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Congratulations on the perfect score!
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Wow! Don't have words.

Just out of curiosity, how much were you scoring in official mocks?
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Would love to know your practice test scores as well and your starting point....
Also, would be amazing if you could confirm/verify your GMAT Focus Score. To do that, please go here and confirm https://gmatclub.com/forum/ucp.php?i=280
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­Hi Azakura16,

Wow!!! A GMAT Focus score of 805 is absolutely phenomenal! This is truly a masterful display of what can be accomplished when you work hard and set high goals. So many future (and present) GMAT Focus students could learn so much from your story. For many students, 9 months may seem like a long time to prepare for the GMAT, but I also think that those same students would give up almost anything to score 805 on the GMAT Focus Edition!

I’m also thrilled to hear how much you enjoyed the TTP course. Your thoughts on TTP are spot on! The course is definitely thorough and structured, and yes, above all else, we care about our students.

Congratulations on this AMAZING achievement! Feel free to reach out to the TTP team anytime. Good luck with things moving forward!!!
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Thanks Azakura16! I see you have added your score - you just need to verify it.­



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So it was not a long wait for us to see a perfect score eh bb ?
bb
Would love to know your practice test scores as well and your starting point....
Also, would be amazing if you could confirm/verify your GMAT Focus Score. To do that, please go here and confirm https://gmatclub.com/forum/ucp.php?i=280
­
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Azakura16
I don't usually do things like this. I'm way more of a lurker. I made this profile two days ago, even though I've benefitted from this forum as a tool to figure out why I got questions on the practice tests wrong. However, I took my first official GMAT last Wednesday and managed to get a perfect score. Also, I've been studying for the GMAT since July of last year, and it's taken up a lot of my free time and energy, which I suddenly have available again, so I might as well lay out my experience in case it's helpful for anyone else. 

I pretty exclusively used Target Test Prep, aside from the question review mentioned above. I started mid-July. I didn't really know how long I would need to prepare, as I work a lot and I have limited free time. As any good citizen of the internet does when searching for product reviews, I went to Reddit to find what programs people recommended, and TTP came up a lot. Positive (and less positive) reviews mostly talked about how thorough TTP's program is. I'm anxious and I like to overprepare for things, so that sounded great to me. I had a vague notion of preparing for a couple of months left over from my erstwhile undergrad days. That's clearly not what happened. I ended up spending about 9 months prepping, and I logged about 500 official prep hours.

Here's what I liked about TTP:
1. It is crazy thorough - Every chapter has review tests in three difficulty levels, and many have multiple review tests in each level. 
2. Difficulty - There were lots of very challenging questions. I often felt I understood concepts well, but when asked to apply them to harder questions, it was a whole other deal. This was one of the most helpful things for my prep. A lot of the concepts that I was tested over aren't necessarily difficult, but seeing how to get from the question to the answer (in the allotted time) will absolutely make or break the experience.
3. The lesson structure- This turned out to be a much bigger plus than I expected. If I had a minute while waiting at the doctor's office, or in between customers, or before my partner got home, I could tackle a lesson or two. They're broken down, bite-sized concepts, followed by specific questions to apply the concepts. Being able to make a little progress when I had time, instead of having to carve out whole blocks of time every day, fit into the life I live a lot better.
4. I liked their vibe- This will be personal preference to a degree, but I liked the TTP team's overall vibe. They give off the impression that they know what they're doing and they want to be doing it. I just wanted a slightly dry, no nonsense, coven of math wizards to run me back through a review course of most of high school, and these people answered the call. Even when I had questions that weren't about the course exactly (applying for accommodation), it was TTP's Scott (on Reddit) that answered those questions as well. I appreciate dealing with people who are dedicated to their craft.

A note on my accommodation, and a quick note about the TTP study plan layout (which I recommend following): TTP recommends not stressing early on about the time that you take to answer questions, but instead focusing on building a strong foundation of the knowledge and knowing that you'll get faster with practice. That was true. At the end of the study plan, they have you take the 6 official GMAT tests that are available to purchase on the MBA website, and I took one per weekend for 6 weeks. TTP's website is nice, well laid out, decent on mobile, overall pretty user friendly. The GMAT Focus is very Windows 95. It's not nearly as user-friendly. It also does this fun thing where, after every question, it pops up a box that makes you confirm that you are ready to submit your answer and move to the next question. The TTP tests aren't clunky in that way, and the first time I took a practice test, it threw me all the way off. I wasn't doing super bad on my time up until that point, but the extra seconds dealing with that popup every time takes, and the way it felt generally disruptive to me added a lot of stress. I ended up applying for an accommodation for time and a half pretty quickly after my first practice test, because it's recommended that you give the GMAC 30ish days to get a decision back to you, and you can't schedule your test until you're approved for the accommodation or it doesn't count. I got my decision back in like 5 days, so I was lucky. I pushed my time and a half to the limit on quant in every. single. practice exam. In the actual exam, I ended up having about 2 minutes left on DI, 5 minutes left on Verbal, and like 15+ minutes left on Quant. My actual test score was higher than any practice test and less stressful than any practice test (even though the kid in the testing cubical next to mine sounded like they were coming down with consumption, and I would recommend earplugs).

TTP does mention to take care of yourself while you're studying, get enough sleep, get enough exercise, anything that makes you feel your best. They especially recommend to take it easy the last week before the test, eat a good breakfast the morning of, get there early. I made myself do 10 minute meditations before bed every night for the last two weeks before my exam, because even though they can be frustrating in the moment, they do force me to calm down. The day of, I woke up 15 minutes earlier than I usually do so I would have time to do a bit of yoga and a quick meditation before I went to the test center, and I do think that helped. Also, some of it was luck, because there were almost zero questions that covered the topics I have the most trouble with, and even with infinity preparation, the topics covered are still incredibly broad and some will be easier for you than others. Good luck!



 ­
­
Azakura16 Congratulation! On hitting such a perfect score. You really nailed it. I must admit that your perfect score is every student's dream come true. Thank you so much for sharing a detailed debrief and I wish you all the best for your future application process.

Good luck!
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Congratulations, Azakura16 on the perfect Score. All the best for applications.
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arinamdar
So it was not a long wait for us to see a perfect score eh bb ?
bb
Would love to know your practice test scores as well and your starting point....
Also, would be amazing if you could confirm/verify your GMAT Focus Score. To do that, please go here and confirm https://gmatclub.com/forum/ucp.php?i=280
­
­
Yes... came a lot sooner than an 800 on the Classic 💪
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Wow... It's amazing to witness a perfect scorer so soon on GMAT CLUB. 

Congratulations!!! Azakura16

Azakura16
I don't usually do things like this. I'm way more of a lurker. I made this profile two days ago, even though I've benefitted from this forum as a tool to figure out why I got questions on the practice tests wrong. However, I took my first official GMAT last Wednesday and managed to get a perfect score. Also, I've been studying for the GMAT since July of last year, and it's taken up a lot of my free time and energy, which I suddenly have available again, so I might as well lay out my experience in case it's helpful for anyone else. 

I pretty exclusively used Target Test Prep, aside from the question review mentioned above. I started mid-July. I didn't really know how long I would need to prepare, as I work a lot and I have limited free time. As any good citizen of the internet does when searching for product reviews, I went to Reddit to find what programs people recommended, and TTP came up a lot. Positive (and less positive) reviews mostly talked about how thorough TTP's program is. I'm anxious and I like to overprepare for things, so that sounded great to me. I had a vague notion of preparing for a couple of months left over from my erstwhile undergrad days. That's clearly not what happened. I ended up spending about 9 months prepping, and I logged about 500 official prep hours.

Here's what I liked about TTP:
1. It is crazy thorough - Every chapter has review tests in three difficulty levels, and many have multiple review tests in each level. 
2. Difficulty - There were lots of very challenging questions. I often felt I understood concepts well, but when asked to apply them to harder questions, it was a whole other deal. This was one of the most helpful things for my prep. A lot of the concepts that I was tested over aren't necessarily difficult, but seeing how to get from the question to the answer (in the allotted time) will absolutely make or break the experience.
3. The lesson structure- This turned out to be a much bigger plus than I expected. If I had a minute while waiting at the doctor's office, or in between customers, or before my partner got home, I could tackle a lesson or two. They're broken down, bite-sized concepts, followed by specific questions to apply the concepts. Being able to make a little progress when I had time, instead of having to carve out whole blocks of time every day, fit into the life I live a lot better.
4. I liked their vibe- This will be personal preference to a degree, but I liked the TTP team's overall vibe. They give off the impression that they know what they're doing and they want to be doing it. I just wanted a slightly dry, no nonsense, coven of math wizards to run me back through a review course of most of high school, and these people answered the call. Even when I had questions that weren't about the course exactly (applying for accommodation), it was TTP's Scott (on Reddit) that answered those questions as well. I appreciate dealing with people who are dedicated to their craft.

A note on my accommodation, and a quick note about the TTP study plan layout (which I recommend following): TTP recommends not stressing early on about the time that you take to answer questions, but instead focusing on building a strong foundation of the knowledge and knowing that you'll get faster with practice. That was true. At the end of the study plan, they have you take the 6 official GMAT tests that are available to purchase on the MBA website, and I took one per weekend for 6 weeks. TTP's website is nice, well laid out, decent on mobile, overall pretty user friendly. The GMAT Focus is very Windows 95. It's not nearly as user-friendly. It also does this fun thing where, after every question, it pops up a box that makes you confirm that you are ready to submit your answer and move to the next question. The TTP tests aren't clunky in that way, and the first time I took a practice test, it threw me all the way off. I wasn't doing super bad on my time up until that point, but the extra seconds dealing with that popup every time takes, and the way it felt generally disruptive to me added a lot of stress. I ended up applying for an accommodation for time and a half pretty quickly after my first practice test, because it's recommended that you give the GMAC 30ish days to get a decision back to you, and you can't schedule your test until you're approved for the accommodation or it doesn't count. I got my decision back in like 5 days, so I was lucky. I pushed my time and a half to the limit on quant in every. single. practice exam. In the actual exam, I ended up having about 2 minutes left on DI, 5 minutes left on Verbal, and like 15+ minutes left on Quant. My actual test score was higher than any practice test and less stressful than any practice test (even though the kid in the testing cubical next to mine sounded like they were coming down with consumption, and I would recommend earplugs).

TTP does mention to take care of yourself while you're studying, get enough sleep, get enough exercise, anything that makes you feel your best. They especially recommend to take it easy the last week before the test, eat a good breakfast the morning of, get there early. I made myself do 10 minute meditations before bed every night for the last two weeks before my exam, because even though they can be frustrating in the moment, they do force me to calm down. The day of, I woke up 15 minutes earlier than I usually do so I would have time to do a bit of yoga and a quick meditation before I went to the test center, and I do think that helped. Also, some of it was luck, because there were almost zero questions that covered the topics I have the most trouble with, and even with infinity preparation, the topics covered are still incredibly broad and some will be easier for you than others. Good luck!



 ­
­
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Hi Azakura16, amazing work.

Just 6 months after the debut of the GMAT Focus Edition, we have our first verified perfect 805 scorer.  

If it's not too much to ask, would you mind sharing your Enhanced Score Report (ESR) images as well?  I would assume that you answered all 64 questions correctly, but this would still be nice to verify--since it is possible to score perfectly with some questions wrong due to the (edit: confirmed!) presence of experimental/pretest/unscored questions.  

Regardless, thank you for sharing your detailed debrief / verifying your score—and congratulations on earning the highest GMAT score of all-time!!­

There will surely be others to come...but for the record, you have reached the top of the 805 mountain first.  

­
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Hi Azakura16, huge congrats on your achievement!

Are you able to share any tips on managing time throughout the entire exam, but particularly on the Data Insights section? It (DI) tends to slow me down a lot due to the fairly long reading prompts/charts/graphs before doing any calculations.

Thanks.­
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Congratulations! All the best for your applications !

Posted from my mobile device
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Many many congratulations once again. :)
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Azakura16
Congratulation on your perfect score. Could you share a little suggestion to make a good score, please?
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­

­
Have you ever wondered how to score a PERFECT 805 on the GMAT? Meet Julia, a banking professional who used the Target Test Prep course to achieve this incredible feat.

Julia's story is nothing short of an inspiration. After earning her BBA in Finance, she spent nearly a decade in banking. Last July, she decided to begin GMAT Focus preparation to pursue her MBA. After reading rave reviews on various forums, she chose the Target Test Prep online self-study course for her prep.

Julia quickly realized TTP was the perfect fit for her. The comprehensive lessons, detailed explanations, and massive question bank gave her everything she needed to earn a top score.

In this inspiring video, Julia shares how she achieved her extraordinary 805 GMAT Focus score on test day.

Join Julia and many other students who have used Target Test Prep to score high on the GMAT Focus Edition. Start your 5-day trial of the TTP GMAT Course today for FREE.

Warmest regards,

Scott Woodbury-Stewart
Founder & CEO, Target Test Prep

­
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