Hi guys,
I am typically a self do-er, but I am at a loss and would highly appreciate some advice from some experts.
After studying for most of the year, while juggling fulltime work (aiming for c.700ish), I sat the GMAT and scored a very, very disappointing 580 (Q42, V28). I could hardly believe it. The worst part is that I was feeling confident and performing well on practice exams and questions. Maybe some further context about myself, I am not from the US so my education did not involve standardised tests like these before. However, I am historically strong in exams (such as CFA etc). I also work in finance in a highly numerical and verbal intensive job.
Practice tests (I did not sit a massive amount of them, potentially my downfall)- 620 (Q43, V32)
MGMAT CAT - almost 6 months ago closer to the start of my study
- 650 (Q46, V33)
MGMAT CAT - 3 months ago
Did not resit a practice exam for a good 3 months
- 690 (Q49, V35) GMAT official practice exam - a week before my exam. I also felt I made a couple of dumb errors and could've done better,
Details about my prepMy study was pretty dedicated, particularly in the last few months, studying both days on the weekends and a couple of hours each night.
- 2 months of TTP course (which I found very good for my fundamentals). While I didn't attempt
every problem set, I was pretty much meeting all target accuracy for each every easy, medium and hard topics. MY understanding I thought was good, although not perfect.
-
MGMAT books- Pretty much completed every OG2020 question
- Additional Verbal / quant review questions
- GMAT club problems
- GMATNinja youtube videos
In the week leading up to my exam, I was feeling confident. Scoring a 690 on the official practice test, doing sets of 10 questions from the verbal/quant verbals and achieving 70/80/90% accuracy for medium and hard questions per the official guide questions ...
I intend to resit but struggling to find out where to begin as I am unsure if my disappointing performance is from:
- Fatigue (I work in a very demanding job in finance, doing 60-70hours weeks in the months leading up to my exam)
- Pure dumb lucky (or lack of..). I often was able to hone in on issues, but spent a good amount of questions debating between two options. I also found this exam much harder than all other practice exams taken
- Some fundamental flaws?
- Bad technique (I did have some trouble with pens)
- Nerves (No meltdown.... I did find myself rereading passages however)
- Bad timing, skipped 2 verbal questions near the end as I ran out of time
Last piece of relevant information from my ESR
- My accuracy was 70/80% during the first 2 sections, but capitulated to 60% and 40% during Q3 and 4 respectively - assume this is relatively normal given the adaptive nature?
- Q (quarters correct) 71%, 86% 57%, 43%
- V (quarters correct) 62%, 71%, 57%, 38%
- 60-80% RC questions correct, yet 47th percentile for RC?????
- Very varied performance on quant for some topics (33% geo vs 88% value order factors)
From this, I think my main problem is time, I did spend maybe half my prep without timers. Getting faster on 'easier' questions and learning to skip questions at the right time (I only skipped 2 in verbal at the end as I ran out of time) seem essential.
Thanks for reading. I am happy to provide further info if relevant, but I appreciate the advice in advance.