A 2022 SHRM study of nearly 1,700 HR professionals found that 56 percent of employers use pre-employment assessment tests to evaluate the skills, experience, and knowledge of candidates.
89 percent of hiring professionals said that skill assessment scores are just as or more important than traditional hiring criteria, and 36 percent said that candidates with high skills test scores are very likely to make it to the list of final candidates, even if they don’t meet the minimum years of experience.
As skills test become more commonplace in the hiring world, the question isn’t whether or not you should be using them, but how best to leverage skills test to improve your hiring metrics. Read on to learn more about how to implement and optimize skills tests in your hiring process.
Skills assessment tests refer to a broad set of tests designed to evaluate the experiences, knowledge, soft skills, hard skills, personality types, and other essential candidate metrics. At their best, skills tests will give you a better understanding of a candidate’s personality, cultural compatibility, and ability to excel at their role. Some of the most common skills tests include personality tests, cognitive ability tests, interviews, EQ tests, and hard skills tests.
Skill assessment tests should be part of a holistic, well-planned hiring approach. To get the most out of your assessments, you should define the most critical skills and metrics you’re looking for and integrate the most relevant tests into your hiring approach. You can follow the following steps to implement a skills assessment test strategy:
Bad hires can hinder your growth, affect other workers’ morale, and cost your company at least 30 percent of the new hire’s first-year salary. Skills assessments aren’t a hard-and-fast solution to your hiring challenges, but they are an effective tool you can use in a holistic hiring effort.
Here are some other key SHRM stats to demonstrate the efficacy of skills assessment tests:
What you test for in your skills assessment tests will depend largely on what position you’re trying to fill. Technical roles will require a greater emphasis on hard skills and technical capabilities, while managerial or sales positions require candidates to have better soft skills.
Here are some common tests you can leverage:
You can test for a variety of skills with the following test template structures.
Questions |
Strongly agree |
Agree |
Neutral |
Disagree |
Strongly disagree |
I tend to defend myself when criticized |
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It’s easy for me to stay calm under pressure |
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I tend to move on quickly from setbacks |
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I try to see things from others’ perspectives, even if I know they’re wrong |
Most skills tests will come with their own integrated scoring system, so you don’t need to worry about calculating scores or assessing their significance. And with Crosschq, you’ll be able to curate your own test or use templated questions in your testing, providing you with flexibility, support, and AI integrations that help you assess smarter than ever.
Crosschq’s skills and competency software leverages data to learn, expand, and refine our assessment process. Crosschq allows you to connect performance data with skills and competencies to continuously refine your competency framework to changes in the market.
On top of that, you get access to Crosschq’s 360 reference checks, an IO Psychiologist-backed tool that will reduce unconscious bias and give your candidates greater control of the pre-hire assessment process.
Sign up for a demo to streamline your hiring process, enable more objective hiring practices, improve your quality of hire, and reduce your time to hire today.