Welcome to the first of the minefield of exams you have to step through in order to become a WSET Ⓡ Master of Wine! The WSET 4 D1 on Wine Production essentially tests your knowledge of everything that happened to the wine in your glass to make it the way it is, from shoot to shelf (Read: vineyard site, rootstock, climate, soil conditions, vine diseases, fermentation, barrel aging, bottling, and distribution.)

In other words, you’ve got your work cut out for you! But that’s why you’re here, reading this guide, which is not just about how to pass the WSET 4 D1 exam (with distinction) but also how to set yourself up for enormous success in all of your subsequent WSET Level 4 Diploma exams!

This brings us to our first important point, after which we’ll walk you through some powerful tips for efficient and effective studying of that mountain of content. And it’s this …

The WSET 4 D1 module establishes an important foundation for all subsequent modules

D1 Wine Production lays a fundamental foundation of knowledge on viticulture and wine-making, which teaches you “the WHAT” so that when it comes to D2 (Wine Business), D3 (Wines of the World), D4 (Sparkling Wines) and D5 (Fortified Wines) you can answer “the WHY”.

If you treat this module as the foundation for all future learning—and are good about regular review so that your knowledge is always fresh and accessible—you’ll set yourself up to do extremely well later on. I’ll give you an excellent tool for that kind of review in just a little bit. But first, let’s get started on our best tips for learning WSET Level 4 Diploma content…

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Key study tips for the WSET 4 D1 module on Wine Production

Dusty old wine bottles

The WSET Diploma D1 concludes with a memory-heavy exam and so much of the advice we have for you is how to efficiently approach, sort, study, and remember the most crucial information. Then, in the next session, we’ll talk about hacks you can use on the actual day of the WSET level 4 exam to make your life a little easier.

Tip # 1: Create a detailed study schedule

No successful military leader in history rushed into combat without a battle strategy and so this too should be your starting point: drawing up a detailed plan of attack on the enormous amount of content you need to learn to pass WSET 4 D1. (You can find Brainscape's free, customizable study planners and exam countdown sheets here!)

Gather together all your resources—textbook, required and recommended reading, and Brainscape’s certified WSET 4 D1 flashcards, as well as practice WSET diploma exam questions and group tastings—and portion that out into daily, weekly, and monthly study goals. Write them down or draw them up into a visual plan that you can refer to every day.

A detailed daily study schedule like this will ensure that you:

  • Stay on track throughout your studies;
  • Allocate more time to your weaknesses; and
  • Efficiently learn new content while constantly reviewing older material (so that you don’t just forget it by the time the exam rolls around).

Make sure you stick to this schedule and also work in a few “rest days” of lighter content review. And, like we said, make use of the customizable study planners and exam countdown sheets we've already put together for students just like you.

Pro Tip: Everything you need to know about what’s tested in the WSET Diploma exam on Wine Production is thoroughly explained in the Official Specification Sheet, so make sure you align your study plan closely with that.

Tip # 2: Use (adaptive) flashcards to understand & memorize the facts

In our previous tip, we hammered home the importance of daily content review. The reason for this is simple: without it, you’ll simply forget the older material you cover as you relentlessly learn the new stuff. And since the WSET level 4 Diploma teaches an enormous amount of information, the last thing you can afford to do is forget anything.

This is where Brainscape’s legendary study tool can help you (1) prioritize the most important information, (2) learn and understand the facts, (3) efficiently memorize them, and (4) conveniently review anytime, anywhere, and on any device; even offline.

WSET Level 4 Diploma flashcards
Brainscape’s WSET Level 4 Diploma collection features 929 engaging flashcards, neatly organized into 11 different decks, tackling EVERYTHING you need to know to ace the D1 Wine Production exam!

I’m talking about our certified WSET Level 4 D1 flashcards. This comprehensive collection of 920+ flashcards (neatly organized into 11 decks) has been created by our experienced team of wine experts, who themselves have run the gauntlet of the Diploma exams.

Together, they have broken down the most current WSET 4 D1 curriculum into individual adaptive flashcards, which leverage the learning power of spaced repetition, metacognition, and active recall to help you learn, understand, and remember the most important content TWICE as efficiently as any other study method.

Each flashcard delivers a nugget of crucial information in the form of a question and an answer (as you’ll see in the picture above). And to ensure that you understand how that answer weaves into the greater tapestry of wine production, there’s always a little (italicized) explanation beneath.

WSET Level 4 Diploma flashcards
Through its engaging and colorful user interface, Brainscape’s flashcards deliver facts in short question-and-answer pairs (shown in the image above: question on the left; answer on the right). You then rate how well you know the answer to the question on a scale of 1 to 5, which will determine how often our spaced repetition algorithm shows you that flashcard again.

What happens next? You rate yourself on a scale of 1 to 5 on how well you knew that particular piece of information, and this determines how frequently you’ll see that card again. It’s called spaced repetition and it’s literally how your brain is hardwired to learn information.

By leveraging it, therefore, Brainscape’s adaptive flashcards are able to help you learn TWICE as efficiently, while drilling you on your knowledge weaknesses until they become strengths. Our app won’t let you forget anything either—even those concepts you’ve rated a 5. Every now and then, those flashcards will pop up to make sure that knowledge is fresh.

So, get Brainscape’s certified WSET 4 D1 flashcards to help you study more efficiently. And if you upgrade to Brainscape Pro, you’ll get uncompromised access to ALL of our wine flashcards, including our certified collection for:

Tip # 3: Lean on a study group for support

Wine tasting

Many WSET Level 4 Diploma students find studying in groups to be pivotal to their success, which is unsurprising. A study group can:

  • Provide a ton of support, if you struggle with any of the content,
  • Motivate you to study and hold you accountable when you’d otherwise procrastinate,
  • Help you consolidate your knowledge through teaching,
  • Be a great source of feedback on practice essays and essay outlines, and
  • Make tasting sessions way more fun and affordable, since you can split the cost of the bottles you need to buy.

Plus, at the WSET Diploma level, most students take their studies seriously so you shouldn’t have to worry about any slackers. So get yourself into a study group and try to meet every week. (Just make sure you read our guide on ‘When to study in groups and how to do it’ beforehand.)

Tip # 4: Teach what you learn

One of the best ways to really embed a new topic in your brain is by teaching it. It’s called the Feynman Technique and here’s how it works …

Find a willing victim (or just use your comatose cat or potted plant) and explain the topic or concept as though you are talking to a sixth grader. In other words, explain it in simple terms from the ground up so that even a young person could understand it. Then, scaffold the details onto the foundations you’ve established to explain the topic in its entirety from beginning to end.

If you can effectively do this, then you indeed know the topic really well.

Of course, it’s not always smooth sailing: at first, you may haltingly proceed your way through “your lecture”, stopping and starting as you refer to your notes and flashcards. But with repetition, you should be able to smoothly explain your way through the whole topic without any prompting. This isn’t pure memorization; it’s a deeply ingrained understanding.

So, when you’ve had enough of studying, reading the textbook, making notes, and running through flashcards, use the Feynman Technique to consolidate your knowledge and tie everything together.

Read: Use the Feynman Technique to make knowledge STICK

Tips for taking the WSET Level 4 Diploma 1 exam

Students taking an exam

Now that we’ve equipped you with the best tools and advice for studying all of that wine content more efficiently, let’s turn our attention to the actual WSET 4 Diploma exam and what you can do to optimize your performance. For starters, this exam consists only of essay questions, which brings us to our first tip…

Tip # 5: Practice your essay-writing skills

Unlike any other WSET exam you may have taken before, the WSET 4 D1 is essay-only, which means there is nothing else to fall back on if you suck at writing. No multiple-choice questions and no tasting exam. Only essays. So best you get good at writing!

How? PRACTICE. Source some past WSET diploma exam questions and practice writing out full essays for them. Equally as important, however, is to get detailed feedback from your study group or certified WSET tutor, not only on your essay’s content, but also on your writing style, formatting, and structure. If there is a single thing wrong with the way you write your essays, you’re going to want to know about it early on, so that you can work on improving.

Tip # 6: Understand how the exam is graded so that you can manage your time

Exam time management

In the WSET Level 3 exam, essays—or short-answer questions—were pretty simple to navigate in that the mark allocation told you how many facts you needed to supply. If a question was marked out of five, there were five pieces of information required of you.

The WSET 4 D1 is different, and understanding HOW it’s difficult is important in helping you negotiate its questions. For Diploma, questions are given as a percentage of the total exam score. So, instead of having a mark allocation of five points, a question may account for 5% of your total test score. Or there might be four worth 25% or two worth 50%, or a combination. (In other words, “1 mark = 1 fact” is out.)

What this percentage tells you is how much of your time you should allocate to each question. A question worth 10% accounts for, surprise, 10% of your exam’s points, while one worth 50% accounts for HALF. Spend the appropriate amount of time answering each (10% and 50% respectively) and not a minute more, unless you have time to spare.

Tip # 7: Know the “command words” and what they require of you

The next logical question is if the WSET 4 D1 exam doesn’t have mark allocations for every question, how do you know how much information to provide in your written responses?” You won’t know exactly, but the command words—like “define”, “describe”, “explain”, or “compare”—will give you a good idea of how much detail is expected.

If the question says “describe”, it’s obviously expecting more than just a one-liner. If it says “compare”, you’ll probably have to define two different or similar things and then relate them to each other. The percentage score and command words will tell you just how in-depth your response should be and then just be thorough, without squandering more time than is necessary.

The best way to understand this balancing act is, once again, through practice so make sure you get plenty of that in before your exam!

Tip # 8: Answer the “easy” questions first

Excited woman celebrating

Begin your exam by answering the questions you feel the most confident in first. Don’t pass up on easy points by leaving the “easy questions” for last so get them done and then tackle the harder questions. Remember, all you need is 55% to pass so if you begin by smashing out a 10% question here, a 5% question there, and perhaps another 10%, you’ll be well on your way!

Tip # 9: Memorize a “topic grid” to help you remember points to raise when constructing answers

In response to an essay question, it’s not a matter of IF but WHEN you’re going to forget to mention an element or two (or more) involved in wine production. This is because there’s a crushing avalanche of information you need to remember, not only about wine-making itself but about what happens to the wine after it’s bottled. And when you’re sitting there in the exam venue, sweating bullets with anxiety, your chances of forgetting something (and leaving marks on the table) are only going to compound.

So, in preparation, memorize a simple grid that lays out all those crucial factors. It could look a little something like this:

WSET Diploma examination grid

Then, when the exam starts, quickly jot this grid onto a piece of paper and use it as a totally legal reference tool when you compose your responses to each question (particularly the more complex ones). This will prevent you from forgetting any important factors and, in doing so, leaving marks on the table.

For example, let’s say you get a question about site selection for a new vineyard. A quick look over your grid would immediately help you isolate keywords like location, heat, soil, water, nutrients, laws, and pests. Right off the bat, that’s seven coherent concerns you can discuss in your answer, which is WAY better than getting flustered and forgetting something.

Pro Tip: You can even use Brainscape to help memorize such a grid by making a flashcard that reads “What are the important factors to consider when writing about viticulture?” To which the answer would be “Land, location, water, heat, pests, soil, nutrients, ripeness, flavor, sugar, harvesting.” And then repeat that for the other three columns.

Final thoughts on the WSET 4 D1 module on Wine Production

Sommelier tasting red wine

So, there you have 9 super useful tips for passing the WSET 4 D1 exam on Wine Production:

Tip # 1: Create a detailed study schedule

Tip # 2: Use (adaptive) flashcards to understand & memorize the facts

Tip # 3: Lean on a study group for support

Tip # 4: Teach what you learn (to a cat or basil plant)

Tip # 5: Practice your essay-writing skills

Tip # 6: Understand how the exam is graded so that you can manage your time

Tip # 7: Know the “command words” and what they require of you

Tip # 8: Answer the “easy” questions first

Tip # 9: Memorize a “topic grid” to help you remember points to raise when constructing answers

Now all that’s left to say is that we wish you the very best ahead of this important exam. Know that with dedicated daily studying, question practice, and review you can and you will rise to the challenge of the WSET Diploma!

And when you’re ready to move onto your next module, know that Brainscape has got your back with these awesome resources:


*Disclaimer: Brainscape has worked with top wine experts to supplement the official publications and preparation offered by WSET. We are not officially endorsed by or connected to WSET itself.