Although many aspirants spend months preparing for the SIDBI Grade A 2025 exam, most forget one very important part of preparation. That part is strategy. They study topic after topic, believing they’ll assemble everything in the end. But unfortunately, by the time exams arrive, they either run out of time or feel unsure about their answers. This is one of the biggest reasons why candidates struggle to score high marks. Strategy is not something you use at the last minute. It must guide your entire preparation journey. And to help you with that, here are 5 simple and effective study techniques designed to help you master key topics like Economic & Social Issues, Finance & Management, Reasoning, and English.
You must not only study thoroughly, but study smartly. The following methods will ensure you absorb concepts, remember important details, and perform confidently on exam day.
You need to bring information to the front of your mind. Many aspirants just re-read notes again and again. But that doesn’t guarantee long-term memory. Instead, use active recall: study a topic, close your books, and then try to recall it without looking. This forces your brain to work harder, strengthening memory.
Practical Example: After studying a Finance chapter like ‘Credit Risk Management’, close your materials and recall definitions, types of risk, and key mitigation techniques. This method helps you retain answers during the actual exam.
Revision must happen at regular intervals. Spaced repetition is one of the most effective study tools. Review the same topic multiple times at increasing intervals—after 1 day, 3 days, 7 days, and so on. This dramatically reduces forgetting.
Practical Example: If you studied Method of Investments today, revise it tomorrow, again after 3 days, and then after a week. Use planners or apps to schedule these sessions. This works best for formulas, policies, and schemes.
Big topics can overwhelm your brain. That’s why chunking helps. Divide a long topic into smaller parts and tackle each part one at a time. This approach makes tough subjects like Economic Issues or Management more manageable.
Practical Example: Instead of studying ‘Banking Sector Reforms’ at once, break it into steps like Narasimham committee, K V Kamath committee, and recent reforms. Revise each chunk individually, then solve related questions.
Do you stay connected with what you studied earlier? Weekly active revision means spending a few hours once a week going over older topics. It’s not just reading, but summarizing, quizzing yourself, or discussing topics. This boosts long-term memory, especially for static GK and financial policies.
Practical Example: If you covered India’s Financial Inclusion strategy last week, dedicate some weekend time to write a short summary or solve Q&A on that topic. You’ll be surprised how much you recall in the actual exam.
Visual tools like charts, flashcards, and tables work wonders for data-heavy subjects. These visual aids stay longer in memory and are quick to review before the exam.
Practical Example: Create a comparison table for Monetary Policy vs Fiscal Policy. Make flashcards for important Economic Terms. Use flowcharts for flow of credit. Place these visuals near your study area for regular exposure.
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Do you wait till the end to start writing practice? That’s a mistake. The descriptive paper in SIDBI tests your ability to write clearly, structure your thoughts, and present ideas well. You must start early and write at least one essay or letter every week.
Practical Example: Pick a recent topic like “Digital Transformation in Indian Banking” or “Role of SIDBI in MSME Growth”. Write an essay in 250–300 words, and get it reviewed if possible. Focus on clarity, structure, and grammar.
Many students get lost in too many current affairs PDFs and forget what really matters. Instead of collecting everything, follow a monthly current affairs magazine or summary. Revise only the most relevant news related to economy, finance, government schemes, and banking.
Practical Example: Focus more on MSME schemes, Budget highlights, RBI policies, and economic rankings. Prepare a short weekly digest of important points and revise it every Sunday.
Want to know what kind of questions actually come? Then solve previous year papers. It’s one of the smartest ways to understand the real exam level. It also tells you what topics are repeated and what the examiners prefer.
Practical Example: Take SIDBI Grade A 2022 or 2023 paper and solve it in a timed environment. Analyse the pattern, note your weak areas, and adjust your study plan accordingly.
Subjects like Finance and Quantitative Aptitude include formulas, ratios, and facts that must be revised quickly. Instead of going through full chapters every time, maintain one single revision sheet that you can refer to anytime.
Practical Example: Add formulas for NPV, IRR, ROI, Financial Ratios, and recent GDP growth rates in one place. Revise this sheet weekly to keep the data fresh in memory.
Most aspirants forget key concepts because they don’t revise strategically. But with these five techniques—active recall, spaced repetitions, chunking, weekly revision, and visual tools—you will not only remember more but also answer confidently on exam day. Both objective and descriptive sections need clear memory and smart preparation. Don’t wait until the last minute. Start using these methods today, and your future self will thank you.
Moderate to high.
Around ₹1,00,000 per month (including allowances).
Yes, usually 2 years in related fields.
Practice 1–2 essays or letters weekly on finance or banking topics.
Yes, especially economy, banking, and MSME-related updates.
Yes, they help improve speed, accuracy, and confidence.
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