WG has been around for a long time. I was sending out paper copies of the WG in 2005! I don’t think they are more popular now than they were then. If anything many firms have replaced the WG with other forms of assessment (video interviews/gamification based assessments).
No one is using them a a sole barrier though. Not sure where you got this perception from.
Firms often retest WG at assessment centre (along with verbal reasoning and other ability tests). The retest assessed whether you took the original test or not. I have not offered people in the past where the re-test didn’t match. It’s more common than you think for firms to retest.
As it isn’t a sole assessment, it’s likely that most people who falsely take the test will be rejected anyway.
Firms are well aware of practice tests and answers. Does not mean they are the questions you will get on the individual assessment you will get, as each candidate’s assessment comes from a bank of questions. If I took the same firm’s assessment as you, we’d receive different questions.
No paid for services can guarantee what percentile ranking you will get. Don’t fall for that marketing BS. Percentile ranking processes won’t be the same.
Practice tests are not a true indicator of the real assessment. They are assessed in very different ways - getting 8/10 in a practice test could mean a poor percentile ranking, while getting 4/10 on a practice test could actually be a higher percentile ranking (depending on weighting of questions/whether you get negative scores).
happy to discuss this more generally for your article, if that helps?
Hi Jessica, amazing I did not know there was someone from GR here, so yes if you would not mind, I would love to take you up on your offer.
I guess the best question I can ask you is from a GR point of view, what is the point of these tests? I speak broadly in terms of WG and game-based assessments. On one hand I can completely see the premise that firms receive thousands of applications and for efficiency I guess a natural filter is required. However, using the S&M example, which as far as application numbers go, is right up there, cant more firms adopt this type of recruitment? If not then why not?
I do feel the assessments where they ask Situational questions is actually a great measure (Allen & Overy) as the firm can see how you would be as a trainee in certain situations. Similarly VI/Telephone interviews are a good way of getting numbers down but I suppose they can eat up time. I am just curious as to if an alternate method is possible and if not then why not.
Feel free to PM your reply if you feel more comfortable!
Thanks!!