💥 Myth-Busters

Myth #46: Longer Essays Score Higher | GDPIWAT Myth-Busters

Longer WAT essays don't score higher—evaluators reward clarity over word count. Learn the optimal essay length and why concise, structured writing wins every time.

🚫 The Myth

“Longer essays demonstrate more knowledge, deeper thinking, and greater effort. If you have 30 minutes to write, you should fill as much of the page as possible. A 600-word essay will always score higher than a 350-word essay because it shows you have more to say. Leaving white space on the page signals that you ran out of ideas.”

⚠️ How Candidates Interpret This

Candidates race to fill the page. They add redundant examples. They repeat points in different words. They pad sentences with unnecessary qualifiers. They write until the last second, believing more words = more marks. Some even measure their essays against neighbors’ page coverage, feeling anxious if they’ve written “less.” The result: bloated essays that bury good ideas under verbal clutter.

🤔 Why People Believe It

This myth feels logical for several reasons:

1. School Conditioning

Throughout school and college, we were often rewarded for length. “Write at least 500 words.” “Your answer should be 2-3 pages.” Teachers sometimes gave better marks to longer answers, assuming more content meant more knowledge. This conditioning runs deep.

2. “More Effort” Association

A longer essay feels like more effort. Surely evaluators will recognize that you worked harder, wrote faster, and had more ideas? The assumption: effort = outcome. But evaluators don’t reward effort—they reward clarity, structure, and insight.

3. Fear of “Running Out of Ideas”

A shorter essay might look like you didn’t have enough to say. White space on the page could signal intellectual poverty. So candidates keep writing to prove they’re not shallow thinkers—even when they’ve already made their point.

4. Misunderstanding the Format

Some candidates treat WAT like a knowledge dump: “Let me show everything I know about this topic.” But WAT isn’t testing knowledge breadth. It’s testing your ability to structure thoughts and communicate clearly under time pressure.

Coach’s Perspective
I evaluated WATs for FMS Delhi for 3 years. We had 200+ essays to read in 3 hours. Do the math—that’s under 60 seconds per essay on average. When I saw a 900-word essay, my first reaction was fatigue, not admiration. It signaled: “This candidate doesn’t know how to prioritize or edit.” A crisp 400-word essay with clear structure? I knew exactly what they were saying in 30 seconds, and they were getting an 8. The 900-word rambler? Still scanning at the 60-second mark, probably getting a 6.

✅ The Reality: Evaluators Reward Clarity, Not Word Count

Here’s what actually happens when evaluators read your essay:

45-60 sec
Average time spent per essay
350-450
Optimal word count (words)
Inverse
Correlation: word count vs. score

What Evaluators Actually Look For

❌ NOT Evaluated
  • How much of the page you filled
  • Total word count
  • Number of examples given
  • How fast you wrote
  • Variety of vocabulary used
✅ Actually Evaluated
  • Clear thesis/position in first 50 words
  • Logical structure (intro → body → conclusion)
  • Quality of argument and reasoning
  • Coherent flow between paragraphs
  • Conclusion that adds perspective, not just summarizes

The Evaluator’s Reality: Time Pressure

1
200+ Essays in 3 Hours
The math is brutal.

Top B-schools receive thousands of applications. Even with multiple evaluators, each person reads 200+ essays in a sitting. That’s less than a minute per essay.

Your essay isn’t read—it’s scanned.
2
First Impression in 10 Seconds
Structure is visible instantly.

Evaluators can see at a glance: Does this essay have clear paragraphs? Is there an obvious structure? Or is it a wall of text with no breaks?

Visual structure creates positive first impression before reading a word.
3
Thesis Hunt in First 30 Words
Where’s your point?

Evaluators look for your position immediately. If they’re still reading setup at word 100, they’re getting frustrated. Clear thesis early = evaluator knows what to look for.

Buried thesis = lower score regardless of word count.
4
Scanning, Not Reading
Evaluators don’t read every word.

They scan paragraph openings, look for transition words, jump to conclusion. Your brilliant insight buried in paragraph 4, sentence 7? Probably missed.

Key points must be visible, not hidden.

Real Data: Word Count vs. Scores

📊
Scoring Pattern Analysis
From actual WAT evaluation batches
The Data
In one evaluation batch of 47 essays, I tracked word count against scores:

Essays scoring 7+ out of 10:
Average word count: 420 words
Range: 350-500 words

Essays scoring below 6:
Average word count: 710 words
Range: 550-900 words

The pattern was clear: longer essays consistently scored lower. Not because length was penalized, but because longer essays were typically unfocused, repetitive, and poorly structured.
420
Avg words (7+ score)
710
Avg words (below 6)
290
Word difference
Inverse
Correlation

Same Candidate, Two Drafts

✏️
The Editing Experiment
Evaluator training demonstration
The Setup
During evaluator training, the head evaluator showed us two essays on the same topic:

Essay A: 850 words, well-written prose, wandering structure, multiple tangents, ideas spread across 6 paragraphs

Essay B: 380 words, crisp structure, clear position, 3 tight paragraphs, strong conclusion

We scored both essays independently.
The Results
Essay A (850 words): Average score 6.5/10
Essay B (380 words): Average score 8/10

Then the head evaluator revealed: Same candidate. Essay A was the first draft. Essay B was after editing out 470 words.

The SAME IDEAS, just tighter. The editing itself was worth 1.5 points.
Coach’s Perspective
Here’s my contrarian advice that differs from most coaching: Plan to write LESS than you think. Most candidates try to maximize words. I tell them to set a target of 400 words and focus on making every sentence count. If you finish “early,” use that time to edit—cut redundant phrases, tighten sentences, strengthen your conclusion. A polished 380-word essay beats a rambling 700-word essay every single time.

⚠️ The Impact: What Happens When You Chase Word Count

Problem The Long Essay Trap The Concise Approach
Clarity of thesis Thesis buried somewhere in paragraph 2 after lengthy setup Thesis clear in first 2-3 sentences; evaluator knows position immediately
Structure visibility Wall of text; paragraphs blend together; no clear organization 3 distinct paragraphs; each starting with a clear point; visual structure obvious
Argument strength Good points diluted by filler, repetition, and weak examples Every sentence earns its place; tight reasoning throughout
Evaluator experience Fatigue; scanning for the point; frustration Quick comprehension; appreciation for efficiency; positive impression
Conclusion quality Rushed (ran out of time) or repetitive summary Thoughtful final perspective that adds value
🔴 The Padding Penalty

Here’s what padding actually signals to evaluators:

❌ “This candidate can’t distinguish important points from filler”
❌ “They don’t know how to prioritize under time pressure”
❌ “They lack the editing skills essential for business communication”
❌ “Reading this feels like work, not insight”

Every unnecessary word is a tiny tax on the evaluator’s attention. Accumulate enough of these taxes, and you’ve lost them entirely. Padding doesn’t show effort—it shows inability to edit.

Common Padding Patterns (What to Cut)

⚠️ Recognize These in Your Writing

Throat-clearing openings: “In today’s world…” “Since time immemorial…” “It is a well-known fact that…”

Redundant qualifiers: “very unique” “completely essential” “absolutely necessary”

Saying it twice: “In my opinion, I believe that…” “The reason is because…”

Weak transitions: “Having said that…” “Moving on to the next point…”

Unnecessary examples: If one example makes the point, don’t add two more

Summary conclusions: “In conclusion, I have discussed X, Y, and Z…”—just restating what evaluator already read

💡 What Actually Works: The High-Scoring Essay Formula

Here’s how to write essays that evaluators love—regardless of word count:

The Optimal Structure (350-450 words)

1
Opening (50-70 words)
Hook + Thesis in first 2-3 sentences.

Start with something engaging (brief statistic, provocative statement, relevant observation). Then immediately state your position clearly.

Evaluator should know your stance by word 50.
2
Body (200-280 words)
2-3 paragraphs, each with one clear point.

Each paragraph: Topic sentence → Support → Brief example if needed. Use transition words (However, Moreover, Additionally) to show logical flow.

One idea per paragraph. No wandering.
3
Conclusion (50-80 words)
Add perspective, don’t just summarize.

Don’t repeat what you said. Instead: implications, nuance, future outlook, or synthesis that shows deeper thinking. Leave evaluator with something to remember.

“In conclusion, I discussed X, Y, Z” = wasted words.
4
Time for Editing (3-5 minutes)
Finish “early” and edit ruthlessly.

If you have 30 minutes, plan to finish writing by minute 25. Use remaining time to: cut padding, strengthen weak sentences, ensure thesis is clear, check for flow.

Editing time = scoring time.

Time Allocation for 30-Minute WAT

Phase Word-Count Chaser Strategic Writer
Planning 0-2 minutes (“I’ll figure it out as I write”) 5 minutes (outline thesis + 3 main points)
Writing 28-30 minutes (write until time runs out) 20 minutes (efficient, structured writing)
Editing 0 minutes (no time left) 5 minutes (cut padding, strengthen key points)
Result 700+ words, wandering structure, rushed conclusion 400 words, tight structure, strong conclusion

The Editing Checklist

❌ Cut These
  • “In today’s world…” “Since time immemorial…”
  • “It is important to note that…”
  • “Very,” “really,” “basically,” “actually”
  • Sentences that repeat the previous point differently
  • Third example when two already made the point
✅ Keep These
  • Thesis statement (make it clearer if anything)
  • Topic sentences of each paragraph
  • One strong example per point (if needed)
  • Transition words showing logical flow
  • Conclusion that adds perspective
💡 The Sweet Spot: 350-450 Words

This range hits the optimal balance:

✅ Long enough to develop an argument with support
✅ Short enough to force prioritization and clarity
✅ Readable in 45-60 seconds by the evaluator
✅ Leaves time for proper editing

Below 300: Might seem underdeveloped
Above 500: Likely contains padding

Aim for 400 words. If you’re naturally at 500+, that’s a signal to edit, not a sign of a better essay.

Coach’s Perspective
Here’s my test for candidates: After writing your essay, try cutting 100 words. If you CAN’T cut 100 words without losing meaning, you’ve written a tight essay—good job. If you CAN easily cut 100 words, you had padding—and that padding was costing you points. The best essays are ones where every sentence earns its place. When you can’t cut anything without losing value, you’ve reached the right length—regardless of word count.

🎯 Self-Check: Are You a Word-Count Chaser?

📊 Your WAT Writing Style Assessment
1 You finish your essay with 5 minutes remaining. Your instinct is to:
Add another example or expand on a point to use the remaining time
Read through and cut any padding or weak sentences
2 When you glance at a neighbor’s essay and see they’ve written more, you feel:
Anxious—maybe I need to write more to compete
Unconcerned—length isn’t what evaluators are scoring
3 Your essay opening typically begins with:
“In today’s world…” or similar general context-setting
A direct statement of your position or a sharp hook
4 When making a point, you tend to:
Give 2-3 examples to make sure the point is thoroughly supported
Give one strong example and move on—point is made
5 Your conclusion typically:
Summarizes the points you made: “In conclusion, I have discussed X, Y, and Z…”
Adds a new perspective—implications, nuance, or forward-looking insight
Key Takeaway

Longer essays don’t score higher—clearer essays do. Evaluators read 200+ essays in hours. They spend under 60 seconds on yours. They reward structure, clarity, and efficient communication—not word count. In actual scoring data, essays scoring 7+ averaged 420 words while essays scoring below 6 averaged 710 words. The extra 290 words weren’t adding value—they were diluting it. The optimal range is 350-450 words: long enough to develop an argument, short enough to force prioritization. Plan to finish early and edit. Cut padding ruthlessly. Make every sentence earn its place. In WAT, editing is scoring.

🎯
Want to Master WAT Writing That Scores?
Learn to write crisp, high-scoring essays through personalized feedback on structure, clarity, and editing—from coaches who’ve evaluated thousands of WATs.
Prashant Chadha
Available

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