I have been lurking here for 2 months and after taking the GMAT for the second time on Friday, I thought I would post my debrief. You'll notice from below that I really overstudied for this and should have done much better on my 1st attempt given my practice scores. Note also that I wasted a lot of time @ the start with bad material (i.e. PR/Kaplan books).
Bio:
30 yrs old, CS degree from Stanford, 8 years work experience, been living in the UK for past 5 years running the office for a software company. I quit my job this summer and studied full time for the GMAT from late Sep to end of Oct (took GMAT first time), then spent approx 10-20hrs/week on GMAT in month of Nov (before taking exam for 2nd time). I hadn't taken a standardized test since the SAT 12 years ago.
Actual Scores:
GMAT (2nd attempt): 750 - Q50, V41, awa 5.5
GMAT (1st attempt): 660 - Q44, V37, awa 5.5
See bottom of post for prep material and practice test scores in chronological order. Sorry this is so long, I hope some of my advice helps some people out there and wish I had found this forum sooner.
My Testing Experience:
-I was 100% ready for the GMAT the 1st time and scored below my target mostly because I slept about 2 hours the night before (nerves) and because I got stubborn on 1 Quant problem and wasted too much time, by the time I hit verbal, I was exhausted and so shaken from my quant I couldn't recover, also got caught up on an impossible short RC that put me behind time and ended up having to guess on final 3 V questions
-I didn't really improve much between attempts, but was just better mentally prepared, I had 3 tutoring sessions with an
MGMAT tutor before the 2nd take that helped to build my confidence, focus on my weaknesses (getting specific with DS), and come up with a timing strategy
-Second time, I also didn't sleep particularly well the night before but had a better timing strategy for both quant and verbal. For quant, I had no more than 3 or 4, 3 minute questions, but had enough easy (1min) ones mixed in that I picked up time, I had 5 questions and 5 minutes to go but luckily some of the last questions were easy, never had to blindly guess on any of them. For verbal, I made myself stick to the timing strategy described below, but still burned too much time on one RC passage and am confident this hurt my score.
Advice:
-Timing strategy: Verbal - complete 8 questions every 15 minutes (60mins remaining, on question 9, 45 remaining, on question 17, etc); Math - Every 5 or so questions, take question you are just starting, subtract from 37, multiply by 2, then add 2, that's how much time you should have left. You should never be more than 2-3mins behind. Sounds kinda complicated, I know...
-Practice using a realistic marker and noteboard (
MGMAT sells them), I have horribly messy handwriting and definitely lost my concentration trying to get a new one in the middle of a tough problem
-Do NOT be stubborn in quant: in EVERY SINGLE practice test, I barely finished quant. In my first
MGMAT practice test, I only made it to question #32! This was purely because I was stubborn - I'm good at math and couldn't let a question go. Further, I only wanted to solve a problem using the prettier algebraic approach. Do NOT only rely on the algebraic approach, also be able to plugin numbers. In addition, DO NOT HAVE a 4 or 5 minutes question or more than 3, 3+ minute questions: my first take I sat on a medium level difficulty question for 5+ minutes because I made a multiplication mistake, this killed me and I ended up with 10questions w/10 to go
-Do NOT be stubborn with RC: in both attempts, I got 1 absurdly difficult but SHORT RC, I spent probably 4-5 minutes trying to understand it before hitting the questions, I should have been at the questions earlier, because those extra few minutes on the passage didn't really improve my understanding
-Use the
MGMAT OG Tracker Spreadsheet and
OG timer to create your
error log, the payoff and summary stats are extremely useful in terms of figuring out where you should focus (I also used Excel's auto-filter and added a few extra columns for notes / to highlight problems that needed review). The payoff stats will hopefully drill into your brain that sitting on a question for a while usually has limited return.
-The .docs floating around that contain all the SCs and the 198 700 level quant problems (not all are 700 level, but most seemed like it) from GMAT prep are best source for hard material; don't do these until the end though or your GMATPrep scores will not be representative
-Paper tests, although not adaptive, were great for working on timing in both Q and V (I used the
MGMAT OG timer when I took these and followed the time constraints for each section), even though Q is way easier than GMATPrep or real GMAT, being able to sail through the easy Q problems on real GMAT is most important skill I picked up in my final month of prep before retake; for V, there were always a few difficult SCs and CRs and while on the whole most of the problems were easy, emphasis on speed really helped
-Retaking GMAT Prep had diminishing returns: I ALWAYS got 5-10 repeats in Q and V and, particularly for verbal, would always remember the answers and couldn't force myself to sit there for 2 minutes watching the clock tick to truly simulate the experience, so I was always way ahead of time in V whereas on the real test I struggled to finish; I think using the SC/Quant docs is a better use of time
-As everyone notes
MGMAT math is harder than real test, but CATs provide best timing practice available
-Don't waste time with KAPLAN or PR Cats or any of those books for that matter, CATs too easy and books lack sufficient detail for quant -- they just don't compare to the
MGMAT quant books
-Take NOTES on everything you read, I rarely looked back at them, but by writing I simply learned the material
-Spend time with every question you get wrong, particularly in GMAT Prep, Ron Purewal on MGMT forum's has great explanations for virtually every GMAT Prep question, read them, learn them, then do the question over yourself
-
MGMAT SC great, CR bible good for improving skills on attacking causal arguments
-05 versions of GMATPrep had too much overlap with
OG, PowerPrep was even worse in this regard
-I learned hundreds of Idioms (even though I'm a native English speaker) using notecards and it felt like only the "most common ones" as outlined in the PR or Kaplan books really appeared on the test, probably not worth the effort if you are a native speaker
If I were to do it all over:
-Buy OG12, Verbal/Quant 2nd editions,
MGMAT SC, all
MGMAT quant, and CR Bible
-Go through all
MGMAT quant books, take detailed notes, do associated
MGMAT question bank after you complete each book, don't do
OG homework problems, yet
-Go through
MGMAT SC and take copious notes (this will be painful), same for CR Bible, though less painful, still don't do
OG problems, yet
-Take 1
MGMAT CAT
-Do timed contiguous sets of 10-20 from
OG (PS,DS,CR,SC,RC) using
MGMAT OG Timer and track in
OG Spreadsheet, jump around in terms of difficulty level, sometimes do lower numbers sometimes do higher numbers, the easy problems are just as important to do as the hard problems, I would have ideally done non-contiguous sets (i.e. 1,11,21,31,41) but it was too difficult to get this data into the
OG tracker (pasting columns into an auto-filitered spreadsheet doesn't seem possible w/out MACROs), if you get a question wrong or run out of time, try to solve it untimed before looking at official answer (also use
MGMAT online
OG companion for better explanations
-Intersperse 3-4 more
MGMAT CATs during
OG practice
-
OG practice complete (3 weeks to go), do GMATPrep 1
-2 weeks to go, GMATPrep 2
-Final weeks, redo all
OG problems you missed, from SC doc and quant doc w/problems from GMAT Prep do sets of 10-20 (using
MGMAT OG timer), take GMAT Prep 1 or 2 again if you want and do final
MGMAT CATs
If you run out of material:
-Paper Tests were great speed practice and GMAT Focus was pretty good for new quant problems, though maybe 5 in each take were repeats from
OG-800 score quant was pretty decent, verbal not worth it
-GMAT Club math was hard, sometimes as hard as
MGMAT, but also a good resource
Prep Material (good)
OG11, OG12, Verbal/Quant 1st/2nd editions
all
MGMAT books (except CR/RC), all question banks, 2
advanced quant "hw" banks (access provided because I had a few hours of tutoring)
Powerscore CR bible
GMAT Focus
Paper Tests I & II
All SCs from GMATPrep
198 quant questions from GMAT Prep
GMATClub Math tests (all "Hardest Question" sets)
Prep Material (bad)
Kaplan 800
Kaplan PremierPR GMAT
PR 1,012 GMAT questions
In general, I was always in the 40+ range for Verbal, with Quant varying from mid 40s to 50.
Practice test Scores (before 2nd attempt)
GMATPrep 1 (3rd time): 800
GMATPrep 2 (2nd time): 780
800score #2: 780
800score #5: Q48 (no verbal)
800score #1: Q47 (no verbal)
GMAT Focus #3: 47-51
GMAT Focus #2: 47-51
GMAT Focus #1: 46-50
PowerPrep 1: 760
GMATPrep 1 (2nd time): 750
Practice test Scores (before 1st attempt)
GMATPrep 2 (2005 version): 740
GMATPrep 1 (2005 version): 740
GMATPrep 2 (1st time): 740
MGMAT 6: 750
Kaplan #5: 790
MGMAT 5: 720
Kaplan #4: 750
MGMAT 4: 750
Kaplan #3: 780
GMATPrep 1 (1st time): 770
MGMAT 3: 680
MGMAT 2: 700
MGMAT 1: 630