When students get trained by me, they enjoy the direct benefit of my 15 years of experience in training students for MBA entrance exams. In these years, I have not only come up with the easiest way of learning concepts, but also developed well defined techniques of solving questions using various methods, giving students a grasp of the subject at hand.
The complete course material is designed by me and provided to the students, so that students do not have to run hither and thither to search for quality material.
The number of students is deliberately kept low, i.e. a maximum of 5-6 students in the individual group to ensure much greater chances of success of students. This is very similar to private tuitions which most of the students would have joined in their school days and benefitted. With such a small group of students, I am clearly able to understand the problems faced by each student, and also know the exact point where a student gets stuck up, and resolve the same on the spot. Another advantage of such a small group is the convenience for students as they do not have to wait for the ‘batch to get filled’ before launching the batch. There is no concept of ‘batch’ here, it is only a small group with complete individual attention.
The focus of the entire program is to enhance the skills of students for them to face the exam confidently, and succeed. Below I present an example of a success story, which clearly establishes the power of studying individually from a highly experience mentor.
Very recently, a student aspiring for MBA joined me. Her exam was mere 8 days away! And, her basics of Arithmetic were abysmally poor. After undergoing the training for only 1 week (close to 12 - 14 hours in all), she was finally able to clear the exam and is currently studying in her dream college. Frankly speaking, at one point of time of her preparation, even I was a little doubtful about her success! But, when she called me the day she cleared the exam, we both were pleasantly surprised! No marks for guessing what would have happened had she joined any coaching institute.
This incident and many earlier incidents confirm the fact that the only way of greatly improving the chances of success in such competition exams is to go for studying individually from a highly experienced mentor.
Preparing for CAT is not a group activity, but an individual one. And so having a personal coach is all the more important and a good strategy. Take the examples of those sports which are individual activity, e.g. Tennis (Singles), Boxing, etc. In Tennis, Sania Mirza is an ace player who has a personal coach Bob Brett (who was previously the coach of Boris Becker). In Boxing, Vijender Singh Beniwal has been coached by Jagdish Singh who recognized his talent and encouraged him to take to professional boxing. So, the importance of getting coached by a personal mentor cannot be over-emphasized.
The complete course material is designed by me and provided to the students, so that students do not have to run hither and thither to search for quality material.
The number of students is deliberately kept low, i.e. a maximum of 5-6 students in the individual group to ensure much greater chances of success of students. This is very similar to private tuitions which most of the students would have joined in their school days and benefitted. With such a small group of students, I am clearly able to understand the problems faced by each student, and also know the exact point where a student gets stuck up, and resolve the same on the spot. Another advantage of such a small group is the convenience for students as they do not have to wait for the ‘batch to get filled’ before launching the batch. There is no concept of ‘batch’ here, it is only a small group with complete individual attention.
The focus of the entire program is to enhance the skills of students for them to face the exam confidently, and succeed. Below I present an example of a success story, which clearly establishes the power of studying individually from a highly experience mentor.
Very recently, a student aspiring for MBA joined me. Her exam was mere 8 days away! And, her basics of Arithmetic were abysmally poor. After undergoing the training for only 1 week (close to 12 - 14 hours in all), she was finally able to clear the exam and is currently studying in her dream college. Frankly speaking, at one point of time of her preparation, even I was a little doubtful about her success! But, when she called me the day she cleared the exam, we both were pleasantly surprised! No marks for guessing what would have happened had she joined any coaching institute.
This incident and many earlier incidents confirm the fact that the only way of greatly improving the chances of success in such competition exams is to go for studying individually from a highly experienced mentor.
Preparing for CAT is not a group activity, but an individual one. And so having a personal coach is all the more important and a good strategy. Take the examples of those sports which are individual activity, e.g. Tennis (Singles), Boxing, etc. In Tennis, Sania Mirza is an ace player who has a personal coach Bob Brett (who was previously the coach of Boris Becker). In Boxing, Vijender Singh Beniwal has been coached by Jagdish Singh who recognized his talent and encouraged him to take to professional boxing. So, the importance of getting coached by a personal mentor cannot be over-emphasized.