Practice questions · Graduate & Business School Admissions
Executive Assessment: Practice Questions
Original practice questions for the Executive Assessment: about 40% cover the test's format, scoring and strategy, and about 60% are original sample items in the style of the Quantitative, Integrated Reasoning and Verbal sections. Every numerical answer has been worked and checked. These are original study questions, not real assessment questions. Choose an answer to reveal the explanation.
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How long is the Executive Assessment, in testing time?
Correct answer: A. The Executive Assessment is about 90 minutes of testing, made up of three 30-minute sections. 60 minutes is too short; about 2 hours 15 minutes is the current GMAT; and 3 hours 30 minutes is far longer than any current GMAC test. -
How many sections does the Executive Assessment have, and what are they?
Correct answer: B. It has three sections: Integrated Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning and Quantitative Reasoning. There is no separate writing section, so the four-section answer is wrong; and it is not a single combined section or only two sections. -
How many questions are on the Executive Assessment in total?
Correct answer: C. There are 40 questions in total: 12 Integrated Reasoning, 14 Verbal Reasoning and 14 Quantitative Reasoning. 64 is the current GMAT's count; 20 and 100 do not match the published structure. -
On what scale is the total Executive Assessment score reported?
Correct answer: D. The total score runs from 100 to 200, built from three equally weighted section scores. 205 to 805 is the current GMAT scale; 200 to 800 is the older GMAT; and 0 to 60 is not the total scale. -
How is each individual section of the Executive Assessment scored?
Correct answer: B. Each section is scored from 0 to 20, and the three are weighted equally to produce the 100 to 200 total. 60 to 90 is the GMAT's section scale; there is no 1 to 100 section scale; and sections are scored, not marked pass or fail. -
How long are Executive Assessment scores valid?
Correct answer: A. Scores are valid for five years (and remain reportable to schools for up to ten years). One year is too short, scores do expire eventually, and the ten-year figure is the reporting window, not the validity period. -
What is the maximum number of times you can take the Executive Assessment in your lifetime?
Correct answer: D. You may take it up to four times in your lifetime: two at a test center and two online. It is not unlimited; eight was a former GMAT lifetime cap; and two would only be the limit for one delivery channel, not the overall total. -
Which body owns and administers the Executive Assessment?
Correct answer: C. GMAC (the Graduate Management Admission Council) owns the Executive Assessment and the GMAT, with mba.com as the candidate site. ETS owns the GRE; Pearson is a testing vendor, not the owner; and the AICPA is an accounting body unrelated to this test. -
Who is the Executive Assessment primarily designed for?
Correct answer: C. It is built for experienced professionals, especially Executive MBA applicants, and assumes years of work experience. It is not an undergraduate admissions test, an accounting renewal, or a trade licence. -
Roughly how much preparation does GMAC suggest the typical Executive Assessment candidate needs?
Correct answer: D. GMAC suggests the typical candidate prepares for around 30 hours, far less than a GMAT taker, because the test measures reasoning built over a career. 150 to 300 hours is closer to GMAT-style preparation, and some preparation is still recommended rather than none. -
Why does the equal weighting of the three sections matter when you plan your studying?
Correct answer: A. Because no section counts more than another, lifting your lowest section raises the total most efficiently, so your weakest area deserves the most study. You cannot ignore a section, no single section is the only one that counts, and none is double-weighted. -
Is there a fixed pass mark on the Executive Assessment?
Correct answer: B. There is no pass mark; the result is a scaled score and each school decides what total is competitive. The 150 and 50% figures are invented thresholds, and there is no per-section pass requirement. -
How long must you wait between Executive Assessment attempts?
Correct answer: D. You must wait at least 24 hours between attempts. The 16-day gap applies to the GMAT, six months is not a stated rule for this test, and a waiting period does exist. -
Which statement best describes the 'multistage adaptive' format?
Correct answer: C. In a multistage adaptive format the difficulty of later questions adjusts to your earlier performance. It is therefore not a single fixed set for everyone, it does not allow unlimited free navigation, and scoring is automated rather than hand-graded. -
On which section of the Executive Assessment is a calculator NOT available?
Correct answer: B. Quantitative Reasoning provides no calculator, so mental and paper arithmetic must be reliable. An on-screen calculator is available in Integrated Reasoning; Verbal Reasoning does not require one; and it is not available on every section. -
What does a Data Sufficiency question ask you to determine?
Correct answer: A. Data Sufficiency asks whether the statements provide enough information to answer, not what the answer is. Solving for the exact value is the common mistake; comparing passages is a verbal task; and reading a table quickly is an Integrated Reasoning skill. -
Which question types appear in the Integrated Reasoning section?
Correct answer: A. Integrated Reasoning uses Multi-Source Reasoning, Graphics Interpretation, Two-Part Analysis and Table Analysis. Sentence Correction and Reading Comprehension are Verbal types; Problem Solving and Data Sufficiency are Quant types; and there is no essay on this test. -
Which question types appear in the Verbal Reasoning section?
Correct answer: B. Verbal Reasoning uses Reading Comprehension, Critical Reasoning and Sentence Correction. Problem Solving, Data Sufficiency and Table Analysis belong to Quant and Integrated Reasoning; Graphics Interpretation and Two-Part Analysis are Integrated Reasoning; and there is no essay or oral interview on this test. -
What is 15% of 80?
Correct answer: C. 15% of 80 is 0.15 times 80, which equals 12. 8 would be 10% of 80; 10.5 has no basis here; and 15 confuses the percentage figure with the answer. -
A jacket costs $64 after a 20% discount. What was its original price?
Correct answer: D. After a 20% discount you pay 80% of the original, so the original is 64 divided by 0.8, which is $80. $76.80 wrongly adds 20% back onto $64; $84 just adds $20; and $128 doubles the price. -
What is 3/4 + 1/6?
Correct answer: B. Using a common denominator of 12, 3/4 is 9/12 and 1/6 is 2/12, which add to 11/12. Adding numerators and denominators to get 4/10 is invalid; 11/12 is just under 1, so 1 is too large; and 5/6 (10/12) is short by one twelfth. -
Two quantities are in the ratio 3 to 5 and add up to 40. What is the larger quantity?
Correct answer: A. The ratio has 8 parts (3 plus 5), so one part is 40 divided by 8, which is 5; the larger share is 5 parts, which is 25. 15 is the smaller share; 24 and 30 do not fit the ratio. -
A price of 100 is increased by 25% and then the new price is decreased by 20%. What is the final price?
Correct answer: D. 100 increased by 25% is 125; 125 decreased by 20% is 125 times 0.8, which is 100. The percentages do not simply cancel by subtraction, so 105 and 95 are wrong, and 120 ignores the second step. -
A car travels 150 miles in 2.5 hours. What is its average speed?
Correct answer: C. Speed is distance divided by time: 150 divided by 2.5 equals 60 mph. 75 mph would cover 150 miles in 2 hours; 55 and 65 mph do not divide evenly into the figures given. -
18 is what percent of 24?
Correct answer: C. 18 divided by 24 is 0.75, which is 75%. 60% would be 14.4 of 24; 72% and 80% do not match 18. -
What is the perimeter of a square whose area is 49?
Correct answer: D. A square with area 49 has side length 7 (since 7 times 7 is 49), and the perimeter is 4 times 7, which is 28. 14 is only two sides; 21 is three sides; and 49 is the area, not the perimeter. -
A number increased by 30% equals 91. What is the number?
Correct answer: A. If the number times 1.30 equals 91, the number is 91 divided by 1.3, which is 70. 63 subtracts 30% of 91 instead; 118.3 adds 30% to 91; and 61 has no basis. -
A product that costs $80 is sold for $100. What is the markup as a percentage of cost?
Correct answer: B. The markup is $20 on a cost of $80, and 20 divided by 80 is 0.25, which is 25%. 20% wrongly uses the selling price as the base; 80% and 125% confuse the ratio of the two prices with the markup. -
12 is 40% of what number?
Correct answer: D. If 12 is 40% of a number, that number is 12 divided by 0.4, which is 30. 4.8 takes 40% of 12; 48 and 20 do not satisfy the relationship. -
What is the median of the set {4, 8, 15, 16, 23}?
Correct answer: C. The set is already in order, and the middle of five values is the third one, which is 15. 13.2 is the mean, not the median; 8 and 16 are not the central value. -
In a class, 30 students average 80 on a test and 20 students average 90. What is the overall average?
Correct answer: B. Total points are 30 times 80 plus 20 times 90, which is 2400 plus 1800, or 4200, divided by 50 students, giving 84. The simple average of 80 and 90 would be 85, but the groups are unequal, so the weighted average is pulled toward the larger group. -
A bag holds 3 red and 2 blue marbles. If you draw one at random, what is the probability it is red?
Correct answer: A. There are 3 red marbles out of 5 total, so the probability is 3/5. 2/5 is the probability of blue; 1/2 ignores the actual counts; and 3/2 is greater than 1, which is impossible for a probability. -
A recipe for 4 servings needs 6 cups of flour. How many cups are needed for 6 servings?
Correct answer: A. Flour per serving is 6 divided by 4, which is 1.5 cups, and 6 servings need 6 times 1.5, which is 9 cups. 8 and 10 do not match the proportion, and 12 would be for 8 servings. -
What is (2 cubed) squared?
Correct answer: B. 2 cubed is 8, and 8 squared is 64 (equivalently, 2 to the power 6). 16 is 2 to the 4th; 32 is 2 to the 5th; and 256 is 2 to the 8th. -
What is 5/6 minus 1/3?
Correct answer: C. Writing 1/3 as 2/6, the subtraction is 5/6 minus 2/6, which is 3/6, or 1/2. 1/3 and 2/3 do not result from the subtraction, and 4/3 would come from adding incorrectly. -
How many integers strictly between 10 and 30 are divisible by 4?
Correct answer: D. The multiples of 4 between 10 and 30 are 12, 16, 20, 24 and 28, which is five numbers. Counting four misses one, and six or seven overcounts beyond the range. -
Three consecutive integers add up to 51. What is the middle integer?
Correct answer: B. For three consecutive integers, the middle one is the sum divided by 3, so 51 divided by 3 is 17 (the integers are 16, 17 and 18). 16 and 18 are the neighbours, and 19 is outside the set. -
Simple interest on $1,000 at 5% per year for 2 years is:
Correct answer: A. Simple interest is principal times rate times time: 1000 times 0.05 times 2, which is $100. $50 is one year only; $110 mistakenly compounds; and $1,100 is the total balance, not the interest. -
A revenue figure grows from 200 to 260 over a year. What is the percentage growth?
Correct answer: D. The increase is 60 on a base of 200, and 60 divided by 200 is 0.30, which is 30%. 23% wrongly uses 260 as the base; 60% uses the raw increase as a percent; and 130% is the new figure as a percentage of the old, not the growth. -
A company reports revenue of $500,000 and total costs of $380,000. What is its profit margin (profit as a percent of revenue)?
Correct answer: C. Profit is 500,000 minus 380,000, which is 120,000, and 120,000 divided by 500,000 is 0.24, or 24%. 32% wrongly divides profit by costs; 76% is costs as a percent of revenue; and 12% halves the correct figure. -
A table shows quarterly sales by region: North 120, South 95, East 140, West 85. Which region had the highest sales?
Correct answer: C. East has 140, the largest of the four figures. North (120) is second; South (95) and West (85) are lower. -
Using the same regional sales (North 120, South 95, East 140, West 85), South's sales are approximately what percent of the total?
Correct answer: D. The total is 120 plus 95 plus 140 plus 85, which is 440, and 95 divided by 440 is about 0.216, or roughly 22%. 16% understates it, 30% and 45% are far above South's share. -
Two numbers add up to 50, and one is 12 more than the other. What are the two numbers?
Correct answer: A. Let the smaller be x; then x plus (x plus 12) equals 50, so 2x equals 38 and x equals 19, making the numbers 19 and 31. The other pairs either do not sum to 50 with the right gap or do not differ by exactly 12. -
If 40% of students take French and, of those, 25% also take German, what percent of all students take both?
Correct answer: B. It is 25% of the 40%, so 0.25 times 0.40 is 0.10, which is 10%. 15% and 25% misread which group the 25% applies to, and 65% wrongly adds the two percentages. -
In Data Sufficiency, you need to know whether x is positive. Statement (1): x squared equals 16. Statement (2): x is greater than 0. Which is true?
Correct answer: D. From statement (1), x could be 4 or -4, so it cannot confirm the sign and is not sufficient alone. Statement (2) directly says x is greater than 0, which answers the question, so it alone is sufficient. They are therefore not equally sufficient, and the combination is more than enough rather than insufficient. -
Data Sufficiency: What is the value of x? Statement (1): x is an even prime number. Statement (2): x is less than 5. Which statement alone is sufficient?
Correct answer: C. The only even prime number is 2, so statement (1) pins x down to a single value and is sufficient by itself. Statement (2) only says x is less than 5, leaving many possibilities, so it is not sufficient, and the first statement removes any need to combine them. -
Data Sufficiency: What is the average of three numbers? Statement (1): their sum is 30. Statement (2): one of the numbers is 10. Which is sufficient?
Correct answer: B. The average of three numbers is their sum divided by 3, so knowing the sum is 30 gives an average of 10 and is sufficient. Knowing only that one number is 10 says nothing about the other two, so that statement alone is not sufficient and the combination is unnecessary. -
An argument claims that because sales rose right after a new advertising campaign, the campaign caused the rise. What is the main logical weakness?
Correct answer: A. The argument treats a sequence in time as proof of cause, ignoring other explanations such as seasonality or a price change. It does not over-use statistics, misdefine advertising, or lean on expert opinion, so those are not the flaw. -
Which fact, if true, would most weaken the claim that the advertising campaign caused the rise in sales?
Correct answer: A. If sales always rise in that season anyway, the increase has an alternative cause independent of the campaign, which undercuts the causal claim. The campaign's cost and quality do not bear on causation, and the vague point about competitors does not explain this company's rise. -
In Critical Reasoning, what two things should you identify first in an argument?
Correct answer: B. Most Critical Reasoning questions become tractable once you name the conclusion and the unstated assumption holding it up. Sentence length, authorship, and formatting are irrelevant to the logic being tested. -
A Sentence Correction item reads: 'She enjoys hiking, swimming, and to ride horses.' What is the error?
Correct answer: C. The list mixes two gerunds (hiking, swimming) with an infinitive (to ride), breaking parallel structure; the fix is 'riding'. There is no spelling error, the commas are correct, and the tense is not the problem. -
In Reading Comprehension, when an answer choice is true in real life but not stated in the passage, you should:
Correct answer: D. Reading Comprehension rewards what the passage actually supports, so an outside-the-text truth is a trap. Real-world truth alone does not make an answer correct, length is irrelevant, and you should not reject all fact-based options. -
Which approach to Integrated Reasoning is most efficient under time pressure?
Correct answer: B. Selective reading - locating just the data a question needs - is the efficient method, since absorbing everything wastes time. Skipping tables forfeits marks, and answering from one source when several are given is a known trap. -
Why is it usually wise to let a very hard question go during a timed section?
Correct answer: A. With limited time per section, minutes lost on one hard item are minutes unavailable for easier marks, so protecting the clock maximises the score. Hard questions are scored, skipping is a pacing choice rather than a difficulty lever, and you cannot revisit a section after moving on. -
Where can you take the Executive Assessment?
Correct answer: D. You can take it at a test center or online with remote proctoring, and the assessment is the same either way. It is therefore not limited to a test center, to online only, or to a university campus. -
What is the registration fee for the Executive Assessment (before any taxes)?
Correct answer: C. The registration fee is US$350, the same for test center and online, plus any applicable taxes. US$100 and US$250 are too low, and US$800 is far higher than the published fee. -
How long do Executive Assessment scores remain reportable to schools (the reporting window)?
Correct answer: C. Scores remain reportable for up to ten years, even though they are considered valid for five. Three and five years understate the reporting window, and it is not indefinite. -
Across the four lifetime attempts, how are they split between delivery channels?
Correct answer: D. The four lifetime attempts are split as two at a test center and two online. They are not all in one channel, and the three-and-one split does not match the policy. -
Compared with the current GMAT, the Executive Assessment is generally:
Correct answer: A. The Executive Assessment is shorter (about 90 minutes versus roughly 2 hours 15 minutes) and is designed to need far less preparation. So it is not longer, not the same, and not a long test with light preparation. -
Before deciding to take the Executive Assessment instead of the GMAT, the most important thing to check is:
Correct answer: B. Because fewer programmes accept it than the GMAT, confirming your target schools accept the Executive Assessment is the first step. The other points are irrelevant: appearance does not matter, it has fewer questions than the GMAT, and scoring is automated. -
A triangle has two angles measuring 50 degrees and 60 degrees. What is the third angle?
Correct answer: D. Angles in a triangle sum to 180 degrees, so the third is 180 minus 50 minus 60, which is 70 degrees. 80, 90 and 110 degrees do not leave the total at 180. -
A fair coin is flipped twice. What is the probability of getting heads both times?
Correct answer: C. Each flip has probability 1/2, and independent events multiply, so 1/2 times 1/2 is 1/4. 1/2 is the chance of heads on a single flip; 3/4 is the chance of at least one head; and 1 would mean it is certain. -
A value rises from 30 to 45. What is the percentage increase?
Correct answer: B. The increase is 15 on a base of 30, and 15 divided by 30 is 0.5, which is 50%. 33% wrongly uses 45 as the base; 15% reports the raw increase as a percent; and 67% is the old value as a percent of the new. -
Why is Integrated Reasoning often the section where experienced candidates gain the most from a few hours of practice?
Correct answer: A. The hard part of Integrated Reasoning is usually the unfamiliar format rather than advanced content, so a few focused sessions make it routine and lift the score efficiently. The maths is not especially advanced, it is not the longest section, and it does count toward the score. -
A candidate is strong in verbal but rusty in quant. Given equal section weighting, where should most study hours go?
Correct answer: A. With equal weighting, the lowest section limits the total most, so the rusty quant deserves the most hours. Polishing the strong verbal yields less, an even split ignores the diagnosis, and studying by enjoyment is not an efficient strategy. -
What does it mean that the three section scores are 'weighted equally' in the total?
Correct answer: B. Equal weighting means each of the three sections contributes the same amount to the 100 to 200 total. No section is doubled, none is dropped, and the lowest is not discarded. -
A sensible first step in any Executive Assessment study plan is to:
Correct answer: C. A timed diagnostic shows which section is weakest so you can target your hours, which matters because the sections are equally weighted. There is no fixed answer key to memorise, booking for the same evening skips preparation, and studying only your best section wastes effort. -
Which of these is the best reason the Executive Assessment suits busy senior professionals?
Correct answer: D. Its appeal is being short with a light preparation load, fitting a demanding schedule. It does not guarantee admission, it is timed, and it does not substitute for the work experience EMBA programmes expect. -
On a Two-Part Analysis question, you typically must:
Correct answer: B. Two-Part Analysis asks you to select one option in each of two columns, frequently two related quantities that must fit together. It is not an essay, not a single five-option choice, and not a sentence-ordering task. -
A list price of $200 is reduced to a sale price of $150. What is the discount percentage?
Correct answer: A. The reduction is $50 on a list price of $200, and 50 divided by 200 is 0.25, which is 25%. 20% and 33% use the wrong base, and 50% would be a $100 reduction. -
What is 5% of 5% (expressed as a percentage of the original)?
Correct answer: D. 5% of 5% is 0.05 times 0.05, which is 0.0025, or 0.25%. 2.5% and 25% misplace the decimal, and 10% wrongly adds the two percentages. -
Five machines make five widgets in five minutes. At the same rate, how long do 100 machines take to make 100 widgets?
Correct answer: C. Each machine makes one widget in five minutes, so 100 machines each make one widget in the same five minutes, producing 100 widgets in 5 minutes. The scaling does not change the per-widget time, so 100, 20 and 1 minute are all wrong. -
The Executive Assessment is best described as which kind of test?
Correct answer: C. It is a scaled admissions test for business school, reported on a 100 to 200 scale rather than pass or fail. It is not a licensing exam, an undergraduate entrance test, or a language test. -
Which describes a good pacing target within each 30-minute Executive Assessment section?
Correct answer: D. With 12 to 14 questions in 30 minutes, roughly two minutes each is the right average pace. Thirty seconds is too fast to read carefully, five minutes would leave most questions unanswered, and over-investing in the first question wrecks the section clock. -
A Multi-Source Reasoning question gives information across two tabs. A choice looks fully correct using only the first tab. The safest move is to:
Correct answer: A. Multi-Source questions are designed so the correct answer can require combining sources, so you should check the second tab before committing. Selecting from one tab is the classic trap, guessing wastes the information, and preferring fewer-tab answers has no basis. -
Which is the most accurate statement about retaking the Executive Assessment to improve a score?
Correct answer: B. With just four lifetime attempts, it is wise to prepare properly for each rather than rely on repeated tries. It is neither unlimited, limited to a single retake, nor entirely forbidden. -
If you cancel an Executive Assessment appointment less than 24 hours before it, what generally happens to your fee?
Correct answer: D. Cancelling within 24 hours generally forfeits the US$350 registration fee, so late changes are costly. It is not fully or half refunded, and it is not transferred as a GMAT credit. -
What is the best one-line summary of how the Executive Assessment differs from the GMAT in purpose?
Correct answer: C. The Executive Assessment targets experienced professionals (often Executive MBA applicants), while the GMAT is the broader business-school admissions test. Both are for graduate business study, neither is a language test, and the Executive Assessment is a real admissions test, not a practice GMAT. -
How many questions are in the Integrated Reasoning section specifically?
Correct answer: B. Integrated Reasoning has 12 questions in 30 minutes. The Verbal and Quantitative sections each have 14; 10 and 20 do not match the published structure. -
How many questions are in the Quantitative Reasoning section specifically?
Correct answer: A. Quantitative Reasoning has 14 questions in 30 minutes, the same as Verbal Reasoning. Integrated Reasoning has 12; 20 and 21 relate to the GMAT, not this test. -
If a product's price is cut by 25% to $90, what was the original price?
Correct answer: A. After a 25% cut you pay 75% of the original, so the original is 90 divided by 0.75, which is $120. $112.50 adds 25% onto $90; $115 has no basis; and $67.50 takes a further 25% off $90. -
A project's budget is $250,000 and $180,000 has been spent. What fraction of the budget remains?
Correct answer: B. The remaining amount is 250,000 minus 180,000, which is 70,000, and 70,000 over 250,000 reduces to 7/25. 18/25 is the fraction spent; 1/4 and 3/5 do not match the remaining share. -
Which preparation habit most directly builds the endurance needed for the Executive Assessment?
Correct answer: C. Full-length, timed practice rehearses doing all three sections back to back, building the stamina and pacing the real sitting demands. Reading without practising, drilling a single section, and untimed study all fail to rehearse the full experience. -
A team of 4 people completes a task in 6 days. Assuming they work at the same combined rate, how many people are needed to finish an identical task in 3 days?
Correct answer: D. The task takes 4 times 6, which is 24 person-days. To finish in 3 days you need 24 divided by 3, which is 8 people. 6 and 12 do not give 24 person-days over 3 days, and 2 people would take far longer. -
Which statement about the Executive Assessment and work experience is accurate?
Correct answer: B. The test is designed around the assumption that candidates bring significant work experience, which is why it needs less preparation. It is not aimed at people without work history, sets no exact-years registration rule, and does not test job-specific technical content. -
Which best captures the right mindset for the Quantitative Reasoning section, given there is no calculator?
Correct answer: A. Without a calculator, dependable mental and paper arithmetic plus estimation to sanity-check answers is the right approach. You cannot bring your own calculator, skipping arithmetic forfeits marks, and the content is standard rather than too advanced to attempt. -
Two trains start 300 miles apart and travel toward each other, one at 60 mph and the other at 40 mph. After how long do they meet?
Correct answer: D. Their closing speed is 60 plus 40, which is 100 mph, so 300 miles divided by 100 mph is 3 hours. Using only one train's speed gives 5 hours (at 60) or 6 hours (closer to 50); 2 hours is too short for a 100 mph closing speed over 300 miles. -
Which is the single most important planning fact emphasised for the Executive Assessment?
Correct answer: C. Equal section weighting means your weakest section is where extra study lifts the total most, which drives the whole study plan. Verbal is not always hardest, all three section scores feed the total, and the format does not change monthly.
Practice questions FAQ
- Are these real Executive Assessment exam questions?
- No. These are original study questions written to test understanding. They are not real exam questions, exam dumps, or copied from any provider.
- How should I use these practice questions?
- Answer each one, read the explanation (including why the wrong options are wrong), and use the per-domain score below to focus your revision on weak areas. Revisit before exam day.
- How many questions should I do before the exam?
- Enough to score consistently across every domain, alongside full-length practice from official or reputable providers. Understanding why each answer is right matters more than raw volume.
- What score means I am ready?
- A good signal is consistently scoring around 80% or higher across all domains on questions you have not seen before, and being able to explain why the wrong options are wrong.
- Should I use exam dumps?
- No. Dumps (real or leaked questions) breach provider policy, can void your certification, and do not build the understanding the exam actually tests.