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Plum figure sets examples and practice guide
See Plum figure sets examples, learn the main pattern types, and focus on what to check first before taking the assessment.
Start with the pattern, not the details
Plum figure sets are built around logical visual changes. The fastest way to approach them is to identify what stays the same and what changes from one figure to the next.
This guide uses practical example situations rather than invented test items. The goal is to show what to prioritize first so you can read the sequence more efficiently during practice and on the assessment.
Try a sample question right away
This gives you an immediate feel for the question style and the value of the practice environment.
How to analyze a figure sequence
Begin with the most visible feature, then move to the smaller ones. In many sequences, the first useful check is the overall shape, followed by direction, rotation, number of elements, fill, and position.
- Look for the main change across the figures.
- Check whether one element moves, turns, appears, or disappears.
- Compare the last figure with the missing or next figure and test the same rule.
- Choose the answer that keeps the pattern consistent without adding a new rule.
If more than one feature seems to change, stay disciplined and track one rule at a time. This prevents you from being distracted by details that only look important.
Common example situations to practice with
A useful way to prepare is to practice with sequences where one property changes steadily. For example, a shape may rotate step by step, or the number of elements may increase by one in each frame.
Other typical situations include alternation between filled and empty shapes, movement from one position to another, or a repeated combination of two changes. These are the kinds of visual patterns worth recognizing quickly.
- Rotation that follows the same direction in every step.
- A shape that adds or removes one element at a time.
- A figure that moves through positions in a fixed path.
How this fits the Plum assessment
Plum is a digital assessment platform used by organizations to evaluate candidates, including abstract reasoning. Figure sequences are one of the common question types, alongside matrices and number sequences.
When you receive the invitation email, check the practical instructions and timing carefully. During the test, work calmly, avoid spending too long on one item, and keep your attention on the rule that best explains the sequence.
The purpose of practice is familiarity. By seeing more examples, you learn to compare figures more efficiently and approach the assessment with a clearer method.