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ABN AMRO assessment provider Cubiks Talogy experiences
Learn what candidates commonly experience in ABN AMRO Cubiks and Harver assessments, and how to prepare with focused practice.
What candidates usually notice
ABN AMRO assessment invitations are typically sent by email, and that message usually indicates which assessment parts matter for your application. Checking your inbox regularly is important, because the test format can vary by role and process.
In practice, people often encounter a mix of cognitive ability tests and, in some cases, additional personality or behavioral assessments. The experience is usually time-pressured, so it helps to prepare with short, focused exercises that resemble the test style.
This preparation bundle is aligned with Cubiks (Talogy) and Harver (NOA), which makes it useful for candidates who want a clear view of the most common question types before they start.
Try a sample question right away
This gives you an immediate feel for the question style and the value of the practice environment.
How the preparation maps to the test process
The most practical approach is to start with the assessment components named in your invitation email. For ABN AMRO, that often means working on verbal reasoning, numerical reasoning, abstract reasoning, and related logic tasks.
Cubiks-style assessments commonly include analogies, figure sequences, and arithmetic or numerical reasoning. Harver’s cognitive assessments can also feature number sequences, exclusion tasks, and analogy-based items, so practicing across these formats is useful.
Because these tests are often timed, the main pattern is not just solving correctly but doing so at a steady pace. Familiarity with the layout and the wording can reduce hesitation during the real assessment.
Practical checklist for focused practice
A useful checklist is to match your practice to the invitation, then spend most of your time on the question types that appear most often in Cubiks and Harver assessments.
- Review the invitation email to identify the relevant assessment parts.
- Practice figure sequences, number sequences, and analogies first.
- Work on numerical reasoning with tables, graphs, and short calculations.
- Use timed drills to build pace and reduce avoidable errors.
- Treat personality or behavioral parts as separate from the cognitive exercises.
This kind of preparation is especially helpful for candidates who want to feel more comfortable with Logiks Advanced or Cubiks Logiks General (Intermediate), since the same core skills appear across these formats.
Common patterns seen in the question types
Candidates often find that analogies test relationships between words or concepts, while figure sequences focus on changes in shape, direction, position, or size. These items reward careful pattern recognition rather than broad knowledge.
Numerical reasoning usually asks you to extract information from a chart or table and use it quickly. In many cases, the challenge is less about advanced mathematics and more about staying accurate under time pressure.
For sequence and exclusion tasks, the main habit is to look for the rule before guessing. A calm, systematic approach usually works better than trying to move too quickly through every question.
What the assessment experience tends to look like
The overall experience is usually straightforward if you know what to expect: an emailed invitation, a timed online assessment, and a set of question types that focus on reasoning and speed. The details in the email should guide your preparation.
Candidates who practice with the core Cubiks and Harver formats often report that the real assessment feels more manageable because the structure is familiar. That familiarity can make it easier to keep focus when the timer starts.
If you are preparing for ABN AMRO, the safest strategy is to combine targeted practice with regular email checks, so you do not miss any instructions about the specific assessment components.