Students preparing for the GMAT deal with packed calendars. College assignments, job responsibilities, and family obligations leave little room for steady study. The exam checks more than textbook knowledge. It tests the ability to stay focused for hours while solving quantitative problems, reading complex passages, and interpreting data sets under strict time limits. Many start with good intentions but quickly lose rhythm. Solo sessions turn irregular. Concepts that seemed clear one week feel distant the next. Structured support changes this pattern. Programs create daily habits that produce steady gains instead of scattered efforts.
