Resources
Free, diagnostic-led
GMAT thinking.
Short, specific pieces on why scores stop moving despite real effort — and the structured self-assessment tool to find out where yours might be coming from. No fluff, no generic listicles.
How I actually think about a score that won’t move
The reasoning behind the diagnostic-first approach — including real, named cases where the actual problem turned out to be something the student (and every previous tutor) had missed.
The Question Behind the Question: Why Solving 500 More GMAT Problems Won’t Move Your Score
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What a National-Level Cricketer’s Instinct Revealed About a GMAT Trap
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Specific patterns, section by section
Tactical, narrow, and genuinely useful on their own — whether or not we ever work together.
The GMAT Data Insights Mistake That Looks Like Carelessness But Isn’t
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Critical Reasoning Questions That Punish the Skill That Got You This Far
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The Two-Hour Test: A Self-Diagnostic for Your GMAT Blind Spot
A structured worksheet modelled on the same categories I evaluate in the live Performance Diagnostic — section imbalances, timing breakdown patterns, reinforced inefficiencies, and the kind of assumption-driven errors that rarely show up by name in a mock score report.
It will not replace a live diagnosis. It will give you a structured, honest first look at where to start asking questions.
One email. No spam. Used only to send the worksheet and occasional new resources.
A worksheet can point. A diagnosis can confirm.
If something in these articles or the self-assessment sounds familiar, the next step is a structured 2-hour session that identifies precisely what is happening — and what to do about it.
Limited capacity · Serious candidates only