- Home
- /
- Guide
- /
- ABN AMRO Assessment Practice Tips for Harver and Cubiks
ABN AMRO Assessment Practice Tips for Harver and Cubiks
Prepare for ABN AMRO’s Harver and Cubiks assessments with focused practice tips for analogies, sequences, reasoning, and timed test preparation.
Start with the assessment details you receive
ABN AMRO may use Cubiks (Talogy) or Harver (NOA) assessments, and the exact mix can vary by role. The first priority is to check the invitation email carefully so you know which parts are relevant to you.
The most common practice areas are analogies, figure sequences, number sequences, numerical reasoning, and related cognitive tasks. If you want to prepare efficiently, focus on the formats mentioned in your invitation before spending time on less relevant material.
This bundle is suitable for candidates applying to traineeships and other positions, and it can help you prepare for both the Logiks Advanced and Cubiks Logiks General (Intermediate) test formats.
Try a sample question right away
This gives you an immediate feel for the question style and the value of the practice environment.
Build your practice around the core question types
A practical preparation plan starts with the question types most often used by the platform you will face. For ABN AMRO, that usually means working on verbal, numerical, and abstract reasoning in a way that reflects the style of the test.
- Use analogies to train quick recognition of word relationships.
- Practice number sequences to identify patterns faster.
- Work through numerical reasoning questions with tables or graphs.
- Include figure sets or exclusion tasks to sharpen pattern recognition.
If you are short on time, prioritize the formats that appear in your invitation and then add mixed practice once the basics feel familiar. That helps you get used to switching between question types without losing speed.
Stay close to the way the assessment is delivered
ABN AMRO assessment details are typically shared by email, so checking your inbox regularly is part of the preparation itself. The message from Cubiks or Harver usually tells you more about the components you should expect.
Because the assessment may include both cognitive and behavioral or personality elements, it helps to prepare with a steady pace rather than trying to guess every possible section. Focus on accuracy first, then build speed through repetition.
The aim is to arrive at the online assessment already familiar with the format, the timing pressure, and the kinds of reasoning steps each module requires.
Use a simple preparation routine in the days before the test
A short, structured routine usually works better than irregular studying. Start with a few untimed questions to understand the logic, then move into timed sets once the patterns feel clearer.
- Review the assessment invitation and note the likely modules.
- Practice the most relevant question types first.
- Switch to timed sets to work on pace and accuracy.
- Finish with a mixed session to simulate the real test flow.
If one question type keeps taking too long, return to it separately before your final practice session. That is often more effective than trying to improve everything at once.