- Home
- /
- Guide
- /
- ABN AMRO Assessment Preparation: Cubiks Talogy Guide
ABN AMRO Assessment Preparation: Cubiks Talogy Guide
Prepare for ABN AMRO assessments with focused Cubiks Talogy practice for reasoning, number sequences, analogies, and timed test formats.
Prepare with the right focus
ABN AMRO assessment invitations are sent by email, and the message usually tells you which parts to prepare for. A calm first step is to check that email carefully so you can focus on the relevant test components instead of trying to cover everything at once.
This practice page is built around the assessment formats most commonly linked to ABN AMRO, including Cubiks (Talogy) and Harver. The main goal is efficient preparation: learn the question styles, then spend your time on the reasoning skills that are most likely to matter.
If you are applying for a traineeship or another role, it helps to treat the preparation as a short checklist rather than a broad study plan. That keeps your practice practical, structured, and easier to repeat under time pressure.
Try a sample question right away
This gives you an immediate feel for the question style and the value of the practice environment.
What to cover first
Start with the core cognitive skills that appear most often in these assessment formats. For ABN AMRO, that usually means verbal reasoning, numerical reasoning, abstract reasoning, and sequence-based questions.
- Read the invitation email first and note which assessment provider is mentioned.
- Practice the question types most often used in Cubiks and Harver.
- Work on timed questions so pace and accuracy develop together.
- Review mistakes briefly and repeat the same skill until it feels familiar.
For many candidates, the best use of time is to begin with analogies, number sequences, figure sequences, and numerical questions based on tables or graphs. These are the areas where early familiarity can make the test feel more manageable.
Practical preparation habits
Keep sessions short and focused. A smaller set of targeted exercises is often more useful than long, unfocused practice, especially when the test is timed.
Use one round of practice to learn the pattern, then a second round to build speed. That sequence helps you avoid rushing before you understand the logic behind the question type.
Pay attention to errors that come from reading too quickly or missing a simple rule. These are often easier to reduce than content gaps, and they can improve your score without adding much study time.
If your invitation refers to Cubiks Logiks General, Logiks Advanced, or a Harver/NOA cognitive assessment, stay with the core reasoning modules and keep the preparation aligned with that format.
A simple way to structure practice
A practical process works better than trying to prepare for everything at once. Begin with the provider named in your invitation, then match your practice to the question types listed there.
Next, complete a few timed sets for the main areas: analogies, numerical reasoning, figure sequences, number sequences, and exclusion. This gives you a realistic picture of how the test feels and where you still lose time.
Finish with a short review of the questions you missed. Focus on the rule, the pattern, or the calculation step that caused the error, then repeat similar items once more to confirm the fix.