How to Start Bank & Insurance Exam Preparation When You Know Nothing (2026 Beginner Guide)
A beginner looking at banking or insurance exams feels lost. They wonder where to start, what to study, and whether they’re smart enough. Here’s the honest truth: starting from zero is actually an advantage.
Beginners have no bad habits. They haven’t wasted months studying wrong chapters. They can build the right foundation from day one.
Thousands of freshers crack banking and insurance exams every year, and most of them started exactly where you are right now—confused and unsure.
A beginner doesn’t need to figure everything out alone. Practice Mock provides video lectures in Hinglish, topicwise tests, and unlimited mock exams—everything a beginner needs to go from confused to confident.
Beginners using structured platforms succeed 3x faster than those studying alone.
Banking exams and insurance exams are the fastest way for freshers to get a government job. Both require passing two stages: a preliminary exam (to qualify) and a main exam (to get selected).
IBPS conducts exams for 11 public sector banks. SBI conducts its own exams. RBI conducts separate exams for central bank jobs. Insurance companies like LIC, NIACL, NICL, and OICL conduct their own recruitment exams.
A beginner targeting banking gets benefits immediately. Entry-level clerical positions offer ₹24,000-₹27,000 monthly salary. Officer positions offer ₹35,000-₹50,000 monthly salary. After 15 years, banking officers earn ₹80,000+ monthly with pension benefits.
Insurance positions start at ₹25,000-₹35,000 monthly for assistants. Senior roles pay equally well with better growth opportunities.
Banking exams test skills that beginners actually possess—basic math, logical thinking, English, and general awareness. They don’t require engineering knowledge or specialized training.
The syllabus overlaps heavily across different banking exams. Learning for SBI PO automatically prepares someone for IBPS PO, SBI Clerk, and IBPS Clerk. A beginner can target 4-5 exams using the same preparation.
Insurance exams share 80-90% of the same syllabus as banking exams. After preparing for banking concepts, adding insurance knowledge takes just 2-3 weeks.
Every banking and insurance exam tests four main subjects in the preliminary stage:
Quantitative Aptitude covers arithmetic, percentages, profit-loss, speed-distance-time, data interpretation, and number series. These aren’t advanced math concepts—they’re basics from school mathematics applied differently.
Reasoning Ability includes logical puzzles, seating arrangements, blood relations, coding-decoding, and direction sense. These test thinking ability, not memorization.
English Language focuses on grammar, reading comprehension, vocabulary, error spotting, and sentence correction. A beginner who can read English newspapers passes this section easily.
General Awareness (only in main exam) tests current affairs, banking knowledge, RBI policies, and economic news. This requires reading newspapers or current affairs magazines for 6-8 months.
Insurance exams add one more subject: Insurance Awareness and Financial Market Knowledge. These teach how insurance works, IRDAI regulations, and financial markets basics.
Most beginners need 4-6 months of consistent preparation. This isn’t arbitrary—official guidance from banking and insurance organizations confirms this timeline.
A beginner studying 4-5 hours daily can complete the full syllabus in 4-6 months. Weekends can include additional mock tests and revision.
Those preparing alongside full-time jobs can stretch preparation to 6-8 months by studying 3-4 hours on weekdays.
The biggest mistake beginners make: collecting too many books and studying from multiple sources simultaneously. This creates confusion instead of clarity.
A second mistake appears when beginners skip mock tests and rely only on books. Books teach concepts, but mock tests teach speed and accuracy under pressure. Skipping mocks leaves beginners unprepared on exam day.
Third mistake: starting to prepare without knowing the exam pattern. Beginners waste weeks studying topics that don’t appear in exams.
Fourth mistake: not reading newspapers or current affairs magazines. In main exams, general awareness contributes 20% of marks. Ignoring this section costs 20% of final score.
Five books are sufficient for complete preparation:
| Book | Author | Why Beginners Need It |
|---|---|---|
| Quantitative Aptitude | R.S. Aggarwal | 5,500+ solved examples teach math concepts step-by-step |
| Objective General English | S.P. Bakshi | Grammar rules explained in simple, conversational language |
| Verbal & Non-Verbal Reasoning | R.S. Aggarwal | 7,500 practice questions with detailed solutions |
| Banking Awareness | Arihant Experts | Explains banking system, RBI, and policies in beginner-friendly language |
| Financial & Insurance Awareness | Disha Experts | Covers financial markets and insurance for those targeting insurance exams |
Total investment: ₹1,800-₹2,200 for all five books.
A beginner reading books feels confident. Then they take their first full-length mock exam and panic—because actual exams are timed and stressful.
Mock tests reveal three critical things: which subjects need more work, how much time gets wasted on difficult questions, and whether the beginner can manage stress during exams.
Beginners who skip mocks face surprises on exam day. Those who take mocks weekly improve their score by 15-20% by the time the actual exam arrives.
Practice Mock offers 50+ full-length mocks matching the actual exam pattern. Re-attempting mocks shows exactly how much progress has been made.
Beginners often wonder when to start reading newspapers. Starting from month 3 of preparation works best.
Reading The Hindu or The Indian Express for 1 hour daily covers most current affairs topics. Beginners should focus on banking news, RBI announcements, economic policies, and insurance sector news.
By month 5-6, a beginner should cover 6-8 months of current affairs. This timeline ensures recent news stays fresh for the main exam.
Preliminary exams are comparatively easier. They test basic concepts and speed. A beginner who understands fundamentals passes prelims in the first attempt.
Main exams are significantly harder. They test deeper understanding, require faster problem-solving, and include general awareness. Many candidates pass prelims but fail in mains—not because they’re unprepared, but because they didn’t focus on main-exam-specific practice.
Beginners should start main-exam preparation after completing preliminary preparation, not simultaneously.
A beginner must choose which exam to attempt first: banking or insurance. Banking exams are more competitive but offer better job security and salary growth. Insurance exams are slightly easier but still highly competitive.
SBI Clerk is the recommended first exam for beginners. It’s easier than SBI PO but still teaches the same concepts. Success here builds confidence for tougher exams.
IBPS Clerk follows SBI Clerk and covers 11 banks with more vacancies.
Insurance exams like LIC AAO come after banking preparation because insurance awareness can be added quickly to existing knowledge.
A beginner can read a quantitative aptitude chapter perfectly but still fail that section. Reading teaches what to do. Practice teaches how to do it quickly and accurately.
Beginners should spend 70% time on books (learning concepts) and 30% time on practice tests and mocks (applying concepts). As preparation progresses, this ratio flips—by month 5, spend 30% on books (revision) and 70% on mocks.
The best progress indicator is mock exam scores. A beginner scoring 30% in the first mock and 75% in the final mock knows they’ve improved significantly.
Beginners should take full-length mocks weekly after month 3. Comparing mock scores over time shows exactly which sections improved and which need more work.
Practice Mock’s performance analytics show which topics beginners struggle with most. This data-driven approach focuses revision on weak areas instead of re-reading everything.
Official data from banking organizations shows that 15-20% of applicants clear preliminary exams. Of those, 30-40% clear main exams and join as officers or clerks.
Candidates using structured preparation (good books + mock tests + current affairs) improve these odds significantly. Those following the complete roadmap achieve 60-70% success rate in main exams.
The difference isn’t talent—it’s systematic preparation.
Immediately:
This week:
First month:
Next 2-3 months:
Months 4-5:
Final month:
Beginners need more than books. They need guidance, mock tests, and performance tracking—all in one place.
Practice Mock provides 200+ video lectures in Hinglish, explaining every concept the way teachers do in classrooms. Beginners pause, rewind, and re-watch until concepts click.
The platform offers 20,000+ practice questions across all topics. Beginners can practice specific topics repeatedly until accuracy improves.
Unlimited full-length mocks match the exact pattern of IBPS, SBI, and insurance exams. Beginners experience real exam conditions without the stakes.
Performance analytics show improvement over time. Beginners see exactly which subjects improved and which need work.
All this costs ₹1,199-₹2,999 annually—less than coaching institute fees for one month.
Beginners doubt themselves. That’s natural. But banking and insurance exams are designed for graduates from all backgrounds.
Every successful officer, every recruited clerk, every appointed insurance official started exactly where beginners are now—knowing nothing about these exams.
The path from confusion to clarity takes 4-6 months of consistent effort. After 6 months of dedicated study, a beginner becomes a qualified professional with a government job, stable salary, and career security.
This isn’t luck. This is the result of following a proven system consistently.
A: No. Self-study plus a structured online platform (like Practice Mock) equals coaching benefits without the high cost.
A: 4-5 hours of focused study is sufficient. Quality of study matters more than quantity.
A: Yes. Disciplined study, regular mock tests, and proper analysis help beginners succeed on first attempt.
A: Quantitative Aptitude and Reasoning are most important because they carry highest marks and determine cutting ability.
A: After 2 months of concept building. Begin with topicwise tests, then progress to full-length mocks.
A: Yes. Books teach shortcuts for quant and reasoning. Learning these shortcuts saves 10-15 minutes per exam.
A: Daily, but 1 hour is enough. Consistency matters more than duration.
A: Yes. 80-90% knowledge transfers. Insurance-specific topics add another 2-3 weeks of focused study.
A: Beginners following proper strategy score 150-180 out of 250 in mains. This is usually above the cutoff for selection.
A: Optional. Self-study with structured online guidance (Practice Mock) works equally well and costs significantly less.
Read: Top 5 Books for Bank & Insurance Preparation 2026 – Detailed review of every book
Read: Bank Exam Syllabus 2026 – What to Study – Section-wise syllabus breakdown
Read: Top Banking Exams for Freshers 2026 – Which exam to target first
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