Help Us Shape GMAT Ninja’s New Learning Experiments


Thank you for volunteering to help us test our new ideas!
Your insights will help us refine how we teach, and make future materials more effective.

Thank you for volunteering!

You’re here because you kindly responded to our call on YouTube.

We’re genuinely grateful.

Over the past few months, we’ve been experimenting with new ways to teach GMAT concepts: shorter videos, more focused question sets, and streamlined explanations. Before we release anything publicly, we want to make sure these new formats actually feel good to real learners.

That’s where you come in.

We’re selecting a small group of volunteers to try out a handful of new video-and-question-set combinations and tell us what’s working… and what absolutely isn’t. Your feedback will shape how these materials evolve.

What this experiment involves

How the week will work

During the week of 8–12 December, here’s what you can expect:

  • One email per day
    • Each message contains a short video and a set of GMAT-style questions using the new format we’re testing.
  • About 1 hour a day
    • Watch the video, complete the questions, and share quick feedback so we know what landed and what didn’t.
  • Simple, targeted feedback
    • Not long surveys. Just short check-ins designed to help us understand clarity, pacing, and usefulness.
  • One follow-up chat
    • During 15–19 December, we’d love to schedule a brief call to hear your suggestions and talk through your experience.

There’s no cost to participate — we’re simply asking for your time and honest impressions.

Who this experiment is a good fit for

You’re a great fit if:

  • You’re preparing for the GMAT in the near future.
  • You’re comfortable watching short videos and working through questions independently.
  • You can realistically commit ~1 hour per day during 8–12 December.
  • You’re happy to give constructive, candid feedback, even if it’s blunt. Especially if it’s blunt!

We can only include a relatively small group this round, so we may not be able to select every applicant. Either way, you’ll hear from us by email.

Ready to join Experiment #1?

If you’d like to take part, please fill out the form below as completely as possible. Your responses help us build a balanced volunteer group and get the most value from this first experiment.

Name
Are you available to take part in the test during the week of December 8th – 12th
Each day, we’ll send out a video and a set of questions. It should take roughly 1 hour to watch the video and complete the questions each day.
Are you available to meet with a member of the GMAT Ninja team during the week of December 15th – 19th
We’ll do all we can to work around your schedule, whichever timezone you’re in, but we’d like to know you won’t be on vacation and uncontactable during that period.
Have you taken the GMAT before?
Have you taken any official practice tests on MBA.com?
Feel free to add anything you’d like us to know before you sign up for this test.

You’ll receive a short video and a set of GMAT-style questions built using the new formats we’re testing. You’ll watch the video, complete the questions, and give quick feedback.

Plan on about an hour per day during the experiment week. Some days may run slightly shorter or longer depending on the question set.

No live sessions during the experiment week. Everything arrives by email and can be completed on your own schedule that day.

The only live element is an optional follow-up call the following week.

To know we’re getting things right, we need you to be able to complete the video and question set each day. If you know your schedule will be unpredictable, you might choose to skip this round and join a future experiment instead.

No!
This experiment is completely free. We’re very grateful that you’re willing to help us experiment and improve our teaching.

No. Participating (or not participating) has zero impact on tutoring services. This is just an optional chance to help us trial new teaching formats.

Your feedback helps us refine explanations, pacing, and question design. We review patterns across volunteers but do not share your personal details or individual comments publicly.