Start looking for the universities where you want to apply. Narrow down your list of universities and look for requirements of each.If you want a really good scholarship, France is the country for you to study your masters in any field (engineering/finance/economics).France offers excellent scholarships for masters students (good amount of money which is sufficient to finance your expenses and many public universities have low tuition fees. You can visit Campus France Website for more details.Speaking from personal experience, I did my graduation from not so good university (but had a well scored CGPA :p). I took a gap year and started preparing for my masters and did some volunteering work as well just to build up my resume. I applied to a number of universities in France and UK and was fortunate enough to get admission in one of the top Economics institutes with full scholarship.As far as your grades are concerned, you can still apply, because the universities abroad not only looks for your grade, but other factors too (you test scores (GRE/GMAT) SOP, Recommendation letters, extra-curricular activities.Or you can take gap year and do something productive that can be an addition to your CV.Also, Universities in Germany have no/low tuition fees. You can look for the courses which interests you. There's an organisation called DAAD which will help you in every way (from admission to getting scholarships).
Good luck!
Payal Soneja, studied at Toulouse School of Economics
Source: Quora Digest
Start looking for the universities where you want to apply. Narrow down your list of universities and look for requirements of each.If you want a really good scholarship, France is the country for you to study your masters in any field (engineering/finance/economics).France offers excellent scholarships for masters students (good amount of money which is sufficient to finance your expenses and many public universities have low tuition fees. You can visit Campus France Website for more details.Speaking from personal experience, I did my graduation from not so good university (but had a well scored CGPA :p). I took a gap year and started preparing for my masters and did some volunteering work as well just to build up my resume. I applied to a number of universities in France and UK and was fortunate enough to get admission in one of the top Economics institutes with full scholarship.As far as your grades are concerned, you can still apply, because the universities abroad not only looks for your grade, but other factors too (you test scores (GRE/GMAT) SOP, Recommendation letters, extra-curricular activities.Or you can take gap year and do something productive that can be an addition to your CV.Also, Universities in Germany have no/low tuition fees. You can look for the courses which interests you. There's an organisation called DAAD which will help you in every way (from admission to getting scholarships).