Why Many GMAT Students Don’t Improve Despite Hours of Practice
One of the most common reasons students fail to achieve their GMAT goals is not a lack of effort, but the way they practice. Effective preparation is not just about the number of hours spent or the number of questions attempted. It is about the quality and structure of that practice.
For example, doing just a handful of questions in each topic area is rarely enough to build lasting skill. To truly master a topic, you often need to work through dozens, sometimes even hundreds, of carefully chosen questions. At the same time, volume alone will not guarantee results. You could answer hundreds of questions and see little improvement if your approach to practice is not designed to build accuracy and understanding. Simply timing yourself, checking the answer key, and moving on will not deliver the growth you need.
A more effective approach is to be systematic. Focus on one topic at a time. Start with easy questions, untimed. Work through as many as needed until you are consistently answering them correctly at a rate of 90 to 100 percent. Then, progress to medium-level questions, again untimed, until you achieve an accuracy rate of at least 80 percent. Only then should you take on harder questions. In Quant, aim for around 60 percent accuracy on difficult questions. In Verbal, target 70 percent or better.
Once you have reached these benchmarks, begin adding time pressure. You can do this gradually by shortening your time per question in small steps or by practicing at an average pace of about two minutes per question. The goal is to transfer your accuracy from an untimed setting into a timed one, which reflects the reality of test day.
Perhaps the most important part of this process is how you handle mistakes. Every time you miss a question, do not simply read the explanation and move on. Take the time to identify exactly why you missed it. Was it a conceptual misunderstanding, a careless error, or a misinterpretation of the question? Then, address that weakness directly. This cycle of practice, analysis, and adjustment is what builds skill and prevents repeated mistakes.
Effective GMAT preparation is not just about working hard. It is about working deliberately. When you structure your practice in this way, you are far more likely to see measurable progress and, ultimately, the results you want on test day.
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep