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ABN AMRO Assessment Practice Explained
Learn what to expect from ABN AMRO’s Harver (NOA) assessment and how to prepare with focused practice for timed cognitive test tasks.
Preparing for the ABN AMRO assessment process
ABN AMRO may invite candidates to an online assessment as part of its selection process. The exact setup can vary, but the invitation email usually explains which parts apply to you and which provider is used.
This guide focuses on the Harver (NOA) assessment side and the related practice modules. The main value of preparing in advance is timing: the tasks are often short, and you need to work accurately without spending too long on any single item.
If you are applying for a traineeship or another role, it helps to check your email regularly and begin practice early. That gives you time to get familiar with the question styles before the actual assessment starts.
Try a sample question right away
This gives you an immediate feel for the question style and the value of the practice environment.
What the Harver modules are built to train
The Harver (NOA) Cognitive Ability Assessment is designed to measure reasoning, pattern recognition, and accuracy under time pressure. In practice, that means working through a set of short tasks that require quick, structured thinking.
The assessment may include analogies, exclusion, and number sequences. These modules are meant to check how well you spot relationships, identify what does not fit, and extend a pattern before the clock runs out.
For ABN AMRO candidates, the format is especially useful because it mirrors the kind of timed reasoning work that often appears in modern online selection tests. The goal is not only to solve the items, but to do so efficiently.
How to manage your time during practice
A good preparation plan should match the pace of the assessment. Start with untimed practice to understand the logic, then move to timed sets so you can learn how quickly you need to decide.
- Work on one question type at a time until the pattern becomes familiar.
- Use the email invitation to confirm which assessment parts are relevant.
- Practice under time limits so you get used to making decisions faster.
- Review mistakes carefully to see whether the issue was speed, method, or attention to detail.
This approach helps you build a steady rhythm. When you already know what the question looks like, you can spend less time figuring out the format and more time solving it.
Common practice areas in the bundle
The ABN AMRO practice package includes several core reasoning modules that align with commonly used Cubiks and Harver assessment components. The exact mix may differ, but the training is centered on the most frequent question types.
- Analogies for recognizing relationships between words or concepts
- Exclusion for finding the figure or concept that does not fit
- Number sequences for identifying the underlying numerical pattern
- Figure sequences and numerical reasoning for broader pattern and calculation practice
These modules are useful for candidates who want targeted preparation without overloading on content. They support both accuracy and pace, which is important when the test is designed to be completed quickly.
The bundle is also relevant for Logiks Advanced and Cubiks Logiks General (Intermediate), so it can be used as preparation for multiple assessment variants within the same general test family.