1. Understand the Exam Pattern & Basics
To prepare smart, you must know what you’re up against. According to recent updates:
Mode: Computer‐Based Test (CBT) for JIPMAT.
Duration: 150 minutes (2.5 hours)
Total Sections: 3 — Quantitative Aptitude (QA), Data Interpretation & Logical Reasoning (DILR), and Verbal Ability & Reading Comprehension (VARC).
Marking scheme: +4 for a correct answer, -1 for a wrong answer, zero for unattempted.
Because all sections are important and negative marking applies, your strategy must balance speed + accuracy.

Table of Contents
2. Build a Realistic Study Plan
A consistent plan beats last-minute panic. Here’s how to structure your preparation:
Foundation phase (First few months): Focus on conceptual clarity—especially for QA and VARC. As one guide says: “Start early, stay consistent.”
Practice phase (Middle months): Begin sectional tests for each section, build up problem-solving stamina.
Mock & revision phase (Last 2-3 months): Take full‐length mocks regularly, analyze mistakes seriously, revise formulas/vocab/tricks.
You might allocate daily slots like:
Morning: QA practice (1.5 hrs)
Afternoon: DILR sets (1 hr)
Evening: VARC reading + grammar (1 hr)
Night: Revision (30-45 mins)
Customize based on your strengths and weaknesses.
3. Section-Wise Strategy & Tricks
(A) Quantitative Aptitude (QA)
Topics: Arithmetic (percentages, ratios, time-speed), Algebra, Geometry, Mensuration, Probability & Statistics.
Tips:
Build a formula sheet—review it daily.
Begin with NCERT maths (classes 9–12) to strengthen basics.
Learn speed / shortcut techniques (e.g., Vedic maths) for faster calculations.
Practice word problems—application dominates.
In exam: attempt familiar questions first, keep difficult ones for later.
(B) Data Interpretation & Logical Reasoning (DILR)
Involves: charts/graphs, tables, seating arrangements, puzzles, caselets.
Tips:
Daily solve 2-3 DI sets + 1 LR puzzle. Focus on accuracy. KollegeApply
Avoid spending too long on one difficult puzzle during the actual test—mark & move on.
In mocks track which types you get stuck on and practice them more.
(C) Verbal Ability & Reading Comprehension (VARC)
Focus: RC passages, vocabulary, grammar, para‐jumbles, error spotting.
Tips:
Read editorials, articles, long form pieces daily (30-45 mins) to boost reading speed.
Maintain a vocab journal with new words, idioms, one-word substitutions.
Practice grammar basics (Wren & Martin level) and use lesson test on para-jumbles/word usage.
In exam: Attack RCs first (you feed off comprehension energy), then grammar & vocab.
4. Mock Tests, Analysis & Time Management
Begin full-length mocks a couple of months in advance. Review after every mock: identify weak areas, track time per section, monitor accuracy.
Time management: With 150 minutes and equal sectional weightage, allocate roughly: QA: ~55-60 mins, DILR: ~40-45 mins, VARC: ~45-50 mins. Adapt as per your comfort.
Strategic question selection: Start with your strongest section to warm up, avoid getting stuck. Skip hard questions, mark for review if time allows. Career Launcher
Accuracy > attempting everything rashly. Negative marking punishes guessing. Focus on attempted questions with high confidence.
5. Revision & Troubleshooting
Maintain a Revision Notebook divided into: Formulas & tricks, Vocabulary & idioms, Grammar rules, LR/DILR standard setups, Mistakes log from mocks. tarkashastra.co.in
Weekly revision: Set aside 1-2 hours to revisit this notebook instead of tackling new content.
If you fall behind schedule: reassess your study plan, prioritize topics you’re weak at, extend study hours moderately, reduce distractions. PW Live
6. Final 30-60 Days Before Exam
Increase mocks frequency to 3-4 per week. Alternate between topic‐specific mocks and full‐length tests.
Monitor performance curves: aim for consistent scoring above your target score range (check previous years and peer trends).
Dress rehearsal: Simulate exam conditions (same time slot, no interruptions, full duration). Practice avoiding mistakes in login/CBT environment.
Health matters: Sleep 7–8 hours, eat well, take short physical activity to keep mind and body alert.
7. What Else Matters — Mindset, Logistics & Selection Insights
Stay updated: Check the official website of JIPMAT for exam dates, pattern changes, application deadlines.
On exam day: Arrive early, carry valid ID, admit card; avoid last-minute panic. Stay confident.
After prepare: Selection for IPM Programme = Written exam + Interview/WAT + academic profile (depending on institute). So polish overall communication skills, general awareness, current affairs.
Mindset matters: Stay consistent, avoid burnout, maintain discipline rather than heroic but unsustainable leaps. “Consistency matters more than last-minute cramming.”
✅ Quick Recap of Strategy
Know the pattern thoroughly.
Build fundamentals (especially in QA & VARC).
Practice DILR regularly.
Take mocks early, analyze them.
Revise smartly with formulas, vocab & mock logs.
Manage time and avoid careless mistakes.
Maintain health, consistency and confidence.

