There are good reasons to use your game-planning session early and good reasons to wait—you basically have to decide what's best for you.
Overall, most people should aim to bail on about 4-5 per section now that there are fewer questions in each section. (Bail is defined as "guess randomly within 20-30 seconds and save all that time for something else.")
If you are going for a Q score of 49+ or V40+, I would plan aim for 3 in your stronger area and 4 in your weaker area. (I have had students bail on 4 quants under the old numbering—37 questions—and still score a 51 in this section. Now that there are only 31 questions, I would guess it's possible to bail on 3 and still get a 51, but I don't know for sure.) Since you are going for a 730, your Q and V scores will need to be in this range, so you should aim for 3 or 4 bails. The key is to do this as early as possible so that you save as much time as possible on each bail.
For others who may be reading this: If you are going for a lower overall score (less than 650), you can increase—up to about 6 or 7.
Next, time management. Go here:
blog/2016/08/19/everything-you-need-to-know-about-gmat-time-management-part-1-of-3/Go through all three parts over the course of this coming week. When you get through part 3, start doing practice problem sets in multiples of 4 (quant) or 9 (verbal).
Speaking of problem sets: At this point in your studies, I recommend mostly mixed sets built out of official problems. You can try a few one-off problems in a specific category area, but mostly you want to practice under real test conditions. More details on how to do that here:
https://www.manhattanprep.com/gmat/blog ... rt-1-of-3/When you do want to try a specific problem, the easy way to find that problem is to look at the Official Guide Problem Sets doc you can find in your student center on our site. But...the easy way won't help you develop your skills quite as much. The harder—but better—way is for you to browse through the Official Guide until you find something that you think falls into that category. (Why? Because the real test isn't going to tell you, hey, we're going to give you a quadratics problem now, okay? They're just going to plop it up on the screen and you have to figure it out.)
So my preference is to use that problem sets doc only to
confirm that I have indeed correctly recognized what a problem was testing—but I have to try to decide first.
Next, maybe 80% of what you learn is going to come *after* you are done working on a problem set. Your
review of the set is really where you learn. For this, use that file that I put in my last post, the one about the 2nd level of learning. That contains the kinds of questions to ask yourself when reviewing a problem. You don't need to ask every single question on every single problem you review—you use them as a guide to figure out which questions you need to ask yourself for this particular problem, based on how the problem went. (And expect to spend
at least twice as long reviewing as doing in the first place. Most of the time, much longer—because your review will make you realize that you need to go back and review part of a chapter or make flash cards for certain things or try more problems in this area or...)
It can be useful to do some random googling on things that are giving you trouble, yes, but as you said—it's hit or miss. If you do that, you want to look for stuff that was specifically built for the GMAT, not "real math / school math" in general, because often, the way stuff would be presented and best solved for a school test is NOT the way you'd want to approach it for the GMAT.
I think it can also be useful to google specific OG problems to see how other people have thought to solve them. There are a lot of forums where people discuss their ideas for solving, so you may pick up some new good approaches that way. If the conversation is ongoing / you can ask someone questions about their approach, make sure to ask
why they decided to approach a problem a certain way. What clues in the problem made them think to try that approach in the first place? Now you know what clues to look for yourself on future, similar problems.