Among RBI Grade B aspirants, there are also many working professionals. But due to a lack of time, there remains confusion in their minds regarding preparation. They think about whether in less time they will even be able to prepare properly for the exam or not. And now, since on 8th September, the RBI will reveal the exam dates and vacancies through its tender notice, then the exam may be held after one month. So the question arises, how professionals will take out time in this much duration for the preparation of Phase 1, and along with that, Phase 2. Because the job eats up their whole day? Can they clear the exam by preparing along with the job? The answer is yes. It is possible, and many working professionals also become Grade B officers every year. How, you may be thinking? Such professionals, through a smart preparation strategy, can make the most out of their limited time. Let us know how.
A working professional cannot study for 10 hours daily. Time is limited, as far as covering the vast syllabus is concerned. That’s why the strategy should be smart. First, go through the exam pattern and write down the syllabus. Mark the easy topics. Then make a small timetable. Use weekdays for short but focused study. Use weekends for long hours and mock tests. Stick to very limited sources. Revise them again and again. Do not keep switching books. Remember, success is not about studying everything. It is about revising the right things at the right time.
Here are the tips that will help you make a preparation strategy that suits you best:
The Prelims exam is all about speed and accuracy in solving 200 questions in 120 minutes. That means less than one minute per question. Time management becomes very important. Plan your order of solving. Many aspirants waste time on puzzles or long DI sets and then miss cutoffs. Don’t do that. Attempt easy sections first. Skip tough questions. Sectional timing has now made things easier, but still, practice matters. Mock tests will train you for this. The more mocks you take, the better your time management becomes in the exam.
Cutoffs are tricky. To cross them, focus on easy and high-scoring areas. In Quant, Number Series and DI are simple and cover many marks. In Reasoning, target syllogisms, inequalities, directions, and coded relations. In English, Reading Comprehension and grammar-based questions can be scoring with practice. In GA, most questions are direct if you revise current affairs properly. Do not waste energy on tough puzzles or time-taking questions early. Secure the cutoff first. Then, if time remains, solve the tougher ones. This smart order gives confidence.
General Awareness is the king of Prelims. Most aspirants clear or fail because of GA. So, make it your strength. Cover the last 4 to 6 months of current affairs. Focus on RBI reports, government schemes, committees, and economic surveys. Make short notes. Revise them daily. Even 20 to 30 minutes during office breaks can be used for GA. This section is less about practice and more about revision. Keep revising till the last day. GA gives direct marks. Working professionals should treat GA as their best friend in Prelims.
Do not wait for Prelims result. If you do, you will get very little time for Phase 2. Working professionals must prepare Phase 2 side by side. Give 30 to 45 minutes daily to Finance and ESI. Read short notes. pay heed to concepts, and not just mug up everything. Learn all about the government schemes, highlights of the budget, and all the important reports. For English Descriptive, practice essays once a week. This way, you already have a good foundation for the Phase 2 exam by the time the Prelims says goodbye.
Weekdays are busy for working professionals. So, keep 2 to 3 focused study hours on weekdays. Use travel time or breaks for GA revision. Study tough subjects only when your mind is fresh, maybe early morning or night. Weekends are your booster time. Devote 6 to 7 hours on weekends. Attempt full mock tests. Analyze them. Revise your notes. You need to balance everything. Do not burn out. Keep one slot for relaxation, too. A balanced routine guarantees long-term consistency, which is the most important part of RBI Grade B prep.
Notes save time. For working professionals, short notes are lifesavers. Write formulas for Quant. Keep flowcharts for Finance concepts. Summarize schemes in tables and avoid copying long paragraphs. Make short and clear notes, clear, as they are easy to revise. Before office, after office, or during breaks, these notes can be revised quickly. Near the exam, big books will waste time. Only your notes will help. Working professionals should build this habit early. Notes also keep you calm in the last days, when revision speed matters most.
Mocks are non-negotiable. Without them, no one can clear RBI Grade B. Working professionals must schedule mocks every weekend. Start with one full-length mock. Analyze it fully. Find your weak areas. During the week, work on those areas. Then again, test on the weekend. In the last one month, increase mock frequency. Attempt 3 to 4 mock tests every week. Use PracticeMock for the latest pattern. Don’t just see the score. Check solutions. Write down mistakes. Revise them. Mock tests build exam stamina, confidence, and accuracy. Know how to make the most of mock tests HERE.
Everyone has weak areas. Some fear puzzles. Some fear DI. Some struggle with English grammar. Working professionals must look for their weak points early. They must not ignore them. So, you should invest at least 15 to 20 minutes daily in topics you are weak in. Break them into small parts. Practice slowly but regularly. On weekends, give more time to weaknesses. Do not let them terrify you. They will become manageable soon after you keep on trying. The goal is not perfection. The goal is to clear cutoffs. In short, when you’ll deal with your weaknesses smartly, you’ll start turning them into your strengths.
Finance and Management are often new for many aspirants. But it is important in Phase 2. Working professionals should start with the basics. Focus on key terms, definitions, and simple examples. Read short notes. Understand concepts like risk, inflation, balance sheets, and leadership theories. Don’t try to cover everything in detail. Cover the most important topics first. Revise them many times. In exams, even elimination works if the basics are strong. FM is scoring if approached smartly. Daily 30 minutes of consistent study is enough.
ESI is a mix of current affairs and concepts. Working professionals can handle this with proper planning. Revise GA sources. Focus more on government schemes, economic surveys, and budget highlights. Learn about inflation, poverty, growth, and social issues. Prepare notes with examples and data. Questions are often linked to current developments. Read a business newspaper summary weekly. This keeps you updated. In exams, apply logic when you don’t know the exact answer. ESI becomes easy if GA is strong and concepts are revised.
English Descriptive can fetch you maximum marks. So, as a working professional, you should not take it lightly. You must practice eassay writing once every week. And when you practice, choose all those topics that are directly or indirectly related to the economy, banking, or social issues.
Keep a simple format of 4 paragraphs, including:
You can also use data and examples wherever possible. But always try your best to stick to the word limit. Then, practice precis and comprehension too. Check your grammar. Even small errors reduce marks. Revise essay structures. With regular writing, English Descriptive becomes your scoring area in Phase 2. Do not leave it for the last moment.
Working and studying is not easy. That’s why health is important. Sleep 6 to 7 hours daily. Avoid late nights every day. Eat light food, drink a lot of water. And exercise, even if it is for 10 to 15 minutes. Stress is not an abnormal thing. Everybody has it. Even the most successful people. So, whenever it comes, try to manage it calmly. Do not overburden yourself. A tired mind cannot learn. Take small breaks. Talk to friends or family members who motivate you most, or those who give you peace to stay motivated. Healthy habits give more energy for studies. RBI Grade B is a long journey. Only a healthy and calm mind can complete it.
The biggest success factor is regularity. Many aspirants start strong but lose pace. Working professionals must avoid this. Even 2 to 3 daily hours are enough if studied daily. Don’t chase too many materials. Revise the same notes again and again. Stay disciplined like an armyman. It will take months, but regular small steps lead to success. RBI Grade B is not about who studies the most. It is about who stays consistent till the end.
Yes, working professionals can clear the RBI Grade B 2025. Even if you start in September 2025, success is possible. But the approach must be smart. Focus on time management, easy areas, GA, and mocks. Start Phase 2 early. Use weekdays for short revisions, weekends for long study. Make notes. Revise them. Stay healthy. Stay consistent. Don’t panic. RBI wants disciplined, consistent officers. You too can be one of them with the right planning and implementation as discussed above. So, you should believe in your abilities and start now with full focus. And yes, success will come.
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Yes. With smart planning and discipline, it is possible.
2 to 3 hours on weekdays, and 6 to 7 hours on weekends.
Yes. It is the most scoring section in Prelims and helps in Phase 2.
Yes. At least the basics should be started early.
Yes. They improve speed, accuracy, and confidence.
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