Hello guys,
I've been following this forum religiously since the day I started studying for the gmat. Having studied for the CFA exam, I knew the value of actively reading forums when one is prepping for an exam. So in a few words, I graduated with a Bachelor's of Business with a concentration in Finance and with a GPA of 2.9, I knew I couldn't stand out neither in the workplace nor in applying for a Masters program. Therefore I decided to embark on the CFA journey, and two and a half years later, I finished all 3 levels with a lot of pride and some lost years of my estimated life time due to the stressful exam prep conditions and stress. I went to work for a year and a half in a mining company that is for a family member in Africa, and learned lots of soft skills and technical mechanical engineering stuff. I couldn't bear the life there though, because of a lousy social life and the intensity of the job (mining shifts are 10 to 12 hours usually). That is why I decided it was time for me to return to my home country and finally take the GMAT.
I decided to enroll in a Kaplan in person class. After a month, I was less anxious because I knew what the GMAT was all about, but a new anxiety was slowly being created which resulted from acknowledging the difficulty of breaking the 700 barrier. I knew I could do it, but the question was in how much time. Moreover, studying for the CFA is completely different than studying for the GMAT. The former is full of technical terms and knowledge and formulas that are related to each other and that you can derive one from another to get to a valuation of a specific instrument, whereas the latter was plain vanilla theories and rules. There is no fun in studying for the GMAT! There definitely is lots of fun solving mocks and solving quant questions on geometry, rate, work, algebra equations .. But if you are weak at one area, opening the review book and trying to get better at it is a totally different game. Anyway, to summarize my studying plan:
I studied for a total of 2.5 months, the breakdown is as follows:
- 1.5 months of getting to know the material while I was sitting in local Kaplan center. Say 9 hours of class per week * 6 weeks = 54 hours of study time along with some 9 Kaplan mocks which can be rounded to 75 hours in total during that period.
- 1 month of semi-active studying, a mean of 4 to 5 hours per day but in an irregular way, so 2 days I would study the 2 following days I would not. So inconsistent at times but you can say less than 100 hours but more than 75 hours.
So for my resources, I read
MGMAT SC, CR. Skimmed through them in a day each, so retention rate was like 20%. But wanted to get more familiar with the subjects.
For quants, I watched some Kaplan videos, read
MGMAT Algebra, Geometry, Proportions and Word Problems. Skimmed through them as well.
I did lots of mocks, a total of say 16 when I combine all the resources, and very little problems or practice questions from the
OG. I think this method was not the most efficient one because looking back I could have filled the gaps in some topic areas instead of doing full mocks.
I will attach my ESR and I would love to hear some feedback on how my approach should be for the retake. I did the exam yesterday and got a 660. Q44V37. I expected just that but really feel like now is the time for me to take it to the next level and get to the 700+ possibly getting a 720/730 (waw). I was getting between 600 and 670 on GMAC practice tests. I'd be happy to answer any of your questions, and I hope I didn't bore you all with my writing.
Edit: I could not attach my ESR, because I have been registered not long ago.