied to some finance jobs out of law school but had no luck and came across this interesting opportunity in my home country as a trainee on the Project Finance team at a highly respected firm. I figured I'd give it a shot (maybe a little "buyer's remorse" with the JD, as in "I got the JD might as well try law"). In short, my feelings in law school have been confirmed, after 6 months I know that law isn't for me. The way I explained it to my parents was this: Us lawyers cross the t's and dot the i's on a financial transaction, but the ones actually "writing the story" are the i-bankers. I want to be involved in the number crunching, market research, analysis, etc. instead of "standing on the sidelines."
Does the JD make up for lack of work experience? Does the international background/aspect make a difference? I held a part-time job throughout undergrad, had cool summer jobs (including summer camp counselor and interning at a talent agency in NYC), good internships in law school (including interning for a federal judge), etc.
Does any of that matter or am I just better off sucking it up for another year at this firm?