sapper9
Yes I was harsh...I enrolled in their course (verbal only) wasted about 2 months getting no where. Then I realized that their “rules based “ methodology which is based on remembering a 1000 rules and trying to apply them is useless for the majority of questions. Their RC explanations are a joke. That time wasted caused me to postpone my gmat and miss one round if admissions. I am not even sure how they have so many fake reviews. Their emails claiming to make people jump from 600’s to 700’s in 100 days etc is another marketing trap that wastes a lot of time and money for the students and the community.
I am a student and not associated with any other test prep nor getting paid to post this out. I can post redacted versions of their subscription receipts and email correspondences if you wish. But the point I am trying to make is to not have someone starting new on GMAT be baited again with their over the top marketing.
Posted from my mobile device
I would suggest you go ahead and post your own review for
e-gmat. Make sure your review is verified otherwise yours can be treated as fake too.
While I understand you might have had a bad experience, It is not right to claim that all the reviews out there are fake.
Yes. They are good at marketing. I personally feel this. But no course is perfect. What works for one may not work for someone else.
Keeping that in mind, I suggest you start looking for what works best for you, not just a course but approaches for each section and I wish you all the best for your journey ahead.