RJSPO wrote:
Will I be able to complete all the pills from GMATPill in a month.
Hi RJSPO,
We replied to your private message - please take a look.
We seem to get more questions comparing us with
MGMAT. But since there seems to be quite a bit of misleading information among some prospective students, we thought we'd clarify some points.
Yes, the GMAT Pill is designed specifically for busy professionals to fit everything in under 1 month. Your time is limited- and that's our specialty. GMAT Pill is about
thought process efficiency - how you think quickly in a timed environment. Budget in a few hours per night on weekdays and then full 10-hr days on weekends. You can reference our
1 month study plan.
We prepare you specifically for the exam without using fancy grammar terminology - in as little time as possible. If you are looking to master the English language at the PhD level and analyze every grammatical permutation, then GMAT Pill is not for you.
Here are a few objective points to help you better understand the differences:Free Stuff GMAT Pill lets you play around with the
Practice Pill Platform by registering a free guest account.
E-GMAT offers a free trial. We advise you take advantage of both.
GMAT Pill constantly adds upgrades for existing students free - including SC flashcards, new CR frameworks, IR Pill, Practice Pill Platform, and iPad app "GMAT Pill HD"---
-If you are looking to download videos to watch on-the-go, you can do that with 700+ videos in the iPad app - which is FREE.For Non-Natives Although GMAT Pill does not market itself as only for "non-natives" - there are plenty of non-natives who have done spectacularly well.
If you are looking for examples of non-natives who have excelled with GMAT Pill, try
Kang Cao (760 - Darden MBA + $50K Scholarship),
Vishal (>700 - Indian),
Sharon (Hong Kong),
Sudarshan(720 - India),
Shuhua(730-China), and many more...
We recently had a
50+ email exchange - 710 with an Indian student (also non-native) who took the GMAT 3 times and asked similar questions.
He eventually decided to "follow the Stanford guy" and today, after his 4th and final attempt, his testimonial is
now on our homepage with a 710.
For non-natives, verbal is arguably more important than quant -
here's why. So make sure you prepare in the way that works best for you.