Prep Gmat [exclusive] -
– Learn a topic (e.g., Verb Tenses in SC or Rates in Quant) Tuesday – Practice 20 easy/medium questions on that topic Wednesday – Review all mistakes (most important day) Thursday – Mixed timed set (15 Quant + 15 Verbal, 2 min/question) Friday – Error log + weak concept re-study Saturday – Timed section (e.g., only Verbal) Sunday – Full mock exam (every 2 weeks) The gold medal habit: Spend as much time reviewing answers as you do taking questions. A 2-minute question deserves a 5-minute review. 4. The secret weapon: your error log If you “prep GMAT” without an error log, you’re just doing question collections. Not learning.
Start tomorrow. Not next month. One question at a time. prep gmat
| If you’re… | Best core resource | | --- | --- | | Self-disciplined & under $100 | Official Guide + GMATClub (free forums) | | Need structured lessons | Manhattan Prep or Magoosh | | Struggling with Quant | Target Test Prep (TTP) | | Short on time (<6 weeks) | GMAT Ninja (YouTube) + OG practice | – Learn a topic (e
| Question | Source | Wrong answer | Right answer | Why I got it wrong | Concept tested | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | The secret weapon: your error log If you
Pick one primary source and stick with it for at least 4 weeks.
Every 3 days, sort by “Concept” and redo those questions.
Pro tip: The is non-negotiable. It’s the only source with real retired GMAT questions. 3. Build your weekly “prep GMAT” rhythm Here’s a sample weekly schedule for someone studying 10–12 hours/week: