Key topics include:
Number systems, HCF & LCM.
Time & Work, Pipes & Cisterns.
Time, Speed & Distance.
Permutations & Combinations; Probability.
Profit & Loss; Simple & Compound Interest.
Geometry & Mensuration; Algebra; Progressions.
Topics include:
Directional Sense; Logical Deduction.
Coding & Decoding; Pattern Analogy; Number Series.
Data Sufficiency; Puzzles; Syllogisms; Blood relations.
Key topics:
Reading Comprehension.
Grammar (Sentence correction, error spotting).
Vocabulary: Synonyms/Antonyms, Fill in the Blanks.
Para-jumbles; Sentence completion.
If the role is technical, topics include:
Basics of computers: data structures, input-output.
Object Oriented Programming (OOP); Code logic.
Operating Systems, DBMS, Networking.
Usually ~ 2 coding questions.
Focus on writing logic in a programming language (C/C++/Java/Python).
Quantitative: ~ 15 questions, ~ 15 minutes.
Logical Reasoning: ~ 15 questions, ~ 15 minutes.
Verbal: ~ 15 questions, ~ 15 minutes.
Computer Fundamentals: ~ 30 questions, ~ 30 minutes (for technical roles)
Coding: ~ 2 questions, ~ 20 minutes.
Total often: ~ 77 questions in ~ 95 minutes (for roles combining all sections)
Cover the quantitative topics thoroughly (especially those frequently asked like time & work, number systems).
Strengthen logical reasoning with puzzles and series questions since they tend to be tricky.
For verbal: practise grammar, comprehension and vocabulary.
For the technical role: pick one programming language you are strong in and revise basics of data structures, OS, DBMS, networking.
Do mock tests simulating the time-limit and section-wise format so you get used to pacing.
Focus on accuracy + speed — many cut-offs depend on both.