How Letting Go of Perfection Can Help You Improve on the GMAT
Many GMAT students fall into the trap of believing that they need to be perfect every single day of their preparation. They assume that any off day, any mistake, or any moment of fatigue is a sign of failure. In reality, this mindset can do more harm than good.
Perfection is an ideal, not a sustainable goal. There will be days when everything clicks. Your focus is sharp, your accuracy is high, and your timing feels natural. But there will also be days when your performance dips or your concentration falters. That does not mean you are off track. It means you are human. What matters most is not being perfect every day but showing up and improving a little at a time.
If you can become just one percent better today than you were yesterday, that incremental progress will compound over time. Consistency, not perfection, is what drives mastery. Every small improvement you make in accuracy, reasoning, pacing, or confidence contributes to your long-term success.
Striving for excellence is a positive trait, but when it turns into pressure for perfection, it can slow growth. You do not need to solve every question flawlessly or recall every rule instantly to improve. What you need is the willingness to learn from your errors, to adjust your strategy, and to keep practicing even when the process feels difficult.
Between success and failure lies a valuable space where real progress happens. This is the space where you identify what worked, what did not, and what can be refined next time. That reflection is where growth begins.
As you prepare for the GMAT, focus on setting measurable and realistic goals that push you forward without overwhelming you. Aim to complete a specific number of questions with strong accuracy or to strengthen one concept each day. Remember that lasting success is built on steady improvement, not flawless execution.
Sheryl Sandberg once said, “Done is better than perfect.” The same principle applies to GMAT preparation. Keep going, keep learning, and keep improving, even if only by one percent each day. Over time, those small wins will add up to something remarkable.
Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep