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ABN AMRO Cubiks (Talogy) Assessment Practice Tips
Prepare for ABN AMRO’s Cubiks and Harver assessments with focused practice tips for reasoning tests, time pressure, and invitation-based prep.
Practical preparation for ABN AMRO assessments
ABN AMRO may invite candidates to an online assessment that includes cognitive ability tests and, in some cases, personality or behavioral assessments. The invitation email is the best place to check which parts matter for your application, so it is worth monitoring your inbox closely after you apply.
This page is aimed at candidates who want to prepare with a decision-making lens: focus first on the test types most likely to appear, then spend your time where it can improve speed, accuracy, and confidence under time pressure.
The practice material is relevant for ABN AMRO applicants preparing for Cubiks (Talogy) and Harver (NOA) assessments, including common formats such as numerical reasoning, figure sequences, number sequences, analogies, and related aptitude tasks.
Try a sample question right away
This gives you an immediate feel for the question style and the value of the practice environment.
Focus your practice on the likely test format
Start by matching your preparation to the assessment provider named in your email. Cubiks and Harver use different platforms, but both usually reward familiar test logic, careful reading, and steady pacing.
If your invitation mentions Cubiks, prioritize verbal and abstract reasoning work such as analogies, figure sequences, and numerical reasoning. If it mentions Harver, give extra attention to number sequences, exclusion, and similar cognitive tasks.
Use timed practice from the start. These assessments are designed to test how accurately you can work when the clock is running, so it is better to build that habit early than to rely on content knowledge alone.
Preparation habits that save time on test day
- Check your email regularly so you do not miss the assessment invitation or provider details.
- Practice the question types most often used by ABN AMRO, especially reasoning and sequence-based tasks.
- Work under time limits to build a steady pace and reduce avoidable mistakes.
- Review your errors to spot patterns, rather than only repeating questions quickly.
A targeted approach is usually more useful than broad test practice. By training the exact skills used in these assessments, you can make better use of a limited preparation window and avoid spending time on less relevant topics.
A simple way to structure your preparation
Begin with one untimed set for each core question type to see where your strengths and weaknesses are. This gives you a clearer basis for deciding what to practice first.
Next, move to timed drills and compare your accuracy across question types. If you slow down on calculations or abstract patterns, that is a sign to spend more time there before the real assessment.
Finish with short mixed sessions that combine several question styles. This helps you switch between tasks more smoothly, which is useful when the assessment includes multiple sections or different providers.