How a Growth Mindset Can Transform Your GMAT Prep
The truth is that you can always strengthen your abilities and personal qualities. Intelligence and skill are not fixed traits. They are built over time through persistence, practice, and reflection. To develop a genuine growth mindset, start by seeing yourself clearly.
If you believe that you are “naturally” stronger in Verbal than Quant, or the other way around, take a step back and examine where that belief comes from. How much time have you actually invested in each area? How often have you practiced? How comfortable are you with the material because of prior exposure? In most cases, what feels like a natural strength or weakness can be traced back to experience, effort, and focus—not to some inherent limit in ability. Once you recognize that, you gain control over your progress.
It also helps to view others clearly and realistically. When you hear that someone has scored exceptionally well on the GMAT, it can be tempting to assume that they possess some innate talent that you do not. However, every high scorer has followed a path of learning, practice, and adjustment. Even if it seems that their progress came easily, rest assured that it did not happen overnight. Instead of being intimidated by others’ success, study their process. Ask what worked for them. Learn from their methods, and adapt those lessons to your own preparation.
Understanding the nature of learning itself is equally important. True learning involves both steady progress and moments of difficulty. The tougher stretches, when concepts seem just out of reach or when your performance temporarily dips, are not signs of failure but signs of growth. These are the moments when your understanding deepens and your problem-solving ability expands. Recognizing this helps you stay patient and motivated during the more challenging parts of your preparation.
It is only logical that deliberate practice leads to improvement. You have experienced this before—whether in academics, professional work, or personal pursuits. The same principle applies to the GMAT. Every mistake and every moment of confusion provides data you can use to get better.
By cultivating a growth mindset, you transform challenges into opportunities. You learn to approach your weaknesses with curiosity rather than frustration and to measure success by progress rather than perfection. Over time, this mindset not only helps you master the GMAT but also equips you with a stronger, more adaptable approach to problem-solving in all areas of life.
Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep