Hello everyone,
Just writing this little debrief to tell my experience with GMAT prep, and how it changed when I started using TTP.
I started my GMAT journey in
March 2024, first with academies, then studying
on my own, and later with a private tutor. While my results were not bad, I often noticed that I still had
small conceptual gaps, my
time management was poor, and my performance depended too much on how I felt that day — I wasn’t consistent.
After trying different materials, I decided to switch to
Target Test Prep (TTP) for the final three months before my test, and honestly, it became a
cornerstone in my GMAT progression.
Why TTP worked for me
- Structured but flexible: the platform lets you set your own study rhythm — how many hours you can study per day, and how many you should invest to close specific weak areas. It’s flexible, but it only works if you build study discipline.
- Logical and intuitive flow: topics are connected naturally, especially those that overlap. The learning curve feels smooth, not like jumping between random lessons.
- Practice bank and time management: the question bank is large and categorized by three difficulty levels with timers, which helped me improve both speed and intuition—crucial for GMAT Quant.
Results
In just
three months, my score improved by
60 points, and, more importantly,
time management stopped being an issue. I became comfortable with the exam’s rhythm and much more consistent in my performance.
Final thoughts
If you’re someone who already understands the basics but struggles with consistency or timing,
TTP can completely reshape your approach. It gives you structure, confidence, and control—so test day feels like just another practice set.