GMAT Club
January 30, 2026
sednesciunt

Joined: Aug 29, 2025

Posts: 1

Kudos: 2

Verified GMAT Focus score:
715 Q89 V90 DI78

GMAT Focus 635 to 715 in a month

REVIEWER IDENTITY VERIFIED by score report [?]

Improvement 80 Points

Course Target Test Prep Flexible Prep

Location Online

Strengths:

1) Structured yet tailored learning curriculum
TTP offers one of the most logically structured GMAT curriculums I’ve seen. You can select a target score at the outset, and the platform automatically organizes the material in a clear, step-by-step progression. This made it easy to trust the process and focus on execution rather than wondering what to study next. Despite being highly structured, the course still feels personalized to your goals and timeline.

2) Strong emphasis on foundational understanding, especially in Quant
TTP excels at building real foundational knowledge rather than overwhelming students with formulas or shortcuts. Concepts are explained patiently and clearly—almost as if a good teacher were walking you through the logic step by step. This was particularly valuable in Quant, where TTP takes the time to explain why things work, not just how to solve them. The tips and strategic insights throughout the lessons are practical and immediately applicable.

3) Speed, convenience, and efficiency in practice and review
The integration of practice questions directly into learning sections is a major strength. You can immediately reinforce concepts without switching contexts. The review tools are also excellent: weaknesses are clearly identified, performance is tracked by topic, and content is broken into well-defined sections that make targeted review fast and efficient. This design is especially powerful for students with limited study time.

Would make the product better:

TTP is already a very complete product, but one potential improvement would be to include more content that builds intuitive understanding for certain high-variability topics. Some concepts—such as Inequalities in Quant or nuanced Verbal strategies—benefit enormously from alternative mental models or visual explanations.

For example, I found YouTube content from Aditya Kumar (for Inequalities) and GMAT Ninja (for Verbal) particularly strong at developing intuition. If TTP could integrate or emulate the best insights from these types of explanations—perhaps as optional “intuition-building” modules—it would be hard to imagine a student needing any external resources at all.

Overall, TTP is a comprehensive GMAT learning guide that stands out for its efficiency and convenience. With only one month to prepare due to Round 2 application deadlines, I needed a resource that would let me move fast without sacrificing depth. TTP allowed me to essentially “speed-run” the foundational content while still gaining meaningful understanding—especially in Quant.

I improved from a 635 on my first mock to a 715 in just one month of intensive study. This kind of progress would have been extremely difficult, if not impossible, using traditional books or other materials I explored. For students on a tight timeline who still want a thorough and well-structured preparation, TTP is hard to beat.

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