MS-900 with zero IT background — passed in 3 weeks, here's the breakdown
Cleared the MS-900 last Tuesday, 865/1000. I'm in finance, not IT, so I had basically zero context going in. Spent about 3 weeks studying, roughly 90 minutes a day. Wanted to write this up while it's fresh because the advice I found online was scattered.
The biggest thing that helped was doing a MS-900 practice test on day one before touching any study material. It showed me I was already okay on cloud concepts but completely lost on compliance and licensing. That let me front-load study time where it actually mattered instead of reviewing stuff I'd pick up naturally anyway.
Microsoft Learn is free and covers everything on the exam, but it's dry. I used it as a reference rather than a primary source. The licensing and subscription sections are genuinely confusing and took me about 4 days to feel solid on. Don't underestimate that part just because it sounds administrative.
Final week was all practice questions and reviewing any topic where I scored below 70% in mock tests. Went into test day averaging 88% on practices and that felt like a fair predictor.
Cloud concepts is the easiest domain for most people — don't over-study it. Put your hours into security, compliance, and the licensing matrix. That's consistently where people lose points on this exam.
865 is a solid score for a non-IT background. I passed at 820 last month and felt like the compliance section was heavier than I expected from any study guide I used. Spend real time on GDPR, data residency, and Trust Center concepts.
The licensing questions tripped me up too. Microsoft's own docs are the most accurate source but they're written for admins, not exam takers. I made a comparison table for M365 Business vs Enterprise plans and that helped it stick better than any guide I found.
Just scheduled mine for two weeks out. Starting with a diagnostic test first makes way more sense than grinding the full Microsoft Learn path from the beginning. Probably saves 3-4 hours of reviewing stuff you don't need to touch.