Passed my CLM last month — here's what actually worked

by brett_l 929 views6 replies
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brett_lOP
May 25, 2026

I wrapped up my CLM after about 10 weeks of prep, studying 90 minutes a day on weekdays and closer to 3 hours on Saturdays. The exam was harder than I expected on the coaching frameworks section — I scored 78% overall, which cleared the 70% passing threshold, but I had to grind for it.

The biggest surprise was how much emphasis there is on situational leadership models versus theoretical content. I'd spent roughly 40% of my study time on leadership theory and only 20% on scenario-based questions, which was backwards.

If I were doing it again I'd flip that ratio and spend the first two weeks purely on practice scenarios. The ethics and professional responsibility section also carries more weight than it looks in the outline — maybe 25% of what I saw touched on that domain somehow.

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amelia_f
May 26, 2026

I took mine 6 months ago and scored 74% on the first attempt. The scenario questions are where most people pass or fail, so that advice tracks. It's easy to overthink those when they're really just testing whether you know the model.

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rashid_c
May 27, 2026

I took 12 weeks and probably over-prepared — the exam wasn't as rough as the forums suggested. My score was 82% and I don't think I needed every hour I put in.

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chloe_g
May 28, 2026

What study materials did you use? I'm on week 4 and feeling shaky on the communication competency sections. I've been doing about an hour a day and might bump it to 90 minutes.

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jordan_k
May 28, 2026

The ethics content being embedded throughout rather than isolated is something I didn't catch until my second read of the candidate handbook. Would've changed how I organized my notes if I'd known earlier.

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PassedIt2025
June 18, 2026

I almost bailed around week six. Honestly wasn't sure the material was clicking and I kept bombing the coaching frameworks practice questions, which made me feel like I was just spinning my wheels. What got me through was switching how I was reviewing wrong answers — instead of just noting the right answer, I started writing out why the wrong ones were wrong, and that changed something for me.

Ended up passing with a 74%, which isn't glamorous but it's a pass. If you're in that rough middle stretch where nothing feels like it's sticking, just keep going. It's not linear and that's frustrating, but I promise it starts to consolidate. The last two weeks felt completely different from week five.

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PrepKing_J
June 18, 2026

This is such good advice, and I'd add one thing that changed everything for me: whenever I got a practice question wrong, I didn't just look at the right answer and move on. I'd actually sit with the wrong choices and figure out why they were wrong, not just "oh it's not D." That clicked for me especially on goal-setting stuff — I used the clm clm goal setting performance measurement practice test and forced myself to write out a one-sentence reason each wrong option failed. Took longer, but it wasn't wasted time.

The coaching frameworks section tripped me up too. I kept confusing models that look similar on the surface, and memorizing the right answer wasn't helping. Once I understood the logic behind why one framework applies over another, it's like the exam stopped feeling like a guessing game. You'll still see tricky questions, but at least you're working from understanding instead of just vibes.

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