CAT

Get insights from 13.2k questions on CAT, answered by students, alumni, and experts. You may also ask and answer any question you like about CAT

Follow Ask Question
13.2k

Questions

14

Discussions

110

Active Users

8.3k

Followers

New question posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 59 Views

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 30 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Bharat DebbarmaPursuing MBA

Contributor-Level 9

Basically, if you get more than 40 Percentile you can apply and be assure that you have 75% chance to be shortlisted the rest depends upon the management decision.
Best of luck

New answer posted

7 years ago

1 Follower 318 Views

A
ankit chauhan

Contributor-Level 10

No, I don't think so. All IIMs take admissions from CAT exam.

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 171 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Raj shakya#ReadyToHelp

Scholar-Level 16

Hi,
There are certain essential differences between CAT and GMAT.
1. Quants section of CAT is tougher than GMAT. In CAT you can afford to skip questions, but in GMAT. You cannot do that.
2. If you don't do well in CAT then next year you can take CAT again. If you don't do well in GMAT. You can retake GMAT after few months. Speed and accuracy is essence of both.
3. CAT cost: Rs.2000 approximately for per-form.
4. GMAT. Rs.16k approximately for per appearance. I hope this helps.

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 120 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Raj shakya#ReadyToHelp

Scholar-Level 16

There are three parts involved in preparing for any competitive exam.
1. Learning the concepts.
2. Solving questions and papers
3. Evaluation and improving. You can use Youtube or refer some books to clarify concepts and learn about the test format and structure. For solving problems you can buy some books by Tata McGraw Hill, Arihant for CAT and Kaplan, GMAT Review for GMAT. For evaluation and improving, you can solve papers and evaluate them yourself. Find out your weaknesses and work on improving them.

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 231 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Raj shakya#ReadyToHelp

Scholar-Level 16

Hi,
There are three parts involved in preparing for any competitive exam.
1. Learning the concepts.
2. Solving questions and papers
3. Evaluation and improving. You can use Youtube or refer some books to clarify concepts and learn about the test format and structure. For solving problems you can buy some books by Tata McGraw Hill, Arihant for CAT and Kaplan, GMAT Review for GMAT. For evaluation and improving, you can solve papers and evaluate them yourself. Find out your weaknesses and work on improving them.

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 50 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Raj shakya#ReadyToHelp

Scholar-Level 16

Hi,
Start preparation from now. Get a good mentor, who will guide you to crack those exams or attend a good coaching class for your preparation and study well. Work hard with your full concentration. You can study from online tutoring portals also. Here introducing you "TutStu", an online portal for finding tutors of any subjects any branches. If you want to appear and crack the CAT & GMAT with good percentile then here's the best place for you. Study online on "TutStu" and get help preparing CAT GMAT etc. Tests from best well known tutors across the world. TutStu is more affordable and easily accessible online coaching platform for st
...more

New answer posted

7 years ago

1 Follower 141 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Raj shakya#ReadyToHelp

Scholar-Level 16

Hi,
Unfortunately, the answer to this question is "YES". CAT preparation won't be sufficient enough for GMAT and the same holds true if you are preparing for GMAT. This is because the intention to check on the areas are very different in both the exams. CAT tests your ability mainly on your 1- Quantitative abilities 2- Data Interpretation/ Logical Reasoning and 3- Verbal Ability. GMAT on the other side tests your, quant, Verbal, AWA, IR. You may think Quant and Verbal overlap in both but this isn't enough as the difficulty is not the same in both. Quant in CAT is at a higher level than GMAT. Similarly Verbal scores point in GMAT over qu
...more

New answer posted

7 years ago

18 Followers 3.5k Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Raj shakya#ReadyToHelp

Scholar-Level 16

Hi,
You have to essentially focus on pursuing your PGDM, from the top 30 B Schools in India. It is only then, that your degree will be valued and respected by the corporate world. These B Schools accept only CAT scores. There is nothing great about the CAT exam. It is purely a hype. You have to aim at scoring a minimum of 98 percentile in the CAT exam. Being a CAT trainer, for the last 15 years, putting in two hours of focused study daily for three months, is more than enough. Believe in yourself and take it up as a challenge.

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 508 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Raj shakya#ReadyToHelp

Scholar-Level 16

You are eligible to apply for admission. All Entrance Scores Are valid for admission after September 2015 CAT, MAT, XAT, etc.). While MIT-SOB has equal weight-age on all your performances from 10th Till Graduation, the selection process is a blend of parameters such as- Score obtained by candidate In CAT/MAT exam. Performance at Extempore Talk (Including written essay) Performance at Personal Interview Past Academic Record (10th & 12th level) Work Experience (If any).

Get authentic answers from experts, students and alumni that you won't find anywhere else

Sign Up on Shiksha

On Shiksha, get access to

  • 66k Colleges
  • 1.2k Exams
  • 689k Reviews
  • 1850k Answers

Share Your College Life Experience

×
×

This website uses Cookies and related technologies for the site to function correctly and securely, improve & personalise your browsing experience, analyse traffic, and support our marketing efforts and serve the Core Purpose. By continuing to browse the site, you agree to Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy.