One mindset that quietly undermines many GMAT students is the belief that they must be perfect every single day. This expectation may feel motivating at first, but over time it becomes counterproductive. When perfection is the standard, even minor setbacks can feel like major failures. A slightly lower practice score, a difficult study session, or a few questions that do not go well can quickly lead to unnecessary frustration and self-doubt.
A far healthier and more sustainable approach is to focus on small, steady improvements. If you commit to becoming even one percent better each day, your progress will compound in meaningful ways. Consistency is far more powerful than occasional bursts of perfection. GMAT success is built through repeated effort, thoughtful review, and honest reflection, not flawless performance.
There will be days when everything flows smoothly and your study session feels efficient and productive. There will also be days when you feel distracted, tired, or less confident. Both types of days are normal, and neither determines your final score. What matters is that you continue to show up and remain committed to learning. Growth happens on the good days and the challenging ones, and often the most valuable insights come from the moments when things do not go exactly as planned.
Striving for excellence is important, but excellence does not require perfection. Genuine improvement requires you to be willing to make mistakes, examine them without judgment, and adjust your approach. Between success and failure lies a space where you can assess what your best effort looked like that day. When you identify even one small area to strengthen, you have already taken a meaningful step forward.
Set goals that are realistic, measurable, and constructive. These standards should support your development rather than discourage it. Keep in mind Sheryl Sandberg’s well-known reminder: done is better than perfect. Completing focused, intentional work each day, even when the day is not ideal, will bring you closer to your target score than chasing an unattainable ideal of daily perfection.
Happy studying!
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep