I would probably start by being very honest about the choice of test itself. I have seen quite a few people score significantly better on the GRE even when the GMAT just did not click for them, so I would strongly suggest at least trying both before committing. There is no upside in forcing GMAT if your natural strengths align better with GRE.
Beyond that, the biggest thing is mental preparation. You have to accept upfront that a 200 point jump is a long and rigorous journey. It is not possible without putting in a large number of focused hours over several months. What worked for me was reframing the goal from score chasing to process discipline. Daily consistency mattered far more than occasional long study sessions.
A few practical things I would do again. Build fundamentals first, especially quant basics and verbal accuracy, before touching advanced problems. Track errors obsessively and look for patterns rather than isolated mistakes. Take full length mocks early, even at low scores, to build stamina and reduce test anxiety. Also plan for burnout. Breaks are not laziness, they are part of the strategy.
If I had to change one thing, I would have stopped comparing my timeline to others much earlier. Everyone’s score trajectory is different. Once I focused on my own weaknesses and trusted the process, progress became much more predictable.
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Wow! That's a great improvement
tusharmurkute22!
It is nice you are giving a credit where it is due - any other tips or suggestions you have for someone who is starting at that level and perhaps what you would have done differently? What worked for you?