2) Decision making <Which question to leave/attempt>
3) Panic handling on the D-Day
These three skills, coupled with a regular practice of basic questions are enough to sail you through. I can vouch for that. From here on, I would like to touch upon few challenging areas that bothered me during my preparation.
Non-Engineers and Engineers differences
We are the minorities who appear for CAT. Hence, we get a little extra advantage from top B-schools owing to the diversity factor. However, engineers, due to their familiarity with the CAT type questions get a jump start in general. This balances the differences between engineers and non-engineers, hence no need to get anxious to see people scoring highest percentiles in MOCK CATs. You have to realize that your competition is with yourself. Better each time. If you fail, fail better. Persevere!
How to get enough time to study for working people?
CAT is surely an exam that does not require you to burn midnight oils. Taking out 3 to 4 hours a day for working people is not tough. As I was also working, I used to get up early in the morning to do Quants and DIs. Verbal was taken care of in the yawning gaps in the office. Towards the end, I took a long vacation as well. Note that you have to stay in touch with all the areas of CAT throughout the year.
Importance of Newspaper reading
If you read Newspapers dedicatedly, half of the verbal is taken care of. Make sure to maintain a diary for the new words. Newspaper reading enhances the ability to read and comprehend. I recommend the editorial section of The Hindu. Also, please don’t read just for the sake of it. Read them to comprehend. This will not only help in tackling verbal but also the interviews, in the later stages.
Focusing equally on all sections
If you get biased towards the one section and keep other sections at bay, you are going to suffer. All B-schools have sectional cut offs, so make sure to divide your time equally amongst the sections. I tried to fix hours for sections and tried to follow them as much as possible.
Practice can never be enough
Try to do as much practice as you can. The more you practice, the better you will get. I suggest solving questions on iQuanta group and buying one study material from a coaching institute or as suggested by iQuanta. Once you are through, be very active on the CAT preparation group and try to solve problems posted by others.
Mocks
Mocks are the keys to crack CAT or any other competitive exam. Write exam specific mocks with 100% dedication. Analyze them with double the dedication. Try to maintain an increasing performance graph of your mocks. Make sure to try different strategies in mocks and finalize a strategy towards the end. Mocks are beneficial only if given seriously. As someone has rightly said- Treat each mock as a real exam and the real exam as any other mock.
In conclusion, I would say that CAT is not a difficult exam. The competition brouhaha makes it sound so. But, trust me half of the people who write CAT each year are not even serious aspirants. If you are reading this article, you probably are in the 50th percentile already. You just have to give the whole nine yards. Wish you all the very best, success is waiting to hug you
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