Jagrati Awasthi: AIR 2 in UPSC CSE 2020, Strategy, and the Story Behind the Rank

An electronics engineer from Bhopal picks Sociology as her optional subject. She sits for UPSC twice. In her second attempt, she lands All India Rank 2

An electronics engineer from Bhopal picks Sociology as her optional subject. She sits for UPSC twice. In her second attempt, she lands All India Rank 2

An IIT Bombay Civil Engineering graduate. Three attempts. Anthropology as an optional subject. And an interview score of 182 out of 275, one of the highest recorded in recent UPSC history.

A Computer Science engineer with a JP Morgan offer in hand chose Sociology and civil services instead. She was 22 years old.

One year, she could not clear the CSAT. The very next attempt, she secured All India Rank 4 in one of the world's toughest examinations.

She failed to clear UPSC Prelims in her first attempt. Then she failed again in her second. Two attempts, two Prelims failures, zero Mains appearances.

His teachers in Odisha had saved his father's phone number as "Animesh IAS" years before he ever appeared for the exam. His father, a Political Science lecturer,

What does it take to top India's hardest exam at 22, in your very first attempt, as the first Dalit woman in history to ever do so? For Tina Dabi,

If you secured AIR 2 in the UPSC Civil Services Examination, most people would assume you walked away with IAS. Anmol Sher Singh Bedi chose IFS instead.

Most aspirants treat a fourth unsuccessful attempt as a signal to stop. Nandini K R treated it as preparation for a fifth. That fifth attempt made her the top-ranked IAS officer in the entire country in 2016.

She was not studying in a library with eight uninterrupted hours ahead of her. She was preparing for UPSC around her toddler's nap times, meal schedules, and bedtime routines.