Your 30-Day Master Plan
- Why 30 Days Is the Sweet Spot
- WAT Preparation Tips: The Foundation Principles
- Week 1: Foundation (Days 1-7)
- Week 2: Skill Building (Days 8-14)
- Week 3: Specialization (Days 15-21)
- Week 4: Peak Performance (Days 22-30)
- WAT PI Combined Preparation: The Integration Strategy
- 30-Day GD Preparation: Building Discussion Skills
- 30-Day Interview Preparation: PI Mastery
- WAT Preparation Books: Essential Reading List
- WAT Preparation Apps: Digital Toolkit
- WAT Preparation PDF: Download Your Complete Checklist
- WAT Preparation 7 Days: Fast-Track Alternative
- Progress Tracking & Self-Evaluation
- Key Takeaways
Why 30 Days Is the Sweet Spot for WAT Mastery
Thirty days isn’t arbitrary—it’s the minimum time required to move from “understanding WAT” to “mastering WAT.” In four weeks, you can write 40+ essays, receive meaningful feedback, recognize your patterns, and develop the automaticity that separates 8/10 essays from 5/10 ones.
The Science Behind 30 Days
| Time Frame | What You Can Achieve | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| 7 Days | Survival skills, basic structure, 7-10 essays | No pattern recognition, limited feedback integration |
| 14 Days | Solid foundation, 15-20 essays, one feedback cycle | Insufficient for school-specific mastery |
| 30 Days | Full mastery, 40+ essays, multiple feedback cycles, automaticity | Ideal balance of depth and efficiency |
| 60+ Days | Diminishing returns, risk of overthinking | May develop analysis paralysis |
The 30-Day Transformation
WAT Preparation Tips: The Foundation Principles
Before diving into the daily schedule, internalize these principles. They’ll guide every practice session for the next 30 days.
The 10 Non-Negotiable WAT Preparation Tips
| # | Tip | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Personal story in first 50 words — Hook with specific experience | 5.2× higher scores (research data) |
| 2 | State thesis by line 3 — No build-up, position immediately | Determines “top pile” placement in 4-6 sec |
| 3 | ONE specific example beats three generic — With name, number, year | Creates credibility and memorability |
| 4 | Always include counter-argument — “However, critics argue…” | 15-20% of evaluation weight |
| 5 | Complete > Perfect — Finish the essay at all costs | Incomplete = automatic low score |
| 6 | Skip dictionary definitions — Instant evaluator eye-roll | “IIM-A Wall of Shame” material |
| 7 | End with forward look, not summary — What’s next? What should change? | Recency effect: last impression matters |
| 8 | Read topic 3 times slowly — 18% rejected for misreading prompt | Prevents wasted essays |
| 9 | Underline key sentences — Visual cues for tired evaluators | +0.8 marks average (IIM Indore RTI) |
| 10 | Time yourself religiously — Every practice = exam conditions | Builds automaticity under pressure |
The Universal WAT Formula
HOOK (1 sentence) → THESIS (1-2 sentences) → ARGUMENT + EXAMPLE (3-4 sentences) → COUNTER + REBUTTAL (2-3 sentences) → CONCLUSION (2 sentences)
Word Budget (250 words):
Hook + Thesis: 50-60 words (20%)
Argument + Example: 80-100 words (40%)
Counter + Rebuttal: 60-80 words (25%)
Conclusion: 40-50 words (15%)
Framework Selection Guide
| Topic Type | Best Framework | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Opinion/Debate (“Should X…”) | Pros/Cons or Problem-Solution | “Should voting be compulsory?” |
| Abstract/Philosophical | Interpret → Connect → Illustrate | “Time is money” (IIM-L/K style) |
| Case-Based | Stakeholder + Options Analysis | Business scenario (IIM-A AWT) |
| Current Affairs | PESTLE (pick 2-3 angles) | “Gig economy regulation” |
| Ethics/Values | Stakeholder Perspectives | “Corporate social responsibility” (XLRI) |
Week 1: Foundation (Days 1-7)
Theme: Build core skills and understand WAT format. By end of Week 1, you should know exactly what a high-scoring essay looks like and be able to produce a basic version.
Essays: 7-8 (mix of timed and untimed)
Daily Time: 1.5-2 hours
Focus: Structure, openings, example bank
Output: First self-evaluation, weakness identification
Day-by-Day Schedule: Week 1
• Study IIM-specific WAT formats — time, words, style for each school (30 min)
• Understand evaluation criteria weights (15 min)
Evening (60 min):
• Read 5 sample high-scoring essays — note structure, NOT content (45 min)
• Write UNTIMED essay on familiar topic (30 min)
• No timer today—focus on understanding the format
• Learn Intro-Body-Conclusion framework in depth (20 min)
• Study the 4-part WAT formula: HOOK → THESIS → EXAMPLE → COUNTER → SYNTHESIS (25 min)
Evening (60 min):
• Practice 5 speed outlines: topic → 3 points → example in 3 min each (15 min)
• Write structured essay with outline first (40 min untimed)
• Self-evaluate structure only (5 min)
• Study 10 opening techniques in detail (20 min)
• Memorize 5 opening templates for emergencies (25 min)
Evening (60 min):
• Write 10 different openings for SAME topic (30 min)
• Write full essay focusing on strong opening — first timed essay (20 min)
• Self-evaluate opening quality (10 min)
• Learn PEEL method: Point → Evidence → Explain → Link (20 min)
• Practice data sandwich: Context → Statistic → Interpretation (25 min)
Evening (60 min):
• Practice 5 standalone body paragraphs (30 min)
• Write full timed essay with PEEL paragraphs (20 min)
• Self-evaluate body paragraph depth (10 min)
• Study 5 conclusion techniques (20 min)
• Practice “forward look” vs “summary” conclusions (25 min)
Evening (60 min):
• Write 5 conclusions for previous essays (25 min)
• Write full timed essay with memorable closer (20 min)
• Final Line Callback drill: Last line echoes first image (15 min)
• Read and mine 3 newspaper articles for examples (30 min)
• Build initial example bank: 10 versatile examples (15 min)
Evening (60 min):
• Practice integrating current affairs into abstract topics (25 min)
• Write full timed essay on current affairs topic (20 min)
• Add 5 new examples to your bank (15 min)
• Self-evaluate ALL Week 1 essays using rubric (40 min)
• Identify top 3 weaknesses (10 min)
• Write improvement plan for Week 2 (10 min)
Evening (45 min):
• Write one final timed essay applying learnings (20 min)
• Compare Day 1 essay vs Day 7 essay — note improvements (15 min)
• Share 2-3 essays with mentor/peer for first feedback (10 min prep)
Week 1 Example Bank Starter
| Category | Examples to Memorize | Use For |
|---|---|---|
| Indian Business | Tata-JLR acquisition ($2.3B, 2008), Infosys founding story, Reliance Jio disruption | Business topics, leadership, innovation |
| Technology | UPI (10B+ transactions/month), Chandrayaan-3 (₹615 Cr), Aadhaar (1.3B enrollments) | Digital India, efficiency, scale |
| Policy | GST implementation, PLI scheme, Startup India | Government, reform, regulation |
| Social | Gig economy (7.7M workers), Women workforce participation, Rural-urban migration | Labor, society, development |
| Personal | Your work experiences, family observations, hometown examples | Authentic hooks, personal angles |
Week 2: Skill Building (Days 8-14)
Theme: Develop advanced techniques and time management. By end of Week 2, you should execute the structure automatically and handle time pressure confidently.
Essays: 10-12 (all timed)
Daily Time: 2 hours
Focus: Time management, counter-arguments, feedback integration
Output: First feedback cycle complete, time splits mastered
Day-by-Day Schedule: Week 2
Daily Practice:
• 2 timed essays per day (20 min each)
• Track time spent on each section
• Build strict discipline: 3 min planning (STOP), 14 min writing, 3 min review
• Word count calibration drill: Guess → Check → Adjust
Daily Practice:
• Abstract Decoder drill: Take abstract topic, find 3 real-world angles (10 min)
• 2 abstract topic essays per day
• Topics: “Time is money,” “Unity in diversity,” “The sound of silence”
• Framework: Interpret literally → Find metaphor → Apply to business/life
Daily Practice:
• “To Be Sure” paragraph drill: Acknowledge opposite view, then counter (10 min)
• Opinion Reversal: Argue convincingly for position you disagree with (15 min)
• 2 balanced essays per day with strong counter-argument sections
• Pattern: “However, critics argue…” + your rebuttal
• 3 back-to-back timed essays simulating exam conditions
• No breaks between essays, strict timing
• Random topics (don’t cherry-pick)
Evening (60 min):
• Self-evaluate all three against rubric
• Review feedback from Week 1 essays (from mentor/peer)
• Create “weakness elimination” plan for Week 3
Time Management Quick Card
| WAT Duration | Plan | Write | Review |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30 min (IIM-A) | 5 min | 22 min | 3 min |
| 20 min (IIM-B/C/K) | 3 min | 14 min | 3 min |
| 15 min (IIM-L) | 2 min | 11 min | 2 min |
| 10 min (IIM-I) | 1 min | 8 min | 1 min |
Week 3: Specialization (Days 15-21)
Theme: Master different topic types and school-specific formats. By end of Week 3, you should confidently handle policy, ethics, abstract, and case-based topics—adapting to any school’s style.
Essays: 12-14 (all timed, school-specific)
Daily Time: 2 hours
Focus: Topic types, school formats, external feedback
Output: Mastery across all topic types, school-specific adaptations
Day-by-Day Schedule: Week 3
Daily Practice:
• Study PESTLE framework in depth (20 min Day 15)
• 2 policy essays per day with specific data points
• Topics: “Should India adopt UBI?”, “Gig economy regulation”, “One Nation One Election”
• Practice integrating statistics naturally: Context → Stat → Interpretation
Daily Practice:
• Study stakeholder perspective framework (20 min Day 17)
• 2 ethics-focused essays per day
• Topics: “Corporate social responsibility”, “Work-life balance”, “AI ethics”
• Practice: Identify 3-4 stakeholders, analyze each perspective
Daily Practice:
• Study case analysis framework: Situation → Options → Recommendation (20 min Day 19)
• 2 case-based essays per day
• Practice clear recommendations with supporting rationale
• Focus: “If you were the CEO, what would you do?”
• 3 essays covering all topic types (policy, ethics, abstract)
• Full exam simulation conditions
Evening (60 min):
• GET EXTERNAL FEEDBACK on 3 best essays from Week 3
• Compare self-evaluation vs external feedback
• Identify blind spots you didn’t notice
School-Specific Quick Reference
| School | Format | Style | Watch Out For |
|---|---|---|---|
| IIM-A | 30 min, 300-350 words | Case-based (AWT), analytical | Need clear recommendations |
| IIM-B | 20 min, 250-300 words | Policy/Current affairs | Grammar STRICT, 15% weightage (highest) |
| IIM-C | 15-20 min, 250 words | Opinion-based | Strong stance required, language strict |
| IIM-L | 15 min, 200-250 words | Abstract topics | Need metaphors, creativity valued |
| IIM-K | 20 min, 250-300 words | HIGHLY abstract | Originality crucial, unique angles |
| IIM-I | 10 min, 200 words | Current affairs | SPEED is everything (fastest) |
| XLRI | 20 min, 250-300 words | Ethics-focused | Values, social responsibility expected |
If you’re appearing for multiple schools, develop a versatile base style that you can adjust:
Base: Structured, clear thesis, one strong example, balanced view, confident conclusion
For IIM-A: Add more data, make recommendation decisive
For IIM-K/L: Add creative angle, use metaphors
For XLRI: Add stakeholder analysis, ethical dimension
For IIM-I: Tighten everything, cut 20%
Week 4: Peak Performance (Days 22-30)
Theme: Exam simulation and confidence building. By end of Week 4, structure and execution should be automatic—you think about content, not process.
Essays: 14-18 (daily mocks)
Daily Time: 2-2.5 hours
Focus: Simulation, consistency, confidence
Output: Exam-ready automaticity, 40+ total essays written
Day-by-Day Schedule: Week 4
• 2 timed essays with strict exam conditions
• Random topic selection (don’t cherry-pick)
• No breaks, no editing after time ends
Evening (45 min):
• Self-evaluation using rubric
• Rewrite weakest section applying learnings
• Track progress in spreadsheet
Target: 14+ essays in Week 4 alone (40+ total)
• Complete simulation with WAT + PI component
• 3 timed essays back-to-back
• Mock interview immediately after (if possible)
Afternoon:
• Final self-evaluation
• Prepare “anchor content”: 10 quotes, 10 stats, 10 examples
• Review your best 5 essays
• Light review of anchor content ONLY
• NO new essays, NO heavy practice
Rest of Day:
• Physical activity (walk, stretch)
• Good meal, hydration
• Prepare logistics: pen, documents, route
• Visualization: Picture calm writing, finishing on time
• Sleep by 10 PM
Mock Test Frequency Guide
| Time Before Exam | Mock Frequency | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| 4+ weeks before | 2-3 mocks/week | Learning, experimenting |
| 2-4 weeks before | 4-5 mocks/week | Building consistency |
| Final week | 1 mock/day (full simulation) | Peak performance |
| Day before | Light review only (NO mocks) | Mental rest |
The 30-Minute Pre-Exam Ritual (Day 31+)
Minutes 0-5: Physical Reset
• 2 minutes deep breathing (4-7-8 pattern)
• 2 minutes hand/wrist stretches
• 1 minute power pose (confidence boost)
Minutes 5-15: Mental Activation
• Read 2 newspaper editorials (5 min)
• Write 3 speed outlines on random topics (5 min)
• No full essay writing—conserve energy
Minutes 15-25: Review Anchors
• Review your top 10 quotes (3 min)
• Review your top 10 statistics (3 min)
• Review your top 5 examples (4 min)
Minutes 25-30: Visualization
• Close eyes, visualize receiving topic
• Visualize calm outlining, smooth writing
• Visualize finishing with time to spare
WAT PI Combined Preparation: The Integration Strategy
Most students prepare WAT and PI separately. This is inefficient—the same content serves both. Your examples, thinking frameworks, and opinion positions work for written essays AND verbal interviews.
The Integration Principle
WAT: Sustained written argument with one well-developed example
PI: Verbal conversation with multiple examples, follow-up questions
The core—your examples, frameworks, positions—is IDENTICAL. You’re preparing once and adapting delivery.
What Serves Both WAT and PI
| Shared Element | In WAT | In PI |
|---|---|---|
| Example Bank | ONE detailed example per essay | Multiple examples, prepared for follow-ups |
| Current Affairs | Context for policy/business topics | “What do you think about X?” questions |
| Self-Awareness | Personal hooks, authentic voice | “Tell me about yourself,” weakness questions |
| Thinking Frameworks | PESTLE, Pros/Cons, Stakeholder | Same frameworks for structured verbal answers |
| Opinion Positions | Clear thesis with supporting argument | “What’s your view on…” questions |
30-Day Combined WAT-PI Schedule
| Week | WAT Focus | PI Focus | Time Split |
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Format, structure, openings | TMAY (2-min version), Why MBA? | 80% WAT / 20% PI |
| Week 2 | Time management, counter-arguments | Strengths, weaknesses, failure stories | 60% WAT / 40% PI |
| Week 3 | Topic types, school-specific | Why this school?, domain questions | 50% WAT / 50% PI |
| Week 4 | Simulation, consistency | Mock PIs, stress questions | 50% WAT / 50% PI |
30-Day GD Preparation: Building Discussion Skills
Some schools include GD (Group Discussion) along with WAT and PI. Here’s how to integrate GD preparation into your 30-day plan.
GD vs WAT: Key Differences
| Element | WAT | GD |
|---|---|---|
| Control | Full control over content | Chaotic—depends on group |
| Framework Use | 2-3 angles, developed in depth | Multiple entry points |
| Examples | One detailed example | Quick mentions, move fast |
| Position | Clear thesis early | Can evolve based on discussion |
30-Day GD Integration
Two GD Nightmares + Solutions
Everyone shouting, no structure, chaos.
Solution:
- Try to bring calm: “Let’s hear one perspective at a time”
- If that fails, fight for airtime but keep imposing structure
- Being the voice of reason gets noticed
Topic you know nothing about.
Solution:
- Use PESTLE framework to generate basic points
- Listen actively, reframe what others say
- Become synthesizer: “Building on what X said…”
30-Day Interview Preparation: PI Mastery
Personal Interview preparation runs parallel to WAT. Here’s how to build PI readiness over 30 days while leveraging your WAT work.
PI Preparation by Week
• “Tell me about yourself” (2-min version) — practice until natural
• “Why MBA? Why now? What next?” — clear, specific answers
• Review your resume — know every line, anticipate questions
• 3 strengths with evidence (use AAO framework: Activity → Actions → Outcome)
• 2 weaknesses (framed constructively with ongoing work)
• 1 failure story with genuine learning and behavior change
• “Why this school specifically?” — research-based, NOT generic
• Domain/work questions — know your projects, achievements
• Current affairs opinions on 10 topics (same as WAT prep)
• 2-3 full mock PIs with mentor/peer
• Stress question handling: pushback, disagreement
• Video record yourself, watch playback
• Final integration: WAT topic → immediate PI discussion
The Self-Awareness Foundation
For every answer—written or verbal—ask yourself:
WHY did you do this?
HOW did you arrive at this decision?
What EVIDENCE backs it up?
This methodology prevents generic answers and demonstrates the critical reasoning B-schools seek.
PI Questions That Connect to WAT Topics
Opinion Questions (Same as WAT Topics)
- “Is economic growth compatible with sustainability?”
- “Should social media be regulated?”
- “What’s your view on remote work?”
- “Is higher education overrated?”
Connection: Your WAT thesis + counter-argument becomes your verbal answer.
Self-Awareness Questions
- “Tell me about a time you failed.”
- “What’s your biggest weakness?”
- “Describe a difficult decision you made.”
- “What achievement are you most proud of?”
Connection: Personal examples in WAT hooks become detailed PI answers.
Current Affairs Questions
- “What do you think about AI replacing jobs?”
- “Should India ban cryptocurrency?”
- “Is the startup funding winter good or bad?”
Connection: If you’ve written a WAT on these, you have a structured answer ready.
WAT Preparation Books: Essential Reading List
You don’t need dozens of books. These carefully selected titles cover writing, critical thinking, and content—read strategically based on your gaps.
Must-Read Books (High Priority)
| Book | Author | Why Read | When |
|---|---|---|---|
| On Writing Well | William Zinsser | Classic guide to clear, concise non-fiction writing. Teaches simplicity and brevity. | Week 1-2 |
| The Elements of Style | Strunk & White | Timeless grammar and style rules in 100 pages. Quick reference. | Week 1 |
| Bird by Bird | Anne Lamott | Overcoming writer’s block, embracing imperfect first drafts. Key: “Shitty first drafts” | Week 1-2 |
| Thinking, Fast and Slow | Daniel Kahneman | Understand cognitive biases that affect reasoning. Recognize logical fallacies. | Week 2-3 |
Good to Read (Medium Priority)
| Book | Author | Why Read |
|---|---|---|
| Thank You for Arguing | Jay Heinrichs | Practical guide to rhetoric and persuasion. Structure arguments for maximum impact. |
| The Art of Thinking Clearly | Rolf Dobelli | 99 cognitive errors explained simply. Avoid pitfalls in your reasoning. |
| Everybody Writes | Ann Handley | Modern business writing guide, practical tips for digital age. |
| Writing Tools | Roy Peter Clark | 50 specific strategies for improving writing. |
For Business Content Depth
| Book | Author | Examples You’ll Get |
|---|---|---|
| Good to Great | Jim Collins | Hedgehog concept, Level 5 leadership, Flywheel effect |
| The Lean Startup | Eric Ries | MVP, Pivot, Build-Measure-Learn |
| Zero to One | Peter Thiel | Monopoly thinking, contrarian views |
| Business Maharajas | Gita Piramal | Indian business leaders’ stories for WAT examples |
| India Unbound | Gurcharan Das | Economic liberalization, Indian growth story |
Recommended Reading Order
Week 1-2: Foundations
1. “On Writing Well” (Zinsser) — Clarity in essays
2. “The Elements of Style” (Strunk & White) — Grammar essentials
Week 3-4: Craft & Depth
3. “Bird by Bird” (Lamott) — Permission to write badly first
4. Skim one business book for examples
Common mistake: Reading 10 books but writing only 5 essays.
Right approach: Read 2-3 books strategically, write 40+ essays.
Books inform technique; practice builds skill. Prioritize practice.
WAT Preparation Apps: Digital Toolkit
The right apps streamline preparation. Here are the essentials—organized by function, with free alternatives highlighted.
Essential Apps (Use All)
| Category | App | Cost | Use For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Writing | Google Docs | Free | Practice essays with auto-save, word count |
| Grammar | Grammarly | Free tier | Grammar/spelling check (don’t over-rely) |
| Readability | Hemingway Editor | Free web | Check complexity (target Grade 8-10) |
| Timer | Clock App (built-in) | Free | Strict countdown for mock WATs |
| News | Finshots | Free | Daily newsletter—simple explanations |
| News (Quick) | Inshorts | Free | 60-word summaries, quick daily scan |
Typing Practice Apps
| App | Best For | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| TypingClub | Structured lessons from scratch | Free |
| Keybr | Adaptive practice, identifies weak keys | Free |
| 10FastFingers | Speed testing, competitive practice | Free |
| MonkeyType | Customizable tests, clean interface | Free |
Note-Taking & Organization
| App | Use For | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Notion | WAT dashboard—examples, topics, progress tracking | Free (personal) |
| Google Keep | Quick capture of quotes, stats while reading | Free |
| Anki | Flashcards for memorizing quotes and statistics | Free |
| Obsidian | Linking ideas across topics, knowledge graph | Free |
Community & Practice Platforms
| Platform | Best Section |
|---|---|
| PaGaLGuY.com | IIM call getters threads, past WAT topics, peer discussions |
| InsideIIM.com | School-specific WAT analysis, success stories |
| YouTube: CATKing | WAT-specific strategies, tips videos |
| YouTube: IMS India | Expert sessions, topper interviews |
Budget Guide
FREE (Sufficient for most): Google Docs, Finshots, PaGaLGuY, YouTube channels, Coursera (audit), typing websites, library books
LOW COST (₹500-2000): 2-3 recommended books, Grammarly free tier, news app subscriptions
MEDIUM COST (₹5000-15000): Coaching WAT-PI module with feedback, premium tool subscriptions
Bottom Line: You can prepare excellently with FREE resources + 2-3 books. Paid coaching helps but isn’t mandatory.
WAT Preparation PDF: Download Your Complete Checklist
This section provides print-ready summaries you can save or screenshot for offline reference during your 30-day journey.
30-Day Master Checklist (Print This)
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Day 1: Study formats, read 5 sample essays, write first untimed essay
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Day 2: Learn 4-part structure, practice 5 speed outlines
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Day 3: Study 10 opening techniques, write 10 openings for same topic
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Day 4: Learn PEEL method, practice body paragraphs
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Day 5: Study conclusion techniques, write 5 conclusions
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Day 6: Build example bank (10 examples), integrate current affairs
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Day 7: Self-evaluate all essays, identify top 3 weaknesses
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Days 8-9: Time management mastery, 2 timed essays/day
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Days 10-11: Abstract topic handling, 2 abstract essays/day
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Days 12-13: Counter-argument practice, 2 balanced essays/day
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Day 14: Week 2 mock (3 back-to-back essays)
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Days 15-16: Policy & economics topics (IIM-B style)
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Days 17-18: Ethics & social issues (XLRI style)
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Days 19-20: Case-based topics (IIM-A AWT style)
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Day 21: Full mock + get external feedback on 3 essays
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Days 22-28: Daily mocks (2 essays/day), target 40+ total essays
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Day 29: Final full mock with PI component
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Day 30: Rest & light review only, prepare logistics
✅ Click checkboxes to track your progress — saved automatically in your browser
Quick Reference Card (Screenshot This)
THE FORMULA: HOOK → THESIS → EXAMPLE → COUNTER → SYNTHESIS
WORD BUDGET (250 words):
Hook+Thesis: 50-60 | Body: 80-100 | Counter: 60-80 | Conclusion: 40-50
TIME SPLIT (20 min): Plan (3 min) | Write (14 min) | Review (3 min)
NEVER START WITH: Dictionary definitions, “In today’s fast-paced world”
ALWAYS INCLUDE: Clear thesis by line 3, ONE specific example, counter-argument
REMEMBER: Complete > Perfect. Personal story = 5.2× higher scores.
Daily Practice Checklist
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At least ONE fully timed essay
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Self-evaluation immediately after writing
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15 minutes reading (editorials, Finshots)
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Review and strengthen example bank
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Track progress in spreadsheet
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Sleep 7+ hours
WAT Preparation 7 Days: Fast-Track Alternative
Don’t have 30 days? Here’s a compressed 7-day crash course. It won’t give you mastery, but it builds survival skills.
7 Days: 7-10 essays, basic structure, survival skills, no school-specific mastery
30 Days: 40+ essays, pattern recognition, school-specific adaptation, genuine confidence
Use 7-day plan ONLY if you have no other choice. If you have more time, use the full 30-day program.
7-Day Crash Course Overview
| Day | Focus | Output |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Format + Structure | 1 untimed essay, 5 speed outlines |
| Day 2 | Example Bank + Content | 10 examples, 1 timed essay |
| Day 3 | Openings + Closings | 10 openings, 1 timed essay |
| Day 4 | Counter-Arguments + Feedback | 1 timed essay, get external feedback |
| Day 5 | Speed Practice | 3 timed essays |
| Day 6 | Full Simulation | 3 back-to-back essays, mock |
| Day 7 | Rest + Light Review | 1 essay, anchor content review |
7-Day Non-Negotiables
Progress Tracking & Self-Evaluation
What gets measured gets improved. Use these tools to track your 30-day journey.
Self-Evaluation Rubric
| Criterion | Weight | Score 1-10 |
|---|---|---|
| Hook Quality — Does first line grab attention? | 10% | ___ |
| Thesis Clarity — Position clear by line 3? | 15% | ___ |
| Example Quality — Specific, relevant, well-developed? | 15% | ___ |
| Counter-Argument — Acknowledged and refuted? | 10% | ___ |
| Conclusion — Forward-looking, memorable? | 10% | ___ |
| Structure — Clear flow, transitions? | 10% | ___ |
| Language — Grammar, clarity, no jargon? | 15% | ___ |
| Word Count — Within limit? | 5% | ___ |
| Time Management — Finished with review time? | 5% | ___ |
| Overall Impact — Would you remember this essay? | 5% | ___ |
Weekly Progress Log
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Total essays written this week: ___
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Average self-evaluation score: ___/10
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Biggest weakness identified: ___
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Biggest improvement from last week: ___
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External feedback received: Yes / No
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Examples added to bank: ___
Troubleshooting Common Problems
| Problem | Diagnosis | Fix | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| “I can’t start my essay” | Lack of opening confidence | 9-Word Hook drill, 5 opening templates memorized | 1-2 weeks |
| “My essay is too long” | Lack of conciseness | Word Count Calibration drill, 33% cut challenge | 1 week |
| “I can’t think of examples quickly” | Insufficient example bank | Story Mining drill, build bank to 20+ examples | 1-2 weeks |
| “My essay sounds generic” | Lack of personal voice | Personal Voice drill, cliché elimination | 1 week |
| “My opening is weak” | Dictionary/generic starts | 9-Word Hook, Story Opening drill | 1 week |
| “My conclusion is forgettable” | Summary instead of synthesis | Final Line Callback, forward-look practice | 1 week |
Key Takeaways
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130 Days = Foundation → MasteryFour weeks transforms you: Week 1 builds understanding, Week 2 builds skill, Week 3 builds versatility, Week 4 builds confidence. By Day 30, structure and execution should be automatic.
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240+ Essays with Quality Feedback20-30 mentor-reviewed essays is the sweet spot. After 3-4 essays, patterns emerge. Quality of feedback matters more than quantity of essays. Track your progress weekly.
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3WAT + PI + GD = Same ContentYour example bank, thinking frameworks, and opinion positions serve all three formats. Prepare once, adapt delivery. This integration saves time and builds deeper understanding.
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4Free Resources Are SufficientGoogle Docs + Finshots + PaGaLGuY + 2-3 books covers everything you need. Paid coaching helps but isn’t mandatory. Invest time, not necessarily money.
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5Self-Awareness Is the FoundationStudents want shortcuts. There are none. Authentic preparation—where you truly internalize the material—performs under pressure. Surface-level memorization collapses when stressed.