CAT 2025 Exam Live Updates: How did the 99.79 percentile prepare before the exam day?
Milan Morais (CAT 2023, 99.79 percentile, currently at FMS Delhi) said he had completed the syllabus well before the exam and had shifted fully into mock-taking mode by October.
“I had finished my portions around October and was attempting 2–3 mocks a week. In the last 2–3 days, I decided it was time to rest. I just solved the PYQs I hadn’t done yet to keep my mind sharp. And as a stress-buster, I hit the gym every day.”
For him, the final phase was not about pushing harder but about staying mentally steady.
His advice to aspirants: Milan emphasises clarity about strengths and weaknesses — and the courage to skip.
“Focus on knowing what you know. Don’t waste time on ‘interesting’ questions if they’re not your strength. Quant was my weakest section, and since I knew that, I ended up with only around three negative marks in the entire paper.”
He suggests that aspirants work actively on avoiding the sunk-cost fallacy.
“Be extremely comfortable skipping questions. It’s the BEST thing you can do at such a late stage to drastically improve your percentile.”
What to avoid:
— Stress — “as it only breeds mistakes.”
— “During the exam, I spent time singing in my head. While waiting to enter, I took a walk around the centre and joked with friends. I wanted to keep my mind light.”
How he attempted the paper:
— A disciplined and well-thought-out strategy guided his approach across all three sections.
— “Before the exam, I thoroughly read the instructions. That gave me a heads-up about the format change.”
VARC: He had trained his reading speed to ensure he finished the RCs early. “I made sure I’d have around 12–15 minutes left for VA. That made the section much easier to handle.”
DILR: He spent the initial few minutes analysing the sets. “I took 5–10 minutes just reading the questions. That helped me choose the right sets and improve accuracy.”
Quant: As his weakest area, his goal was simple. “I targeted every single easy question and then used the remaining time to solve 2–3 medium-level ones. I always had a time range in mind for each question across sections.”
His approach, he says, was built on one principle: “Choose the battles that matter — and skip the ones that don’t.”
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