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Sri Vallabha, the determined mechanical engineer from IIT Bombay, left his job, built strong reading habits as well as improved his comprehension solving skill across diverse content to make his weakness into one of his strengths, which in turn made one of the CAT 2025 Toppers. Sri Vallabha, CAT 2025 from Tirupati scored 115.96 overall (99.94 percentile) while 96.96 percentile , 99.46 percentile and 99.98 percentile in VARC, DILR and QA respectively in CAT 2025. Vallabha internally knew that his last CAT attempt was not as good as he was expecting because of his Achilles heel VARC Section.He panicked during the section on the CAT exam date, and when the result was out, despite scoring 98.6 overall percentile, he missed out on top B-Schools in India due to his low percentile in VARC (80 percentile).
However, this CAT 2025 toppers retrospected, learned from his mistake of the previous CAT attempt, and took his CAT 2025 percentile in VARC section from 80 percentile to 96.96 percentile CAT 2025 VARC section played a crucial role to make Sri Vallabha one of the candidates of the CAT 2025 Toppers List.
With 115.96 CAT scaled score, in CAT 2025 Sri Vallabha achieved 99.94 percentile which might turn out to be enough for his dream of getting into IIM BLACKIs. In this exclusive interview with Careers360 Sri Vallabha Discussed about his CAT preparation, his CAT VARC preparation, how he turned the his weakness into strength, how he turned his agony of last year into cheer this year
Careers360: Congratulations on being one of the CAT 2025 toppers! What was your reaction? Were you expecting this?
Sri Vallabha : Thank you so much! I was extremely happy when I learned about the CAT 2025 result. I knew the CAT 2025 results were scheduled to be released around 6 PM, but to my surprise, one of my close friends called me around 3:30 PM to share the news that the CAT 2025 result can be accessed through a link. I had been fast asleep at the time, so it took me a few moments to fully process what had happened and come to my senses.
Once it sank in, the happiness was overwhelming. Yes, I was cautiously confident about my CAT 2025 performance. This was my second CAT attempt, and I had put in a tremendous amount of focused and disciplined effort over the year. Seeing that hard work translate into this result was deeply satisfying.
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Careers360: Can you tell us a little about your educational and personal background?
Sri Vallabha: I come from a middle-class family in Tirupati. My father is the Director of the TTD Goshala, my mother is a Deputy Manager at the State Bank of India, and I have a younger brother who is currently in the 8th standard.
Academically, I pursued Mechanical Engineering at IIT Bombay. After graduation, I worked for two years at DCM Shriram as a Technical Management Trainee. I later decided to leave my job to pursue my goal of an MBA.
Careers360: What got you interested in the management domain and this examination?
Sri Vallabha: My interest in management developed during my time at DCM Shriram, where I was exposed to decision-making that went beyond pure technical execution. I realized that while technical skills help solve specific problems, managerial decisions determine scale, and long-term impact.
This realization motivated me to pursue formal management courses, and CAT emerged as the natural choice.
Careers360: How long have you been preparing for the CAT 2025?
Sri Vallabha: I have been appearing for CAT for the past two years. In CAT 2024, I scored an overall percentile of around 98.6 but missed out on qualifying due to the VARC sectional, where I scored close to 80 percentile. This year, I focused extensively on improving that weakness, and the jump from 80 to 97 percentile in VARC played a crucial role in helping me secure an overall percentile of 99.94 in CAT 2025.
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Careers360: How did you motivate yourself after the last attempt?
Sri Vallabha: Naturally, I was disappointed after my CAT 2024 attempt, as I knew right after the examination that I hadn’t performed to my potential. However, the aspiration to pursue an MBA from the top IIMs remained a strong motivating factor, which pushed me to reattempt CAT with renewed focus and determination this year.
Careers360: According to you, what went right this year, compared to the last year's CAT attempt ?
Sri Vallabha: Last year, I panicked during the VARC section, which created a domino effect and impacted my performance in both DILR and QA. This year, I focused extensively on building consistency and mental composure, especially for tough papers, and was able to replicate the same thing in the final examination by staying calm throughout. Also, I focused a little more on VARC than last year.
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Careers360: How was your preparation different from that of last year which ultimately led to success.
Sri Vallabha: VARC had always been a drag on my overall score. Earlier, I believed that continuously practicing RCs alone would be sufficient, but my experience in CAT 2024 challenged that assumption. I realized that my core issue was not practice, but reading depth and comprehension. Thanks to Sayali Ma'am and Cracku, she helped me understand what changes needed to be done in my attempt.
I then changed my VARC strategy by first focusing on building a strong reading habit and improving comprehension across diverse content. After several months of consistent reading, I began taking sectionals and mocks, where I started noticing a clear improvement in my scores. I continued with the same routine of regular reading from multiple sources and focused practice, which ultimately helped me strengthen my VARC performance.
Careers360: How was your exam day experience? Which slot did you appear in?
Sri Vallabha: I appeared in Slot 2 of CAT 2025. During my preparation, I consistently tried to replicate the actual exam scenario in my mocks, treating each test as if it were the final one. Over time, I adapted to the pressure, which helped me stay calm and composed during the actual examination.
Careers360: What was your last-minute preparation strategy for CAT?
Sri Vallabha: QA has always been my strong suit, so I did not require extensive revision, as most formulas and methods were intuitive for me as a part of QA preparation strategy . For DILR, I practiced all previous years’ questions from 2017 to 2024, which I believe helped significantly during the examination. As per my CAT VARC strategy , consistently reading The Hindu articles every morning helped me maintain momentum and carry that rhythm into the exam.
Careers360: What according to you were the toughest and easiest sections?
Sri Vallabha: In Slot 2, I personally felt that VARC and QA were on the lengthier side, while DILR was slightly tougher compared to the other two sections. Overall, all three sections were in line with the difficulty level one would expect from a typical CAT examination.
Careers360: How did you approach your strong and weak areas during preparation?
Sri Vallabha: VARC had been my weak section, which I have already discussed, while QA has always been my strong area. For Quant, I mainly practiced through CRACKU’s study room, which helped me improve accuracy and avoid silly mistakes in the final examination. For DILR, apart from mock analysis from CRACKU and IMS I've practiced previous year questions.
Careers360: Did you take coaching? How helpful was your coaching institute for you? Is it possible to succeed through self-study?
Sri Vallabha : Yes, I took coaching from CRACKU, primarily for the study room and daily targets. I found these particularly useful as they provide structured practice and consistency, especially for aspirants who are already familiar with the CAT exam pattern and core topics.
I have seen many aspirants who have cracked CAT with flying colors through self-study, so it is definitely possible. However, it requires a high level of discipline, consistency, and sustained effort to do so.
Careers360: What are the factors behind your success?
Sri Vallabha: My family’s trust, my friends’ support and guidance, my discipline have been very instrumental in my success
Careers360: Have you started preparing for GD/PI/WAT?
Sri Vallabha: Yes, now that the results are out, I have started preparing for GDPI.
Careers360: Which other MBA entrance exam have you appeared/appearing for?
Sri Vallabha: I have registered for XAT and SNAP. Alongside my GDPI preparation, I am also preparing for XAT.
Careers360: Which is your dream B-School? From which colleges are you expecting a call?
Sri Vallabha: Like most CAT aspirants, my dream institutes are IIM A, B, and C. While there are only marginal differences among them, I do have a slight preference for IIM Bangalore due to its proximity. That said, I would be equally happy to join any of the ABC institutes. I am also expecting calls from all the BLACKI IIMs.
Careers360: What are your hobbies? Did they play any part in your CAT preparations?
Sri Vallabha: My hobbies include watching movies, playing volleyball with friends, and reading novels. Reading novels helped improve my focus and comprehension, which indirectly supported my VARC preparation, while sports and movies helped me relax and manage stress during the preparation phase.
Careers360: What is your message for next year's CAT takers?
Sri Vallabha: For all the aspirants out there, drawing from my personal experience, don’t romanticize the end result. Romanticize the CAT Journey. The day you stop obsessing over percentiles and start respecting daily effort, things genuinely begin to change. Consistency beats intensity every single time. You don’t need 12-hour study days, you need honest 3–4 hours done every day without excuses.
Identify your weak links early and attack them without ego. If something feels uncomfortable (like VARC did for me once), that’s exactly where your growth is hiding. Use mocks not to feel good, but to feel exposed.
Most importantly, stop comparing timelines. Someone else’s 99 doesn’t reduce your chances. This exam rewards patience, self-awareness, and resilience far more than raw intelligence.
If you show up daily, trust the process, and keep your head steady on bad days, the result will eventually have no option but to follow.
On Question asked by student community
Hello,
Here are some top colleges accepting XAT and CAT exams :
Top colleges accepting CAT:
IIMs (All Indian Institutes of Management)
FMS Delhi
SPJIMR Mumbai
MDI Gurgaon
IIT Bombay (SJMSOM)
IIT Delhi (DMS)
IIFT
IMT Ghaziabad
JBIMS Mumbai
Top colleges accepting XAT:
XLRI Jamshedpur
XIMB Bhubaneswar
IMT Ghaziabad
Great
Hi ,
can you please specify the question like in NIT trichy are you looking for admission in B. tech program .
If yes for B. tech program then JEE main exam is necessary and the cut off for each branch may vary.
https://engineering.careers360.com/articles/jee-main-cutoff-for-nit-trichy
Hi there,
A female candidate with a CAT percentile of 67.97 and low sectional scores should target private and tier-2/3 B-schools that accept overall CAT scores in the 60–70 percentile range and have flexible sectional criteria.
Some suitable options include AIMS Institute Bangalore, Doon Business School Dehradun, Christ Institute of
Hi dear candidate,
Although, the older and prestigious IIMs require 97 to 99 percentile which is not applicable in your case. The IIM Rohtak and IIM Shillong might be your closest calls with historically cut off range around 91 to 93 percentile in CAT especially with strong hold for female
Hi there,
Yes, you are eligible for XISS Ranchi with a CAT percentile of 67.60.
According to recent admission trends, the CAT cutoff for the PGDM in Human Resource Management for the general category has been around 60 percentile. For other programs such as Marketing, Finance, and Rural Management, the
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