Free template
The GMAT error log template.
The exact six-tag system Adam used to go from 565 to 735. Log every mistake, tag why it happened, and let the patterns tell you what to fix next. Free spreadsheet — no account needed.
Get the template
Send me the GMAT error-log template.
The six-tag taxonomy and the spreadsheet structure, ready to use. Two months of honest logging surfaces the patterns that cost you points.
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The six causes behind every wrong answer
Every miss has a cause. Tag it with one of these, and your review stops being a pile of questions and starts being a short list of fixable habits.
Conceptual
You did not know the underlying rule or method. The fix is learning, not speed.
Careless
You knew it but slipped — a sign error, a misread digit, a skipped step.
Time Pressure
You rushed because the clock was tight, and accuracy paid for it.
Misread
You answered a slightly different question than the one on the screen.
Strategy
The math was fine but the approach was slow or roundabout — a better path existed.
Other
Anything that does not fit cleanly above. Tag it, then refine as patterns emerge.
How to use it
- 1After every practice set or mock, open the template and add one row per question you got wrong or guessed.
- 2Tag each mistake with one of the six causes below. Be honest — the tag is the whole point.
- 3Write one line on what actually went wrong and what you will do differently.
- 4Once a week, sort by tag. The biggest bucket is your highest-leverage thing to fix next.
Want the error log built in?
The full platform has this same six-tag log inside it, then feeds your tagged mistakes into a spaced review queue so you actually re-test the ones that hurt. It is free to use while it is in private beta.
No credit card. No score promises — just a system that makes your review honest.
Common questions
Yes. Enter your email and the spreadsheet downloads immediately — no account, no card. You will also get occasional GMAT prep notes you can unsubscribe from in one click.
No. The template is a standalone spreadsheet that works on its own. The full platform has the same six-tag error log built in (plus spaced review of your mistakes), and it is free to use during the private beta if you want it.
Volume alone repeats the same mistakes. Logging and tagging turns each miss into a pattern you can see — and patterns are what you fix. It is the single habit that moved Adam's score the most, though no method can promise any specific result.
Yes. The tags describe why you missed a question, which is the same across Quant, Verbal, and Data Insights on the Focus Edition.