Hey y'all, dropping in from the 2021 thread to wish everybody good luck! I just wanted to pass on a couple pieces of advice that were helpful to me during my cycle.
1. Start working on your personal statements early. I had a very rough draft done around mid-June, and then went back and edited it about 30 mins a week. I think it really helps you to have time to develop it organically and you can add in meaningful experiences immediately as they occur, which keeps it more fresh. Also make sure you get a number of different eyes on it (specialty advisors, general advisors, friends with writing backgrounds)
2. Asking for letters of recommendation sucks and it feels awkward, but it's part of an attending's job to write them for you and many of them will be flattered that you asked them.
3. If you're planning on doing a surgical sub-i, your ability to handle floor work is going to impress the residents a lot more than any OR skills you have. Don't abandon the floor at the first opportunity to go to the OR - if assigned cases for the day end early, try to help out with consults, and go back to the OR for other cases only once that work is done. You also get to do a lot more when you stay late/outside of when you'd be expected to be there - one resident let me do an entire progressive tension abdominal closure, including fascia, and an attending let me attempt a nerve coaption because I was still there at 1 AM for a limb reattachment.
4. Take step 2 as early as possible to get it out of the way, but don't sacrifice your score to get it early. Make sure you have a 2 week block relatively free to study for it. I didn't follow this advice, and it was super annoying having to study for it later in the year after my sub-is when I had forgotten all general medicine.
5. For personal statements, don't undervalue the worth of adding a program specific paragraph for places that you're really interested in. I had strong geographic preferences, and I wrote a little additional paragraph in my PS for the programs in that area, basically just saying why I was so interested in that program (I mentioned research time, faculty connections, and only THEN location - location, even if it's your #1 reason for interest in a program should always be discussed last. Programs want to hear about how special they are, not that they're located somewhere you want to live). I went 5/5 with interviews at places where I sent personalized personal statements.