It is worth noting, in my opinion, that my optimisation example illustrates a general exam strategy that I believe is under-utilised, which is:
Keep your eye on your goal.
In this question, my goal was the ratio

, and while that can be found by finding

and

and then dividing them, I am not actually required to find

or

.
In forming equation (2), I recognised that I was planning to use it to eliminate

or

from equation (1). Thus, I expressed (2) in the form that suited simplifying (1), rather than making

the subject and adding an extra line of algebra into the substitution step to get to the equation linking

to

.
As I showed later, rearranging equation (2) gave me a form for

where the only variable present was

.
Thus, I worked with the stationary point being at

. I knew that I could take the cube root if I needed

but recognised also that knowing

was likely to be sufficient. This also told me that using equation (2) to back-substitute and find an exact form for

was likely to be unnecessary.
In other words, I didn't stop to find an explicit form for

or

as neither of them was my goal.
In doing so, I avoided:
This is a strategy that can save you time and possibly also avoid losing marks from mistakes in working that isn't actually needed anyway.