The Frustrating Reality of Practicing for the GMAT Without Progress
Many students miss their GMAT targets not because they lack dedication, but because their practice strategy is flawed. Putting in long hours or racing through large sets of questions does not automatically translate into higher scores. What truly drives improvement is how you practice, how focused, intentional, and methodical your preparation is.
Sampling a few questions from each topic may create the illusion of progress, but it rarely builds fundamental proficiency. Mastery requires repetition and depth. For most topics, that means working through dozens, and often hundreds, of thoughtfully selected questions. However, sheer volume is not enough. If you are answering questions, glancing at the solution, and quickly moving on, you may be staying busy without actually getting better.
Productive GMAT practice is organized and deliberate. Instead of jumping between topics, concentrate on one area at a time. Begin with easy questions and remove all time pressure. Your goal at this stage is consistency, reaching near-perfect accuracy before moving forward. Once you are reliably getting easy questions right, shift to medium-level problems, still untimed, and work until your accuracy stabilizes at a strong level. Only after that foundation is in place should you introduce more complex questions. For Quant, a solid benchmark is roughly 60 percent accuracy on complex problems. For Verbal, aim higher, around 70 percent or more.
Timing should come after accuracy, not before it. Once you are hitting your accuracy targets, gradually introduce time constraints. You might reduce your allowed time per question in stages, or practice at an average test-day pace of about 2 minutes per question. The objective is to preserve your accuracy while adjusting to the pressure of the clock, so your performance in practice reflects what you can deliver on exam day.
Equally important is what you do when things go wrong. Mistakes are not setbacks; they are data. Instead of quickly reading the explanation and moving on, pause and diagnose the error. Did you misunderstand a core concept? Did you make a careless slip? Did you misread the question or fall for a trap? Identifying the root cause allows you to fix the issue at its source rather than repeating the same mistake later.
Strong GMAT preparation is not about grinding endlessly. It is about practicing with intention, reviewing intelligently, and continuously refining your approach. When your study process is structured this way, progress becomes measurable, confidence grows, and your target score becomes far more achievable.
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep