As exams drew nearer, I found myself quite confident to take on the challenge. I took NMAT and IIFT examinations before CAT and this helped me to get in tune with the examination feel and the nail-biting 3 hours. NMAT went good and IIFT excellent. The dreaded day (29th November) finally arrived. I tried to be calm but as we all know, it’s easier said than done. The exam started and verbal section looked quite manageable. Verbal had always been my strength and I was quite confident that I had done well. I eagerly awaited the newly introduced LRDI section and ‘’Poooof!!’’ The lights went off and I went absolutely blank. I had not deduced a single question in the first 15 minutes and panic struck in. All my hard-work seemed to be going down the drain in those mere 900 seconds. Gradually, I managed to solve a few questions and thankfully no surprises were in store in the quant section and I did reasonably well. However, my spirit was sucked away by the LRDI section and I was happy to see the clock strike 5:30 P.M (2nd slot). That is the unpredictability of CAT I encountered. It wasn’t that LRDI was my weakness and neither was CAT the toughest paper I have ever seen in life (people who have given TIME mocks will agree to this :P), but still some things just happen. Maybe I got obsessed with the result too much, maybe the easy verbal section made me complacent, maybe I wasn’t wearing my lucky shirt that day. Questions galore but alas, no answers. I came home dejected and I knew that I had lost this battle long before the results were declared. I took some time off and picked myself up for XAT. In the next few days, I devoured GK and decision making material like some angry giant. There was one stop in between – SNAP, which surprised everyone with its horrendously compiled set of “not-so- general knowledge” questions last year. I scraped through the exam. Then if life could not be crueller, I contracted dengue days before the XAT exam. The first major disease of my life struck at the worst possible time. Somehow I pulled my pale and corpse-like body to the exam hall against the doctor’s advice and gave my best. Sadly, that best was again not good enough. The exams (CAT & XAT) which I had prepared for with dedication and dreamt about of excelling in had been screwed. Just for formality, I gave my TISS exam next weekend still reeling with the after-effects of the wretched dengue.
I came home dejected and I knew that I had lost this battle long before the results were declared. I took some time off and picked myself up for XAT. In the next few days, I devoured GK and decision making material like some angry giant. There was one stop in between – SNAP, which surprised everyone with its horrendously compiled set of “not-so- general knowledge” questions last year. I scraped through the exam. Then if life could not be crueller, I contracted dengue days before the XAT exam. The first major disease of my life struck at the worst possible time. Somehow I pulled my pale and corpse-like body to the exam hall against the doctor’s advice and gave my best. Sadly, that best was again not good enough. The exams (CAT & XAT) which I had prepared for with dedication and dreamt about of excelling in had been screwed. Just for formality, I gave my TISS exam next weekend still reeling with the after-effects of the wretched dengue.
Results time! As per the chronological order, NMAT -215, IIFT – 99.23, CAT – 96.85 (Quant –96.4,Verbal – 99.3, LRDI – 69.28), SNAP – 99.48, XAT – somewhere in 80s (did not care to memorise or save the result) and TISS – 81 (Score). As evident, the royal screwing of LRDI in CAT and myself in XAT meant no calls from my beloved IIMs and XLRI. I had to be content with calls from IIFT, SIBM- Pune, SCMHRD, NMIMS-Mumbai, TISS-Mumbai, IIT-Kharagpur and IIT-IIM- ISI’s PGDBA course (I had qualified in its written exam held in February). First up was IIFT and one needs extensive preparation for this battle. One has to be thorough with the current happenings around the world as these creep into the GD topics. Overall, it is a well-organised set of rounds comprising of essay writing, GD and interview. The USP of IIFT’s GD is that each person is given 90 seconds to speak initially thus avoiding a fish-market scenario during the discussion. I did not perform to my expectations in the interview and hence, chances were not too bright again. I felt I had let go of the best opportunity available to me as only an IIFT convert could make me happy from this position. Next up were the Symbiosis twins – the most chilled-out interview process of them all where no prior preparations are needed.
The interview process is designed in such a way that only your spontaneity and creativity matters. NMIMS and TISS both had similar selection processes too – first GD and then an interview. While all of this was going on, I got converts from SIBM-Pune and SCMHRD and I obviously chose the former. Though not fully satisfied, I went ahead and paid the first instalment to book my seat. I was mentally preparing for the upcoming stay in Pune and the gruelling schedule over the next 2 years. Then suddenly out of the blue, on 17 th March afternoon, IIFT results were declared. I was pleasantly surprised to find my name in the Delhi list. This was really unexpected and finally, I
could let out a sigh of relief. After a lot of struggles and setbacks, I had managed to ace ‘one of the colleges in my list’ when I started an year back. 3 months down the line and with no more regrets, I feel excited and charged up for the next 2 years in IIFT-Delhi.
To all the folks who are giving the exams this year, please do make realistic weekly targets and never go too hard on yourselves. After all, these are just a bunch of exams and these in no way should be used as a judging stick in life. Be immersed but not obsessed during this period of preparation. Things will get tough at times but just stick around and keep putting in your individual efforts. Take mocks religiously and most importantly micro-analyse them to identify your strengths and weaknesses. Always look to play to your strengths and try to improve as much as you can on your weak areas. To those who have joined iQuanta and/or the CAT Preparation-iQuanta, please carry on as I assure you that you are in very good hands. Never give up aiming for the stars and you will definitely end up on the moon at least (like me), which trust me, is good enough. Lastly, thanks for bearing this long article of mine and wish you all the very best!
Cheers and Godspeed
Soumyadeep Paul – iQuantite/IIFT 2016-18 batch
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