You need to know what to prepare for. A good way to do this is to consult search engines like Google. If the company whose test you’re preparing for is XYZ Consulting, for instance, use search engine
term like “XYZ Consulting question format”, and you are most likely going to be directed to a career website or discussion forum (eg Nairaland) where such had been discussed. If it is a less-known company, and its test may not have been discussed on the internet before,
you may try speaking with someone that had done the test in the past. Try calling several friends and ask whether they have an idea on how the job test of the company looks like.
2. Practice test questions
After getting hints on the test type of the company, find practice test
questions similar to the ones you’re expecting, and solve as many of them as possible. During your practice, figure out your weak areas and try to improve on them. The more you practice, the higher your chances of scoring are.
3. Don’t assume
When preparing for an
aptitude test, don’t ever make any assumptions. For example, don’t assume that the numerical reasoning test would be a walk in the park simply because you had an A grade in math in college. Practice every type of question you expect to face during the test!
B. TAKING THE TEST
4. Equip yourself
When going for the exam, equip yourself with everything you will need, such as your watch, writing materials (pen, pencil, etc. as requested), and calculator – one that you’re familiar with and understand how to use.
5. Read the instructions well
Before you start attempting any questions, be sure to read over the instructions two to three times. Overlooking or misinterpreting instructions will affect your score badly, so always take your time to understand them.
6. Be fast, with care
Once you start attempting the questions, work as fast as possible without being careless. Recruitment aptitude tests are usually strictly timed, and a typical test allows you to spend just 30 to 60 seconds on a question. In fact, the major goal of aptitude
test is to know how fast a prospective employee can think.
Whenever you come across a difficult question, don’t waste your time on it. Move on to other questions, come back to it later, if you can. Good to answer all the questions, but you don’t need to answer all to pass.
7. Beware of poisonous “low-hanging fruits”
If the questions are in a multiple-choice format, you need to be extra careful. Many test questions are actually straightforward. However, some only appear so and the solutions are not usually as straightforward as they seem.
Such questions are often designed to confuse you, with incorrect options that include common mistakes that candidates make.
Answer as many questions as you can. Even if you cannot answer everything – which will most likely be the case – don’t get frustrated.
The most important thing is to correctly answer the ones you can. Where there is no rule against it, I personally advise guessing the right choice for tough questions rather than spend more time on them, but this should be done only in the last three minutes of the test.
Recruitment aptitude tests are usually tough, and have been the bane of many job seekers. However, I believe the tips shared here can make a difference in crossing that hurdle.
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A young follower just copped a job with McKinsey. With only Bsc from a Nigerian public school (1st class) + small experience from one of the Big 4 (the experience there must have helped him).
Went thru the famed McKinsey PST test and
5 levels of interview, including with their foreign partners.
McK has one of the toughest recruitment processes in the world and this experience of another friend (who unfortunately didn't get the job) should give a clue into how tough getting into McK is
The experience shared in this 2013 article. Hopefully, will get the young friend that just got in to share his own recruitment experience too for publication on JarusHub
1/ A company can be cash generating and making losses.
Another company can be profit making and having dire cash situation.
Here is why:
Profit = Revenue - Expenses
Where Expense > Revenue, you have a loss.
Understanding what is revenue and expense is not as
2/ straightforward as people (especially non-accountants) think.
Revenue is not simply the cash you collected from your sales as people think. Let me spare you the accounting jargon called “principles of recognition of revenue”, but present only one interesting aspect of
3/ what is recorded as revenue: once that sale transaction is completed and both buyers and sellers fulfill some conditions (eg buyer accepts delivery of the goods), the seller can record revenue in his books, even if their contract says he will be paid cash next year.
1/ Govt-owned, govt-run companies are the same all over the world: They hardly fire employees for poor performance!
The most secured jobs
Here is an excerpt from a case study of some Middle East NOCs (NNPC equivalent) in Saudi (Aramco), Kuwait (KPC), ADNOC (UAE), & NIOC (Iran)
2/ "With the exception of ADNOC, the NOCs do not fire poorly performing personnel. They will isolate them so that they do not harm the business or freewill. I was told about the existence of shadow offices, sometimes a whole wing or flow of a company building, that keep these
3/ "underperforming undesirables away from important business. No one checks what they do with their time or whether they come towork at all. Some employees feel it was a sign that the company had a heart because it was aware that the bad employees too had to feed their families"
Hav followed Feyi for at least 8 yrs, always considered him one of the smartest young Nigerians, even though no be all time I dey agree with his views(eg I believe his views on Dangote are a little over board)
Sector, Country, Revenue, PBT, and Gross Margin in bracket
1. Apple (American, Tech, $274b, $58b, 21%) 2. Microsoft (American, Tech, $143b, $44b, 31%) 3. Industrial & Commercial Bank (Chinese, Banking, $122b, $42b, 34%)
4. China Construction Bank (Chinese, Banking, $104b, $36b, 35%) 5. Google (American, Tech, $166b, $32b, 19%) 6. Agric Bank of China (Chinese, Banking, $92b, $28b, 30%) 7. JP Morgan (American, Banking, $119b, $25b, 21%) 8. Alibaba Group (Chinese, Tech, $80b, $25b, 31%)
9. Bank of China (Chinese, Banking, $79b, $25b, 32%) 10. Intel Corp. (American, Tech, $79b, $24b, 30%)
Source of data is Investopedia and the data straddles 12 months Sept 2019-Aug 2020.
The Piper Alpha: Oil & Gas Industry's Deadliest Accident
Oil & gas is an extremely risky activity. Not even talking about financial risk (eg risk of spending $20m to drill a well and finding water instead of oil) but safety hazard.
Everything about oil and gas is highly inflammable. A small error and hundreds of lives could be lost. So safety is taken extremely serious in the industry. In fact, one of the most important and demanded fields in oil and gas career is Health, Safety & Environment (HSE).
HSE is extremely critical and oil companies invest a lot in it.
Unfortunately, despite all the strictness and seriousness of oil companies about safety, accidents still happen from time to time. In fact, in July 2020, an explosion at an NNPC facility led to death of 7 people.