I failed my first attempt. Not by much, but enough to have to reschedule. Here's what went wrong and how I fixed it for attempt #2 (which I passed).
Mistake 1: Skimming the question
The AAMS exam is full of questions with words like "EXCEPT," "FIRST," "BEST," or "MOST important." I was answering the question I thought I saw, not the one on the screen. Slowing down and reading every word carefully picked up at least 8-10 points on my retake.
Mistake 2: Studying the wrong things deeply
I spent most of my time on AAMS - Accredited Asset Management Specialist content because it seemed most relevant, but the exam was more balanced than I expected. The BC ADM - Advanced Diabetes Management Certification sections caught me off guard. Use the official content outline to weight your study time proportionally.
Mistake 3: Not timing myself during practice
I ran out of time on about 12 questions on my first attempt. During my retake prep I did every practice test strictly timed and learned to flag and move on rather than getting stuck.
Mistake 4: Overthinking the answers
For business certifications exams specifically, when two answers seem equally right, the correct one is usually the one that's safest, most conservative, or most protective of the client/patient/public. That heuristic alone is worth remembering.
Anyone else have first-attempt war stories? I want this thread to be a resource for people going into their first try.
Thank you for sharing this honestly. The shame around failing an exam is real and it keeps people from talking about what actually helps. I failed my first AAMS attempt too and knowing others have been there makes the retake feel less daunting.
The "safest/most conservative answer" heuristic applies to almost every professional certification exam I've taken. It's essentially asking: "What would a cautious, by-the-book professional do?" That framing helped me enormously.
The timing issue is so real. I actually set a timer for 1 min per question during practice until it became instinct to move on when I was stuck. Flagged questions go fast when you're not starting from scratch on them.
The thing that made the difference for me was treating practice exams like the real test instead of an open-book quiz. First attempt, I'd pause, look stuff up, take little breaks whenever I felt stuck. So I never actually built the stamina or the timing, and on test day I panicked when I couldn't just check something. Round two I sat down and did full timed runs, no notes, no phone, same as the real thing. It felt brutal at first but it's exactly what fixed me.
Honestly the content wasn't even my problem, it was the pressure. Once I'd done a handful of those timed sessions the actual exam felt familiar, almost boring, and that's a good thing. If you've already failed once and you're rescheduling, don't just reread your notes again. Practice under the conditions you'll actually face. That's the part I wish someone had told me.
Just wanted to drop in with a quick update since I've been following this thread. Hit an 81% on my last practice run yesterday, which honestly surprised me because I wasn't feeling confident going in. I've been drilling the aams financial analysis reporting section hard this week and it's finally clicking. Planning to sit the real exam on July 8th so fingers crossed.
The "EXCEPT" and "BEST" thing you mentioned is so real. I missed like four questions on my last mock purely because I read too fast. Slowing down on those qualifier words made a noticeable difference in my scores. You've got this if you caught it early enough to fix it before your retake.
Honestly the thing that saved me on attempt #2 was drilling aams financial analysis reporting questions specifically. I'd been studying everything evenly but that section was where I kept losing points without realizing it. Once I focused there my scores jumped fast.
It's not glamorous advice but just do more practice questions than you think you need. I didn't take it seriously enough the first time and it showed. You'll start to recognize the patterns in how they phrase things and that's really what the exam is testing.
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