If you’re preparing for the GMAT exam, you probably know by now that most people study for the GMAT in 3-6 months. Some study for up to a year or even more.
Why such a long period of time?
Overpriced $1500 prep programs revolve around 12-16 week courses that eat up your Saturday afternoons. 12-16 weeks!
Even an intense-college course on sub-atomic physics takes only 9 weeks (in a quarter system like at Stanford) or a little longer for semester system colleges.
I’ve never taken a sub-atomic physics class before, but trust me-there’s a TON more intense material in a 9 week sub-atomic physics class than there could possibly be on the GMAT.
Most of the concepts on the GMAT were covered in high school. You’ve seen all this stuff before! So all you really need to do is to review high school mathematics and writing and maybe learn a few new concepts. You’d also need to familiarize yourself with the different ways the GMAT guys try to trick you on the exam.
So since most people study 12-16 weeks for this exam that covers high school level material, why then is the average GMAT score in the low 500s? Seems like a perfectly legitimate question!
At first, I thought the only two reasons were 1) the content 2) the exam is very tricky
But it wasn’t until my two friends came out of the exam that I realized there’s actually a THIRD reason. You see, my two friends came out of the exam disappointed with their scores.
Me: “How did you study?”
They gave me a stack of the prep books they to study. I took a look, and within minutes, I was totally lost in the reading material.
The prep book was chock full of grammatical terms like participial phrase, dependent clause, and subjunctive. It would take me forever to understand what those terms mean.
No wonder why test takers takes 12-16 weeks to prep for the GMAT! They spend their time learning these useless fancy grammar terms. The critical reasoning section was also filled with these weird terms I did not understand.
After a few minutes of being confused by this observation, I quickly fell asleep as my eyes wandered across the pages and pages of the book. It was just way too easy for me to lose focus.
The quant section did an equally good job of making me fall asleep. As a visual learner, there’s only so much I can absorb by reading a book.
It was clear to me that part of the reason my two friends didn’t do well on the exam was the ineffective approach of the prep resources they used. These prep books used confusing words. They taught concepts-which are important-but they were missing something important-an efficient thought process. So what happened was my two friends understood all the concepts, but they didn’t know how to think through exam questions in a time-pressured environment.
During my two weeks of intense, marathon-like studying, I didn’t waste my time on “concepts” and instead created an efficient thought process with frameworks that help me identify what is being tested.
But I can see how I could easily have ended up studying away 12-16 weeks of my life had I prepared the way my friends did for the GMAT. I eventually showed my friends my thought process and they retook the exam with success. You can read more about our story.
So back to the original question: Why do most students study GMAT for 3-6 months?
1) the material is very rigorous 2) the test is very tricky 3) confusing, inefficient studying techniques
The material is tough, but it’s not impossible. Yes, the exam is very tricky so understanding the ways the GMAT guys try to trick you is crucial.
And yes, learn from the mistakes of my two friends. Make sure you stay away from confusing prep books that can waste away your precious time. Be smart about how you study because remember–how you study is perhaps the most important aspect to getting a good score.
Zeke Lee is the founder of the GMAT Pill Study Method, a unique GMAT Prep study method that has aided many MBA applicants do well on the GMAT in as little time as possible. Learn the techniques he used to score in the 98th percentile of the exam in just 2 weeks of intense preparation with GMAT Questions.
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