Last visit was: 25 Apr 2024, 14:09 It is currently 25 Apr 2024, 14:09

Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.

Customized
for You

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History

Track
Your Progress

every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance

Practice
Pays

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
SORT BY:
Kudos
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 02 Jun 2012
Posts: 17
Own Kudos [?]: 70 [21]
Given Kudos: 5
Location: Egypt
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, General Management
Schools: Harvard Business School - Class of 2015
GMAT 1: 700 Q47 V39
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V44
GPA: 3.41
WE:Marketing (Telecommunications)
Send PM
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 02 Jun 2012
Posts: 17
Own Kudos [?]: 70 [6]
Given Kudos: 5
Location: Egypt
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, General Management
Schools: Harvard Business School - Class of 2015
GMAT 1: 700 Q47 V39
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V44
GPA: 3.41
WE:Marketing (Telecommunications)
Send PM
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 02 Jun 2012
Posts: 17
Own Kudos [?]: 70 [3]
Given Kudos: 5
Location: Egypt
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, General Management
Schools: Harvard Business School - Class of 2015
GMAT 1: 700 Q47 V39
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V44
GPA: 3.41
WE:Marketing (Telecommunications)
Send PM
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 02 Jun 2012
Posts: 17
Own Kudos [?]: 70 [3]
Given Kudos: 5
Location: Egypt
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, General Management
Schools: Harvard Business School - Class of 2015
GMAT 1: 700 Q47 V39
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V44
GPA: 3.41
WE:Marketing (Telecommunications)
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
3
Kudos
Hey guys, thanks for the compliments :-)

The application was one hell of a ride.

I started with research. After a lot of reading, I decided to apply to HBS, MIT and Stanford. When you make reading about top schools a habit (their programs, cultures and unique features), you begin to get "gut" feelings about certain schools and not others.

I especially liked what I read, saw and heard about those three schools, so I decided to apply to them and not to anywhere else. My friends thought I was crazy not to apply to Wharton, Columbia, Booth, LBS and INSEAD. But I just felt something different about HBS, Stanford and MIT. "At the end of the day, it's a very personal decision" I kept telling my friends. And I still maintain that it is. If you're not going to be subjective and opinionated about where you're going to spend two years of your life, you might was well just throw your whole life away and replace it with a non-biased feasibility study! :-D

That being said, my ultimate preference was HBS and the very very very distant second was Stanford, and then MIT. I was just so impressed with everything I knew about HBS. The diversity, the students, the program, the facilities, and last but definitely not least, the inexplicable grandeur of the brand. I thought Stanford was great, but wasn't as moved as most people about the value of having a small class size or the entrepreneurial culture.

So I got to work. With the GMAT out of the way, the first thing I did was form a network of people around me who were either graduates of top schools, admits, or in any other way knew what it took to get in. Through asking for some favors, pushing for some introductions and in some cases running into lucky coincidences, I managed to form my "advice pool". Most of them were consultants (duh!), and I was surprised by how helpful they were. Throughout the 1-hour coffee chats I usually had with them, I found that they presented sharp, balanced and objective feedback. As a matter of fact, it was one of these people whose advice significantly contributed to my decision to retake the GMAT :-D But that was over 1 year ago when I wasn't even thinking about forming my advice pool...now THAT was a lucky coincidence. Go figure!

All members of my advice pool agreed that my profile was full of interesting things to say about myself. Perhaps from the way I talked about HBS, or maybe from how much they knew about the school, they all advocated my inclination to give HBS everything I've got. "You definitely give out a Harvard vibe", they kept saying. I didn't know if they were saying this just to motivate me, or if they really meant it. But I decided that not giving a **** about that for the moment would save me a lot of useless pondering. Instead, I started focusing a huge amount of effort on the 2 HBS essays. I decided to use all of the feedback and expertise gained from writing and perfecting the HBS essays to later write the Stanford and MIT essays.

With the help of my advice pool, I went through about 10 drafts for each HBS essay. The difference between each draft and the next one gets smaller as you progress. At first, our back-and-forth attachment-littered emails were about topic selection and content...and starting the 6th or 7th draft they evolved to small changes in sentence structure and vocabulary. At last, I felt satisfied about the quality of the essays. They were down to earth, action-packed, unboastful, and to-the-point.

Around that same time, my parents -who were extremely excited about the possibility of my receiving a top MBA- starting exerting...ahem...formidable amounts of pressure on me to apply to more schools to "increase the probability of getting in to a top program". I kept telling them that it wasn't about how many schools you apply to, but rather about how diligently you devote yourself to the application(s) you're writing. I argued that all of the deadlines were in the same month, and that it was far better to focus on just 2 or 3 applications and perfect them than to distract yourself with 5 or 6 applications and end up hurrying all of them. My parents, bless them, would have none of it :-D Eventually I got tired and agreed to apply to Columbia and INSEAD as well, just to get them off my back. Doing this was both good and bad. It was bad because I suddenly had a huge amount of essays to write, all at the same time, and all with similar deadlines. But it was also good because since I was still convinced that focusing hard on any application is what makes it great, I decided to invest about 90% of my effort on the HBS application. I was just so sure that the investment would pay off, and that I wouldn’t give a damn if I didn’t get in to any other school.

One of the members of my advice pool recommended that I run the 2 HBS essays by an admissions consultant just for a quick spice-up of sentences and a few interesting word changes here or there. I got in touch with the consultant and made it very clear that I did not want any help with the content or the ideas; I just wanted to polish the wording. After going through both essays, she got back to me with almost meaningless changes and informed me that the essays, from her experience, were in very good condition for submission.

At that point, I started scouting for recommenders, and quickly got my boss and ex-boss on board. I sat down with each one of them alone and we had quick chats on what they can mention in their recommendations. I mostly agreed with what they wanted to write, and I asked one of them to make it a point to refer to a significant achievement of mine that I had wrote about in one of my essays. For the third recommendation, I called up an older friend of mine who knows me quite well and is running a very successful business. I asked her to just write what she thought about me, and I knew that she would have good things to say -with a wealth of examples to back them up.

At last, when I had made sure that my HBS application was coherent, told a strong story, contained everything I wanted the adcom to know, and thoroughly revised, I submitted it. And then I turned to the other 4 applications. I found that writing essays was becoming a much simpler issue than before, since I kept drawing from the advice and feedback I received throughout my rollercoaster ride with the HBS essays. Perhaps because I subconsciously could not see myself anywhere but at HBS, I did not give the other applications as much focus. I even remember not feeling that anxious about their deadlines approaching.

I was done with everything by the time the deadlines came rushing, and I submitted everything (I decided to apply to INSEAD in Round 3, since all 3 of its rounds have equal probability of acceptance, unlike most US schools). I felt so relieved that I was now done with all the work, and then resigned myself to checking when HBS would get back to applicants for interviews...every single day :-D

On the day they specified, I got the interview invitation and was absolutely over the moon! 3 days later, I got a rejection from Columbia and (frankly) could not care less. “It’s an incredibly great school, but I just don’t think it’s for me”, I kept saying. I know you’re probably thinking now that I’m so arrogant to only want HBS, but trust me it’s not about pride at all. It’s about finding your perfect fit. If you were in love with someone, and for some reason she wasn’t available, would you just go ahead and marry her twin sister? Even if she was just as smart/pretty/adorable? If things should be like that, then God help us all :-D

After consulting with my advice pool, I decided to fly to Boston and interview on campus. In the week leading up to the flight, I scheduled and sat for 4 mock interviews with different people, some in person and some on skype. After the 4th mock interview, I felt that I was very anxious but ready. I kept reminding myself that the fear was good, because it would keep me alert and prevent me from being reckless and overconfident.

And so I flew to Boston. Needless to say, I loved every single thing about the campus and student life there. I scheduled a class visit, and during the class I actually wanted to raise my hand and say what I thought about the case being discussed…that’s how engaged I was.

The interview was extremely friendly. I had it with 2 members of the adcom, with one mostly doing the writing and the other mostly doing the talking. I was very impressed with the balance they struck between friendliness, professionalism, and time management (the interview lasts for EXACTLY 30 minutes, and they’re very precise about that). They mostly asked me about my job, my achievements, how I viewed leadership, what it took to inspire other people, and how challenging it is for a business to thrive in Egypt in the midst of everything happening. I tried my best to stick to answering what they asked in structured, meaningful and non-repetitive statements, and felt I did fine on the whole.

I wrote my post-interview reflection essay the next day, and mostly wrote about questions I would have loved to have been asked and my answers to them. One of the members of my advice pool did a quick edit of the essay and introduced minor comments. I submitted it and decided to wander around Boston for the rest of the day before heading to the airport. In the middle of a delicious steak meal I was having, I got an email from MIT saying that the decision was available on the online application…which essentially meant that I was rejected without an interview (they send you an “interview invitation” email if they want to interview you). I went back to the hotel, opened my laptop and was not at all surprised at the MIT rejection staring back at me from the computer screen. I did not feel quite as indifferent as after the Columbia decision. I was a bit disappointed, but acknowledged that there is nothing I can do about it now.

When I got back to Egypt, I decided to prepare the INSEAD application. I reasoned that if I was also rejected by Stanford and Harvard, I would not be able do an MBA this year at all. Yes, I wanted HBS, but I wouldn’t wait another year just because I got accepted somewhere else and not at HBS. The fact that I felt I was now ready to start this new chapter in my career superseded the fact that I wanted a specific MBA program and not others. In other words, the ultimate priority was that I do an MBA in a world class program. And THEN, the second priority was that I go to HBS, and I had to be very harsh with myself about that.

So I started and finished the INSEAD application, and felt I had done a very good job on it since my full attention was directed towards it.

On the 27th of March, the HBS decision notification date, I did not even attempt to concentrate at work. The decision would come at 6:00pm Egypt Time, and I kept looking at my watch every 5 minutes starting 11am :-D

When the day finally rolled by -excruciatingly slowly, I might add- and 6pm approached, I headed to my desk at work, opened my laptop and simply stared at the computer’s clock until 5:59pm showed up. At that point, I couldn’t take it anymore. Without yet getting the email saying that the decision was now available on my online application, I opened the application fully predisposed to see the usual layout of submission verifications and other info on the front page. But then I noticed a new item, a link, at the very bottom of the page: “Your application decision is now available online”. I clicked on it, and up popped a small window with a lot of words in it. The very first sentence told me everything I needed to know, and before I knew it I was punching the air, shouting out in triumph, slapping the desk, and making a hell of a lot of noise :-D

An hour later, I checked my unread emails and found that Stanford had also sent me an email saying that their decision was now available online. Since I hadn’t got invited to an interview, I knew what the decision was and didn’t even bother to open it. I was ecstatic, and I couldn’t believe that I got into HBS. Nothing else mattered, and nothing else would ruin it for me.

Later, as I reflected on my whole experience with the application process, I arrived to a very simple conclusion: If you give an application everything you’ve got, there is no way in hell you won’t, at the very least, get invited to an interview. But in order to do that, you have to allocate your time wisely. Don’t get tempted to apply to dozens of schools! Apply to the schools you absolutely love, and give them EVERYTHING. Give them your time, your effort, your resources, and your devotion. Look at me, for heaven’s sake: dinged at Columbia, dinged at MIT, dinged at Stanford, and accepted to Harvard...definitely not because it’s the easiest to get into, but because it’s the one to which I gave my sweat, heart and soul.

Just today, I got an interview invitation to INSEAD. I’m not sure whether I should go to the interview or not. On the one hand, it’s definitely a very cool experience to meet an alumnus and have a casual chat with them. But on the other, if I am accepted, I don’t want to be the reason that someone else who might need this acceptance more than I do didn’t get in because I took his/her place. I’m still trying to decide.

To conclude, I’d say that going through these grueling applications is one hell of an experience. It teaches you patience, networking, stamina, responsibility, tolerance, and dedication. I think that working on these applications is something that I will always remember with pride. It’s the sort of thing you look back on and say “Remember that effing time when you had to do this, this and that? Nice work. Now go make a difference in the world.”

I hope this covers your inquiries and concerns. If you have any other questions, ask away :-)
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 02 Jun 2012
Posts: 17
Own Kudos [?]: 70 [1]
Given Kudos: 5
Location: Egypt
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, General Management
Schools: Harvard Business School - Class of 2015
GMAT 1: 700 Q47 V39
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V44
GPA: 3.41
WE:Marketing (Telecommunications)
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
1
Kudos
Thanks pjolie!

Nope, funnily enough the IR score doesn't show, and the printed sheet they gave me at the end of the test says that I'll receive it with the AWA within 20 days.

It's all MCQ's: why we don't receive it immediately is beyond me!
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 02 Jun 2012
Posts: 17
Own Kudos [?]: 70 [1]
Given Kudos: 5
Location: Egypt
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, General Management
Schools: Harvard Business School - Class of 2015
GMAT 1: 700 Q47 V39
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V44
GPA: 3.41
WE:Marketing (Telecommunications)
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
1
Kudos
gmatsaga wrote:
Very vivid debrief! I could picture you in my mind!

Anyway, could you elaborate more on how you studied for verbal? I'm having a hard time strengthening my score. :( Hope you could provide feedback.


Thanks for the compliment :-)

I began verbal with the Manhattan books, just to get a feel for all of the categories of CR, RC and SC that come up in the GMAT. I didn't really fuss over the explanations of a concept if I found that I could understand it right from the get-go.

What I made it a point to do, especially in SC, was to read the occasional examples scattered inside the chapters, used by the authors to aid the explanations. I would read the chapter's heading and intro paragraph, understand what they wanted to explain, then skim-read the rest of the explanations and read an example every now and then to make sure I understood.

You'll find that doing that will save you a lot of time, and it will sort of get you to blast through your Verbal studying using this "checkpoint" approach, if you know what I mean. I usually tried to guess the answer to the example: if I got it right and I was sure that I could solve one just like it, I moved on. If I barely got it right, didn't know the answer, or got it wrong, I carefully read the section of the chapter dedicated to explaining the concept behind this example. What I don't recommend you do is devoutly read every single word of explanation by Manhattan: sooner or later things will get a bit too theoretical. Be as efficient/practical as possible when approaching the chapters, skim-read each one, and make guesses at every example, and you'll be on your way.

As for practice, I found that the Manhattan CR & RC exercises were great, and very close to the actual test. I solved the last 5-7 questions in the exercise section of each chapter after I skimmed it, and if course recorded my mistakes. As for the SC, my opinion is: don't bother. The exercises are way too theoretical, detailed, and not at all like the actual exam questions. Don't get me wrong, the chapter descriptions are great (especially the specific distinctions they have between similar phrases, such as "like" & "as")...but the exercises aren't. What I did do was solve the 2nd Edition questions specified by Manhattan at the end of each chapter. This was VERY useful, as the number/percentage of questions that I got right/wrong in each category helped me create my error log, and focus on my weaknesses.

I felt that I was ready to take practice tests when I had finished the SC book (kept it to last) and had a good feel of what many people call "GMAT English" (i.e. the set of rules and idioms that the GMAT stubbornly -if not condescendingly- accepts as proper English).

During the practice tests, I noticed that most of my Verbal mistakes were in SC, so I kept making notes of them to understand where I was going wrong. They were usually mistakes that had to do with my "feel" for the sentence, rather than what the actual right answer is in accordance with the rules of the GMAT. It took me a while to recognize and accept uncomfortable-looking answers as in fact the right ones.

You'll find that if you train hard on SC, you'll be extremely quick at solving the questions correctly, and that will save you time to read CR & RC carefully and solve them correctly too; what I mean to say is that most of my mistakes on CR & RC were because of not reading the question properly/being in a hurry/considering the question way too much of a nuisance. But what I found was that all I needed to do is give myself enough time to solve them comfortably and read them carefully...for that, I needed to save time on something else: SC.

If you have any more questions tell me straight away :-)
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 09 Jan 2013
Posts: 1
Own Kudos [?]: 1 [1]
Given Kudos: 0
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
1
Kudos
Bombol wrote:
Hey All,

Just wanted to post an update that I hope would drive you to see the dream and work as hard as you can :-)

I just got accepted to Harvard Business School for the Class of 2015.

I look forward to seeing fellow GMATclubbers there!!!



congratulations bro!! :)

i wanted to ask you this...could you explain your experience of the entire process of getting selected at HBS?? also to which other B-schools did you apply?? i surely hope that one day i too can join HBS!!
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 18 Jan 2013
Posts: 24
Own Kudos [?]: 5 [1]
Given Kudos: 17
Concentration: General Management, Social Entrepreneurship
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
1
Kudos
Congratulations Bombol!!!! Amazing story with an awesome ending.

Your journey is very inspiring. I will definitely be reading it again and again every time I score bad on a practice test or when I need more motivation.

Now, besides the GMAT score, could you share more about the other aspects of your application?
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 28 Nov 2012
Posts: 1
Own Kudos [?]: 1 [1]
Given Kudos: 1
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
1
Kudos
:-D An eyeopening debrief!!All the best for your future endeavors..:).
Some of the tricks are really nice. After going through your debrief I realised a very serious problem with me that is " Oh I am very strong in this area and I got this wrong bcoz blah blah...". Now I understand Self realisation is the key to success!!
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 19 Jun 2012
Posts: 2
Own Kudos [?]: 7 [1]
Given Kudos: 10
Location: United States
GPA: 3.8
WE:General Management (Manufacturing)
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
1
Kudos
hey congratulations for your acceptance!!!!!!!!!!!! hope to see you next year as my senior.....tc
8-)
User avatar
Veritas Prep GMAT Instructor
Joined: 11 Dec 2012
Posts: 310
Own Kudos [?]: 633 [1]
Given Kudos: 66
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
1
Kudos
Expert Reply
Hey Bombol, congrats on the impressive score and detailed debriefs for the exam and the application process. I think this kind of stuff is a huge asset to the community as it showcases what can be done with some good prep and inspires others to follow suit!

Thanks!
-Ron
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 28 May 2011
Posts: 110
Own Kudos [?]: 152 [0]
Given Kudos: 7
Location: United States
Concentration: General Management, International Business
GMAT 1: 720 Q49 V38
GPA: 3.6
WE:Project Management (Computer Software)
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
Congratulations!!! So ultimately you have nailed it to the wall ;-)
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 11 Jun 2012
Posts: 12
Own Kudos [?]: 216 [0]
Given Kudos: 6
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
Excellent debrief. Thank you for your advise. Do you know your IR score? I am just starting my prep and will surely look for those MGMAT books. One more question, can you add your error log to your post. It would be great to have that.
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 02 Jun 2012
Posts: 17
Own Kudos [?]: 70 [0]
Given Kudos: 5
Location: Egypt
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, General Management
Schools: Harvard Business School - Class of 2015
GMAT 1: 700 Q47 V39
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V44
GPA: 3.41
WE:Marketing (Telecommunications)
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
Sorry, forgot my error log! Here goes:

Quant:

Inequalities: 30% of Quant mistakes
Probabilities & Combinatronics: 25% of Quant mistakes
Silly mistakes: 20% of Quant mistakes
Odds & Evens: 15% of Quant mistakes
Other/Miscellaneous: The rest (10% of Quant mistakes)

Verbal:

SC Idioms: 35% of mistakes
CR find the assumption questions: 25% of mistakes
Giving in to annoyance: 20% of mistakes
Miscellaneous: The rest (20%)

This is literally the error log that I kept. Of course I had absolute numbers for everything, in descending order for each section. But I decided to convert them to %'s of total to give you a feel of the kind of errors that I was doing. As you can probably deduce here, I did not individually classify mistakes that took up less than 10% of my section's mistakes, and just made mental notes of them.

A piece of advice, keep your error log simple...it's only there to remind you that a certain bell needs to ring in your head when you get a question that you usually solve incorrectly :-)
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 11 May 2012
Status:Juggg..Jugggg Go!
Posts: 159
Own Kudos [?]: 98 [0]
Given Kudos: 239
Location: India
GC Meter: A.W.E.S.O.M.E
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, General Management
GMAT 1: 620 Q46 V30
GMAT 2: 720 Q50 V38
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
that's a short error log :) thanks for sharing your experience!
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 11 May 2012
Status:Juggg..Jugggg Go!
Posts: 159
Own Kudos [?]: 98 [0]
Given Kudos: 239
Location: India
GC Meter: A.W.E.S.O.M.E
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, General Management
GMAT 1: 620 Q46 V30
GMAT 2: 720 Q50 V38
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
that's a short error log :) thanks for sharing your experience!
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 13 Jan 2012
Posts: 245
Own Kudos [?]: 778 [0]
Given Kudos: 38
Weight: 170lbs
GMAT 1: 740 Q48 V42
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V42
WE:Analyst (Other)
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
This is certainly one of the better debriefs that I've read. Congratulations, and I hope to emulate your achievement.

Does anyone have an example of a very simple error log in Excel? I've downloaded a few on this site, but I think the [subconscious] reason that I don't use them is that they're overly complex.

Originally posted by geometric on 19 Jun 2012, 00:46.
Last edited by geometric on 19 Jun 2012, 00:51, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 05 Jun 2012
Status:Rising GMAT Star
Posts: 106
Own Kudos [?]: 270 [0]
Given Kudos: 16
Location: Philippines
Concentration: General Management, Finance
GPA: 3.22
WE:Corporate Finance (Consulting)
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
Very vivid debrief! I could picture you in my mind!

Anyway, could you elaborate more on how you studied for verbal? I'm having a hard time strengthening my score. :( Hope you could provide feedback.
Board of Directors
Joined: 01 Sep 2010
Posts: 4384
Own Kudos [?]: 32878 [0]
Given Kudos: 4455
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
what about your quant section ?? I suppose you have a strong background but what you did to improve or to avoid silly mistakes ??? share with us some thoughts if you can .............:)
Board of Directors
Joined: 01 Sep 2010
Posts: 4384
Own Kudos [?]: 32878 [0]
Given Kudos: 4455
Send PM
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
This help me a lot :). This debrief on how you went toward your quant part of the test is simple amazing. I found many of your reflections right and similar to what I encounter throughout my practise each day.

Thanks. Thanks and again Thanks
GMAT Club Bot
Re: Done with the GMAT journey; 99th Percentile 760 (Q50, V44) [#permalink]
 1   2   
Moderator:
Founder
37309 posts

Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group | Emoji artwork provided by EmojiOne