💥 Myth-Busters

Myth #57: Fast Writers Have an Advantage | GDPIWAT Myth-Busters

Writing fast doesn't win WAT—thinking well does. Learn why 3-5 minutes of planning beats rushing to write, and how slow writers can outscore speed demons.

🚫 The Myth

“Fast writers have a natural advantage in WAT. They can write more content, have time to revise, and never feel rushed. If you’re a slow writer, you’re at a disadvantage—you need to practice writing faster to compete.”

⚠️ How Candidates Interpret This

Candidates see the 20-30 minute time limit and panic. They start writing immediately to “not waste time.” They practice writing faster, trying to increase words-per-minute. They envy classmates who can fill pages quickly. The result? Fast but unfocused essays that wander, repeat points, and lack clear structure—while slow, thoughtful writers produce tighter, better-organized content.

🤔 Why People Believe It

This myth feels intuitively true:

1. Visible Speed = Perceived Competence

In exam halls, we see fast writers filling pages while we’re still on paragraph one. It looks impressive. We assume they’re doing well. But we can’t see the QUALITY of what they’re writing—often it’s quantity without substance.

2. The Time Pressure Anxiety

With 20-30 minutes for 300 words, every minute feels precious. “If I spend 5 minutes planning, that’s 5 fewer minutes writing!” This logic ignores that 5 minutes planning often SAVES 10 minutes of confused writing and rewriting.

3. School Exam Conditioning

In school, longer answers often got better marks. “Write more” was common advice. WAT is different—it’s not testing how much you can write but how WELL you can write within constraints. Quality over quantity, always.

4. The “Finishing” Obsession

There’s psychological comfort in finishing with time to spare. Fast writers achieve this, which feels like success. But finishing a mediocre essay quickly isn’t better than finishing a good essay just in time.

Coach’s Perspective
Here’s what I’ve observed across thousands of WAT evaluations: The fastest writers rarely produce the best essays. They write stream-of-consciousness, repeat themselves, go on tangents, and often realize mid-essay they’ve taken a wrong approach—but can’t restructure because they’ve already written 200 words. Meanwhile, candidates who spend 3-5 minutes planning write LESS but score HIGHER. Their essays have direction from sentence one. Speed is not the skill being tested. Thinking is.

✅ The Reality: Thinking Speed Matters More Than Writing Speed

Here’s what actually determines WAT success:

3-5 min
Planning time that improves essay quality dramatically
250-350
Word range—more isn’t better, quality is
Zero
Correlation between writing speed and WAT scores

Fast Writer vs. Thoughtful Writer: What Actually Happens

The Fast Writer
“I’ll figure it out as I write”
What Happens
  • Starts writing immediately—no planning
  • Discovers their argument AS they write
  • Realizes mid-essay they’ve drifted off-topic
  • Repeats points because didn’t track what’s covered
  • Finishes with 400 words—has to cut frantically
The Result
  • Essay meanders—no clear direction
  • Introduction doesn’t match conclusion
  • Redundancy and filler visible
  • Editing is damage control, not improvement
🎯
The Thoughtful Writer
“Let me plan before I write”
What Happens
  • Spends 3-5 minutes outlining key points
  • Knows their argument before first word
  • Each paragraph has a planned purpose
  • Writes less but every sentence earns its place
  • Finishes with 280 words—tight and complete
The Result
  • Essay has clear direction from start
  • Introduction and conclusion align
  • No repetition—each point distinct
  • Minimal editing needed—structure was right

Real Example: Same Topic, Different Approaches

Topic: “Is social media doing more harm than good?”
Time: 20 minutes | Word limit: 300 words

The Fast Writer’s Essay
Started writing immediately, finished in 15 minutes
How It Unfolded
Minute 0-1: Started with “Social media has become an integral part of our lives…” (generic opening, no clear direction)

Minute 3: Wrote about mental health impacts—depression, anxiety, FOMO

Minute 6: Shifted to fake news and misinformation (didn’t plan this—just occurred to him)

Minute 9: Started discussing benefits—connectivity, business opportunities

Minute 12: Realized essay was 380 words with no conclusion. Panicked.

Minute 15: Hastily cut sentences, added rushed conclusion: “In conclusion, social media has both advantages and disadvantages.”
0
Planning time
380→290
Words (had to cut)
3
Topic shifts
🎯
The Thoughtful Writer’s Essay
Planned for 4 minutes, finished just in time
How It Unfolded
Minute 0-4: Quick outline—”I’ll argue it’s a tool (neutral), impact depends on use. Structure: reframe question → individual impacts → societal impacts → conclusion that synthesizes.”

Minute 4-8: Wrote introduction that reframes the debate—”The question isn’t whether social media is good or bad, but who it’s good or bad for.”

Minute 8-14: Two focused body paragraphs—individual impacts (mental health varies by user behavior) and societal impacts (democratization vs. polarization)

Minute 14-18: Conclusion that synthesizes—”Social media is an amplifier, magnifying both our best and worst tendencies. The answer isn’t in the platform but in how we design our relationship with it.”

Minute 18-20: Quick review—no cuts needed, 285 words, everything aligned.
4
Planning minutes
285
Words (no cuts)
1
Clear argument

The Math That Proves Planning Wins

Approach No Planning 🎯 With Planning
Total time 20 minutes writing 4 min planning + 16 min writing
Direction changes 2-3 mid-essay shifts (wasteful) None—path clear from start
Words written 350-400 (then cut 50-100) 280-320 (no cuts needed)
Time spent cutting 3-5 minutes (damages flow) 1-2 minutes (minor polish)
Final essay quality Disconnected, edited patchwork Coherent, intentional structure
Coach’s Perspective
I tell candidates: “Writing without planning is like driving without a destination—you’ll cover distance but may not get anywhere useful.” The time you “save” by not planning is lost twice over: once in mid-essay confusion, and again in frantic editing. A 4-minute plan gives you clarity that shows in every paragraph. The evaluator can TELL when someone knew where they were going versus when someone figured it out along the way. Planning isn’t a luxury—it’s the most valuable use of your first few minutes.

⚠️ The Impact: How “Writing Fast” Hurts Your Essay

Problem What Fast Writers Do What Planners Avoid
Wandering argument Discover thesis mid-essay, introduction doesn’t match conclusion Thesis clear from start, essay builds toward planned conclusion
Repetition Forget what’s been covered, repeat points in different words Each point planned once, no redundancy
Uneven development First point gets 150 words, last point gets 30 (ran out of time) Word allocation planned—each point gets appropriate space
Weak conclusions “In conclusion, there are pros and cons” — rushed generic ending Conclusion planned as destination—synthesis, not summary
Franken-editing Cut sentences randomly to fit word limit—damages flow Minimal editing needed—wrote to fit from start
🔴 The “I’ll Edit Later” Trap

Fast writers often think: “I’ll write everything, then edit down.”

Here’s why this fails in WAT:

Editing under time pressure is brutal. You’re cutting sentences that took effort to write. You make bad choices—cutting important transitions, keeping redundant points.

Cutting doesn’t fix structure. If your essay wandered, removing 80 words doesn’t give it direction. The remaining 220 words still wander—just shorter.

Frankenstein essays look edited. Evaluators can tell when sentences were cut. The flow stutters. Transitions feel missing. It reads like damage control, not polished writing.

Planning prevents all of this. Write 280 words with purpose instead of 380 words to be hacked down later.

The Hidden Advantage of “Slow” Writers

Why Thoughtful Writers Often Win

If you’re a naturally slow writer, you may actually have an advantage:

You’re forced to plan. You can’t afford to waste words, so you think before writing.

Every sentence is intentional. No filler, no tangents—you don’t have the luxury.

You write tighter prose. Slow writers learn to say more with less.

You avoid the “write then cut” trap. You write to fit from the start.

The key is embracing your pace, not fighting it. Plan carefully, write deliberately, trust that quality beats quantity. Many top WAT scores come from candidates who wrote the minimum required words—but made every word count.

💡 What Actually Works: The 4-Minute Planning Method

Whether you write fast or slow, this approach works:

1
Minute 1: Understand & Position
What to do: Read the topic. Decide your angle/position.

Key question: “What’s my ONE main argument?”

Write down: One sentence capturing your thesis

Example: Topic: “AI in education”
Thesis: “AI should augment teachers, not replace them—the human element is irreplaceable in motivation and mentorship.”
2
Minute 2: Structure Your Points
What to do: Identify 2-3 supporting points for your thesis

Write down: Brief notes for each paragraph

Example:
• Para 1: AI strengths (personalization, data, availability)
• Para 2: Human strengths (motivation, emotional support, judgment)
• Para 3: Integration model (AI for practice, humans for guidance)
3
Minute 3: Plan Your Conclusion
What to do: Decide how you’ll end BEFORE you start

Key question: “What’s the insight I want to leave them with?”

Write down: One sentence for your conclusion

Example: “The future isn’t AI or teachers—it’s AI freeing teachers to do what only humans can: inspire.”
4
Minute 4: Allocate Words
What to do: Rough word budget for each section

Example (300-word essay):
• Introduction: 40-50 words
• Body Para 1: 70-80 words
• Body Para 2: 70-80 words
• Body Para 3: 60-70 words
• Conclusion: 40-50 words

Why this matters: Prevents 150-word first point and 30-word last point

Time Allocation by Essay Length

Total Time Planning Writing Review
15 minutes 3 min 10 min 2 min
20 minutes 4 min 13-14 min 2-3 min
30 minutes 5 min 20-22 min 3-5 min

What Your Quick Plan Should Look Like

💡 Sample 4-Minute Plan (On Scrap Paper)

Topic: “Should companies mandate return to office?”

THESIS: Hybrid > mandate (flexibility + culture)

STRUCTURE:
1. Why mandates fail (productivity not location-dependent, talent leaves)
2. Why full remote fails (culture, collaboration, mentorship)
3. Hybrid as solution (intentional in-office days, remote for focus work)

CONCLUSION: “Best offices will be worth commuting to. Mandates admit yours isn’t.”

WORDS: 50 / 80 / 80 / 50 / 40 = 300

Total planning time: 4 minutes. Now write with confidence.

For Naturally Slow Writers

✅ Embrace Your Pace
  • Plan more thoroughly—you can’t afford to restart
  • Write tighter sentences from the start
  • Aim for 250-280 words (quality over quantity)
  • Skip the “review time”—write it right the first time
  • Practice writing complete thoughts, not faster scribbling
❌ Don’t Fight Your Nature
  • Don’t try to “write faster”—it creates sloppiness
  • Don’t sacrifice thinking time for writing time
  • Don’t write more than needed just to “fill” time
  • Don’t compare yourself to fast writers—they’re not scoring better
  • Don’t skip planning to “save time”—it costs you quality
Coach’s Perspective
My highest-scoring WAT students aren’t the fastest writers—they’re the clearest thinkers. One candidate wrote just 240 words in 20 minutes. Every sentence was precise, every transition intentional, every paragraph purposeful. She scored 9/10. Meanwhile, a fast writer in the same batch wrote 350 words—and scored 6/10 after cutting 80 words frantically. Speed is a false advantage. Clarity is the real one. Spend your first 4 minutes finding clarity. The writing will follow.

🎯 Self-Check: What’s Your WAT Writing Style?

📊 Your WAT Approach Assessment
1 When you see a WAT topic, your first instinct is to:
Start writing immediately—time is precious, figure it out as you go
Pause for 3-5 minutes to plan your structure and thesis before writing
2 When writing practice essays, you typically:
Write 350+ words and then cut down to fit the limit
Write close to the target from the start with minimal cutting needed
3 By the middle of your essay, you usually:
Have shifted direction at least once from where you started
Are exactly where you planned to be, building toward your conclusion
4 Your conclusion usually:
Gets written rushed at the end—sometimes doesn’t match your introduction well
Was planned before you started writing—it’s the destination you wrote toward
5 If you’re a slow writer, you typically respond by:
Trying to write faster—practice speed drills, write more
Planning more carefully so every word counts and nothing is wasted
Key Takeaway

Fast writers don’t have an advantage in WAT—thoughtful writers do. Speed without planning produces wandering essays with repetition, topic shifts, and rushed conclusions. The “time saved” by not planning is lost twice over: once in mid-essay confusion, and again in frantic editing. The 4-minute planning method works for everyone: decide your thesis, structure your points, plan your conclusion, allocate words. Whether you write fast or slow, clarity beats speed. A 240-word essay with clear purpose outscores a 350-word essay that was hacked down from 420. If you’re naturally slow, embrace it—you’re forced to plan, which is the winning strategy anyway. The highest WAT scores go to candidates who knew where they were going before they wrote the first word. Spend your first 4 minutes finding that clarity. The writing will follow.

🎯
Want to Master WAT Time Management?
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Prashant Chadha
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