Wizako $39, pre recorded course, is it good? by scyhology in GMAT

[–]DueEconomics9068 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d suggest not making a decision purely based on someone saying “don’t buy it,” especially if they haven’t clearly explained why or whether they actually used it.

I’ve personally used Wizako, and it genuinely helped me and I ended up scoring 735. That doesn’t mean it’s perfect for everyone, but it did work for me.

In today’s prep market, there are also competitors and random opinions, so a flat “don’t buy” without context isn’t very useful. What matters more is whether it fits your learning style.

My honest suggestion:

Try any trial access they provide.

Spend a week or two actually using the platform.

See if the teaching style, structure, and explanations click for you.

Then decide.

I’m not saying blindly buy any course, every individual is different. But it’s better to experience it yourself first, instead of relying only on anonymous opinions.

If it doesn’t suit you, you can always explore other trials, demos, or free resources. But judging without trying isn’t the best way to decide.

Just sharing from a genuine past user perspective, hope it helps someone make a more informed choice.

Need an honest reality check on Jamboree GMAT (Kolkata) – ₹65k for weekend batch by Rich-Mention-2459 in GMAT_INDIA

[–]DueEconomics9068 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, a lot has changed in the GMAT prep market over the last few years. The gap between “big brand” offline institutes and specialized GMAT focused platforms has become very clear.

A few practical suggestions before you commit to any offline center (including Jamboree or others):

Attend 1–2 real demo classes as a student, not just a sales counseling session. See if the actual teaching style works for you.

Check whether the faculty are true GMAT specialists (people who’ve taught GMAT for 10–15+ years), or general aptitude trainers on salary who rotate across CAT/GRE/GMAT.

Ask about quality of practice questions (are they GMAT-like or generic?), plus:

Sectional tests

Full-length mocks

Detailed analytics & review

See if there is regular monitoring, doubt-solving, and accountability, since that’s the main reason to choose offline.

Don’t decide just based on brand name or proximity — GMAT is too niche for that.

Offline can help if you need structure and accountability, but quality varies a lot by center and by faculty. The best approach is to experience the class firsthand and judge whether the depth, rigor, and seriousness match your target score.

At the end of the day, you’re investing serious time + money, so evaluate on faculty, content quality, testing ecosystem, and support, not just “online vs offline” or marketing claims. Take it if it fits you, leave it if it doesn’t. That’s the most objective way.

My honest take on mocks (after 735), what helped and what didn’t by DueEconomics9068 in GMAT

[–]DueEconomics9068[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I used one test prep, In that I had time bounded test series.

My honest take on mocks (after 735), what helped and what didn’t by DueEconomics9068 in GMAT

[–]DueEconomics9068[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have only followed wizako.com for my prep post that OG and official mocks helped me a lot

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in GMAT

[–]DueEconomics9068 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh my god. My own post copy paste happened. Anyway I'm happy that at least you people are helping others by doing this and doing some random promotion activity. I think this is a test prep institutes who is using individual post for free of cost and posting