Hi everyone,
Background - Indian male, living in the UK with an economics/finance background. 5 years work experience.
I had been meaning to give the GMAT for a fairly long time (since 2016) and had most of my study materials since then. I dipped in and out of them, but never with much momentum. I grew frustrated with my lack of progress and decided to book the exam for November 2017. I had about 2 months for my prep and while for the first time, I studied with a real sense of purpose and urgency, I felt I wasn't ready. Especially in quant, I couldn't solve the difficult GMATClub questions in time. So I postponed my exam. A few times. Finally I set the date of 25th June 2018, giving myself about 50 days of solid, consistent preparation.
Books & materials used:MGMAT Guides Powerscore CR
OG 12, 13, 18
e-GMAT Verbal Online
Gmatclub tests - (extremely useful for quant)
Gmatclub quant book
Chineseburned guide
I also sampled through most of the packs/user guides on GMATClub (e.g. notes by whiplash) though personally I found the content to overlap significantly with the other materials. Also some of the things that were emphasised (e.g. Idioms) were not very useful from an effort/reward ratio point of view (in my opinion).
My practice scores
GMAT diagnostic - (mid 600s) May 30, 2016 - quite an eye opener
GP1: 730 (Q49, V40) Nov 4, 2017
GP1 (retake): 700 (Q 47, V39) May 5, 2018
GP2: 760 (Q50, V44) Jun 2, 2018
GP3: 730 (Q50, V40) Jun 9, 2018
GP4: No score (exam crashed due to buggy website)
GP5: 770 (Q51, V44) Jun 18, 2018
GP6: 720 (Q49, V39) Jun 23, 2018
Final: 740 (Q49, V 41, IR 7, AWA 6) Jun 25, 2018
My last score (just 2 days before my exam) did put some doubts in my head.
My quick thoughts (strategy + materials)SCMGMAT - Especially for SC, I studied the
MGMAT guide religiously. Although after a point I realised that my strategy was more memorisation based (trying to remember all the rules) and I was struggling in the more difficult questions (which usually tested exceptions to the rule). Then I came across a few of GMAT Ninja's posts on the verbal forum and his advice about treating the section as "verbal reasoning" especially stuck with me. Since then, my focus was more on meaning and comprehension.
I would note that I decided to take e - GMAT at a slightly later stage in my preparation. I was impressed by their clarity of concepts and the emphasis on meaning on their free grammar posts on the Verbal Forum. Their approach towards more difficult topics (usually covered in the advanced sections of the
MGMAT guide) was much more approachable. I also read a lot of good things about their "Pre-thinking" so I decided to sign up for the verbal online course. By that time I had largely grown confident with the SC section so my focus was more on CR.
CRFor a reasonable part of my preparation, I was doing fairly well on the OG CR questions. I had also internalised Powerscore's way of thinking reasonably. However I then discovered the hardest CR questions on GMAT Club and I was hardly getting any right in the allotted time! I also struggled in the 700+ GMATPrep questions. I was (so I thought at that time) also struggling with timing, consistently taking upwards of 2 mins (usually around 2.30 mark) in CR. I lost my confidence in CR a bit and decided to thoroughly do the @
e-GMAT course. Once again, I found their exploration of the fundamentals to be quite thorough. However I must say I didn't quite get much as much value from their pre-thinking framework as I expected. I realised that I had already been able to pre-think (where the situation demanded) on questions upto 700 level, but the method never really clicked for me on the tough questions. I found that I was spending too much time trying to pre-think the answer (without a high hit rate) and less on evaluating the answer choices, and this was hurting my timing as well. In the end, I found myself settling more on
GMATNinja 's approach of spending enough time understanding the prompt but then focusing on finding 4 wrong answers.
QuantHaving gone through the typical eng. entrance exam preparations (quite some while ago though I must say), I wasn't overly worried about quant. I found the
MGMAT to be quite straightforward, almost too easy. Then I stumbled onto @Bunuel's problems and explanations on the Quant forum. And that scared me. This guy was GOOD. And I was nowhere close to him. This was the main reason for postponing my original exam. I set about to do the hardest questions I could find by Bunuel and karishma (I think from VeritasPrep). I completed most of the GMATPrep tests and became reasonably comfortable with the difficult topics (number properties, probabilities and combinatorics, etc). But. I ignored one topic - geometry. It used to be a particularly strong area for me a while ago - in the sense I had a good intuition on what to focus on and visualise while solving questions, so I assumed I would be good at it. And I was wrong. I kept getting an unsatisfactory hit rate in the practice tests - which I attributed to not practicing enough, but at the back of my head, I thought I should be able to pick it up relatively quickly. Therefore plans for revising this kept getting pushed back (CR was already freaking me out) and in the end, my revision on this was uncomfortably close to the exam.
D-dayCloser to my exam, I was beginning to feel quite exhausted by the preparation and so took the last few days lightly (this involved watching a fair bit of the football world cup). I thought this was a good sign - that I reached a stage where I felt I couldn't really make a massive difference to my score by studying more. Upon reflection, I have mixed feelings about this. Anyway, that's for later.
So the d-day arrives. Before starting the exam, I made sure to locate the toilets (they were slightly far away from the room) and compare the clocks in the test room and waiting area (off by a couple of minutes) so that I wouldn't jeopardise the timing in breaks. I decided to opt for verbal first.
The exam started...and it was different. I read a few times that there's nothing quite like the exam questions and this point hit me then. I was suddenly taking a lot more time in SC because the questions were quite difficult in my view (I could solve easy-medium SC questions in 45 seconds and difficult ones by 1m - 1.20) but here I was comfortably taking more. And here I was comfortably exceeding those times on the d-day! I knew I shouldn't get stuck on a question but I also knew that I couldn't mess SC (as I wasn't completely confident on CR). So I fell into a pretty chunky time deficit midway through the exam (I think I now had about 1.20 to 1.30 per question with nearly half the exam to go). I had experienced some time pressure in the mocks so I was somewhat prepared for this (though obviously not excited with this development). I started to absolutely blitz through RC questions and passages. I had now reached the last few questions in the exam - and lo and behold, I got a string of difficult CR questions. I couldn't pre-think and I couldn't eliminate 4 incorrect options. This happened two of three times, and I felt deflated. The section ended on a fairly dud note.
I had 8 minutes to regroup myself. I remember telling myself that I hadn't done terribly though it clearly hadn't gone as well as I had hoped. But I still had time. A Q51 could still save me.
So I began. The exam started well. I was good balance of pace and accuracy. And then an innocuous looking geometry question appeared. At first pass, I couldn't solve it. I redoubled my effort but no luck. Thinking that I had built a cushion from my start, I spent a bit more time trying to figure it out, but I just couldn't "see" the answer in the diagram.I guessed and moved on. Suddenly the test started to seem a bit more daunting. The person sitting next to me (who was giving a completely different exam) also started to read under his breath, which was distracting/annoying me. And then I got another tricky geometry question. And after a few, another. I was a little shaken. I wasn't getting these questions right, despite spending a fair amount of time. I had to rush through some questions towards the end. I may have gone a bit too quickly because I suddenly had 2-3 questions to go and about 2 min/q on the clock (these questions also seemed easier and I actually had time to spare). Once again, I felt disappointed.
By the time IR arrived, I wasn't terribly excited about the section. I think that may have contributed towards my 7 score on the section.
AWA - it was actually the first time I was writing a response, though I had read about 30-40 of sample responses (I think by Chineseburned?) so knew how to approach it. Timing was a bit tight.
The time came to decide on whether to cancel or accept the score. I almost let the 2 minutes pass debating what to do. 740 flashed up on the screen. I was grateful for the score (I felt the overall experience/difficulty was definitely on the higher side compared to the mocks) but I couldn't help feel a twinge of regret. I knew going into the exam that CR and Geometry were somewhat weak areas for me. And I was ruthlessly exposed in the exam. I don't think I got a single question on probability! Nevertheless, I had a feeling of begrudging respectful towards the GMAT - in the end, I got 740 because on the day I deserved no more, but no less.
A few tips from my perspective: 1. Please do not start preparing for the exam until you are certain you can give it the time it deserves in one huge, continuous block. Dipping in and out of preparation is a horrible waste of time.
2. At the same time, remember to exercise/refresh yourself. There are a lot of debriefs that stress the importance of these factors but for some reason, I couldn't balance my preparation in this manner. I think the feeling of fatigue I got closer to the exam was due to a lack of physical/mental stimulation which comes from exercise.
3. I maintained an
error log. But I did not review it regularly. While in the final review, I still got a gist of the errors I was making, frequently reviewing the log would have meant not repeating the mistakes (and therefore increasing confidence/freeing up time to focus on weaker areas).
In the end, I'd like to thank the GMATClub community - this place almost has everything you need to get a strong score. As for me, I feel I still have some unfinished business with the GMAT. I tried attaching my ESR (recently refreshed to provide more granular insights) but I have less than 5 posts and therefore I can't. I am ashamed to say I don't quite recognise GMAT's breakdown of CR into analysis/critique and construction/plan. I would heartily welcome suggestions to tackle CR in particular.