Introduction
You studied the syllabus.
You read current affairs.
You wrote answers.
Yet your marks are stuck at 40–50.
This is the most frustrating phase of RBI Grade B preparation—when effort is high, but results are stagnant.
The truth is uncomfortable:
Your answers are not getting marks not because you lack knowledge—but because you are not writing what the examiner wants to reward.
This post breaks down the real reasons why your answers are not scoring—and what exactly you need to fix.
The Core Problem: Misalignment with Examiner Expectations
Most aspirants write answers from their own perspective:
- “What I know”
- “What I studied”
But RBI evaluates based on:
- Structure
- Relevance
- Policy thinking
- Analytical depth
👉 This gap creates low scores—even with decent content.
The 8 Real Reasons Your Answers Are Not Getting Marks
1. Your Answer Lacks Structure
What You Do:
- Write in long, unorganized paragraphs
- No clear introduction or conclusion
What Examiner Sees:
“Unclear thinking”
Fix:
Follow a fixed format:
- Introduction
- Multi-dimensional body
- Policy linkage
- Conclusion
👉 Structure alone can improve your score significantly.
2. You Are Writing Generic Content
What You Do:
- Use common lines
- Repeat basic points
Example:
“This is important for economic development.”
What Examiner Sees:
“No depth, no uniqueness”
Fix:
- Add specific arguments
- Use cause-effect analysis
- Avoid vague statements
3. You Are Not Integrating Current Affairs Properly
What You Do:
- Either ignore current affairs
- Or randomly insert news
What Examiner Sees:
“Lack of application”
Fix:
Follow:
Concept → Current Example → Impact
👉 Integration matters more than information.
4. Missing Policy Linkage (Biggest Scoring Gap)
What You Do:
- Ignore RBI role
- No mention of schemes
What Examiner Sees:
“Incomplete answer”
Fix:
Always include:
- RBI initiatives
- Government programs
- Regulatory perspective
👉 Policy linkage is non-negotiable for high scores.
5. No Use of Data or Reports
What You Do:
- Write opinion-based answers
What Examiner Sees:
“Lack of credibility”
Fix:
Include:
- Economic Survey
- RBI Reports
- NITI Aayog
- IMF / World Bank
👉 Even 1–2 data points can elevate your answer.
6. Poor Time Management
What You Do:
- Spend too much time on one answer
- Leave paper incomplete
What Examiner Sees:
Incomplete evaluation opportunity
Fix:
- Pre-plan time per question
- Stick to limits
👉 Completion is essential for scoring.
7. Weak Introduction & Conclusion
What You Do:
- Start vaguely
- End abruptly
What Examiner Sees:
“Immature answer”
Fix:
- Start with definition + context
- End with solution + policy direction
👉 First and last impression matter.
8. No Evaluation = No Improvement
What You Do:
- Practice without feedback
What Happens:
- Same mistakes repeated
- No score improvement
Reality:
You cannot improve what you cannot see.
Fix:
- Get answers evaluated
- Identify mistakes
- Apply corrections
The Hidden Reason: You Are Practicing the Wrong Way
Most aspirants:
- Focus on reading
- Ignore writing quality
- Avoid time-bound practice
👉 Result:
Knowledge increases, marks do not.
The 60+ Answer Blueprint (What Examiner Rewards)
High-scoring answers always include:
- Clear structure
- Multi-dimensional analysis
- Relevant current affairs
- Strong policy linkage
- Supporting data
- Balanced conclusion
👉 Missing even one element reduces marks.
The Turning Point: From Effort to Output
To improve your marks:
- Stop writing randomly
- Start writing strategically
Shift from:
- Writing more → Writing better
- Reading more → Applying more
- Practicing → Improving
The Bank Whizz Insight
The biggest gap in RBI preparation is:
Lack of answer-level correction
Bank Whizz solves this through:
- Line-by-line evaluation
- Examiner-style feedback
- Targeted improvement strategy
👉 This converts effort into marks.
Final Action Plan
If your marks are stuck:
- Fix your structure
- Add policy linkage
- Integrate static + current
- Use data
- Practice under time
- Get evaluated
👉 These are not suggestions—they are requirements.
Conclusion
Your answers are not getting marks because they are not aligned with what RBI rewards.
Once you:
- Understand the examiner
- Fix your mistakes
- Practice with purpose
Your score will not just improve—it will transform.
And when that happens,
60+ is no longer difficult—it becomes inevitable.
