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Hi eashaansingh,

The good news is that you're in a pretty solid spot right now!

That said, it’s important to keep identifying your weak areas and actively working to improve them in order to boost your quant score.

Take Number Properties, for example. You can target this topic by doing 50+ questions focused specifically on areas like LCM, GCF, units digit patterns, divisibility, remainders, and so on.

After each set, make it a point to review the questions you got wrong. If you missed a remainder question, ask yourself: Was it a careless mistake? Did you misapply the remainder formula? Was there a concept you didn’t fully understand? This kind of reflection is key to making real progress.

By consistently analyzing your mistakes, you’ll be able to strengthen your weak points and build sharper GMAT quant skills. Number Properties is just one example but apply the same approach across all quant topics.

Feel free to reach out with any questions.
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Thanks a lot, I'll focus on using GMAT Club forums then, do you think redoing the official mocks would be of any help to gauge progress?
hr1212
I think you're very close to your target score, bumping up by 30 points in the next couple of weeks is absolutely within reach. From what I can think, you can start with strategies to reduce unforced errors in Quant and Data Insights. Try to minimize mistakes on easy and medium-level questions, as that alone can give your score a solid boost. One helpful approach here is to focus on your weaker topics and aim for 80–90% accuracy in easy/med questions before moving on. In parallel, work on your time management during mocks, quickly identify which questions you're confident about and which ones you might want to guess on early to preserve time for future ones. If you want Quant specific sectional practice, then GMAT Club has some great Quant Sectional Tests which would help you build better strategies for hard questions.

Once you score 20+ points above your target in couple of mocks, you'll be in a much stronger mental space heading into test day. Personally, I believe practicing OG (include Older Guides and GMAT Classic Mock questions) and popular GMAT Club questions in a targeted way can get you there. But if you think having a structured 1-month course for performance-tracking on any prep platform would help, then that would also be a solid option.

You’ve got this. Just a few strategic tweaks, and you’ll be right where you want to be.
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Thanks a lot for the advice Scott, I'll try to better find patterns in my errors and focus on improving!
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Hi eashaansingh,

The good news is that you're in a pretty solid spot right now!

That said, it’s important to keep identifying your weak areas and actively working to improve them in order to boost your quant score.

Take Number Properties, for example. You can target this topic by doing 50+ questions focused specifically on areas like LCM, GCF, units digit patterns, divisibility, remainders, and so on.

After each set, make it a point to review the questions you got wrong. If you missed a remainder question, ask yourself: Was it a careless mistake? Did you misapply the remainder formula? Was there a concept you didn’t fully understand? This kind of reflection is key to making real progress.

By consistently analyzing your mistakes, you’ll be able to strengthen your weak points and build sharper GMAT quant skills. Number Properties is just one example but apply the same approach across all quant topics.

Feel free to reach out with any questions.
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Quote:
how do I improve on quant & DI fundamentals?

Quote:
I feel like I have strong Verbal skills particularly CR(90th Perc) but on

One thing that may help a bit is finding a study buddy who, for example, is really strong on Quant and needs help with CR. In addition to figuring out how to do hard questions, finding shorter ways to do questions you already get correct may be helpful as well. An error-log that keeps track of question types you may be a bit hit or miss on could also be useful.

Quant 'Cheat' Sheet
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Work on DI weak areas
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eashaansingh
Hi, I need help to get to my target score of around 675,
My section order was Quant-Verbal-DI. I mismanaged my time on DI a bit having to guess the last question, I had 2 MSR sets which I hadn't faced in any official mock.

Prep till now
I feel like I have strong Verbal skills particularly CR(90th Perc) but on Quant I am confused how I can get better at solving completely unfamiliar/harder questions.
I have solved the official books as well as the online official questions, following the GMAT Ninja 13 week study plan and had used TTP lessons for a month before that to learn the basics, my official mock scores have ranged from 655 - 675 owed to even better scores in DI and Verbal and similar scores on quant.

I want to reattempt as soon as possible but want to figure out a path that can make a difference, I have a around 7-8 Expert Global mocks remaining
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This is good, you're already in a strong position with Verbal and DI. Since your struggle is with unfamiliar or harder Quant questions, prioritise targeted practice. Focus on high-difficulty Quant problems to stretch your problem-solving ability. Also, deep-dive into mistakes to identify patterns—whether it's particular topics, conceptual gaps, timing, or strategy issues.

All the best!
eashaansingh
Hi, I need help to get to my target score of around 675,
My section order was Quant-Verbal-DI. I mismanaged my time on DI a bit having to guess the last question, I had 2 MSR sets which I hadn't faced in any official mock.

Prep till now
I feel like I have strong Verbal skills particularly CR(90th Perc) but on Quant I am confused how I can get better at solving completely unfamiliar/harder questions.
I have solved the official books as well as the online official questions, following the GMAT Ninja 13 week study plan and had used TTP lessons for a month before that to learn the basics, my official mock scores have ranged from 655 - 675 owed to even better scores in DI and Verbal and similar scores on quant.

I want to reattempt as soon as possible but want to figure out a path that can make a difference, I have a around 7-8 Expert Global mocks remaining
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eashaansingh
Thanks a lot for the advice Scott, I'll try to better find patterns in my errors and focus on improving!
ScottTargetTestPrep
Hi eashaansingh,

The good news is that you're in a pretty solid spot right now!

That said, it’s important to keep identifying your weak areas and actively working to improve them in order to boost your quant score.

Take Number Properties, for example. You can target this topic by doing 50+ questions focused specifically on areas like LCM, GCF, units digit patterns, divisibility, remainders, and so on.

After each set, make it a point to review the questions you got wrong. If you missed a remainder question, ask yourself: Was it a careless mistake? Did you misapply the remainder formula? Was there a concept you didn’t fully understand? This kind of reflection is key to making real progress.

By consistently analyzing your mistakes, you’ll be able to strengthen your weak points and build sharper GMAT quant skills. Number Properties is just one example but apply the same approach across all quant topics.

Feel free to reach out with any questions.
Awesome. Keep me updated.
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Not to gauge progress as that would be inflated most likely, but you can definitely go through each of those questions and try to understand why did you get them wrong in the first place and come up with better strategies. Official mocks shouldn't be treated as a one time exercise, but instead treat all those questions as a rare question bank which you should keep on revising and improving throughout your prep.

You can utilize other popular free mocks available on the internet to implement your timing strategies but I wouldn't take those scores at the face value due to the variance in the make of those questions.
eashaansingh
Thanks a lot, I'll focus on using GMAT Club forums then, do you think redoing the official mocks would be of any help to gauge progress?
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It's a great sign that none of your three section scores are too low; they're all within a good range! You have room to grow in all three areas, so if you focus, I think you can definitely hit 675!
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