A graduate scheme assessment centre is a full or half-day event where candidates complete a series of exercises — group tasks, case studies, presentations, and competency interviews — observed and scored by trained assessors. It is the final stage before an offer. Most candidates fail not because they lack the skills, but because they haven't practised the format.
Getting invited to an assessment centre means you've already passed the application form, online tests, and video or telephone interview. You're in the top 10–20% of applicants for that scheme. The assessment centre is where that pool is narrowed to the people who actually get offers — typically 30–60% of those who attend, depending on the employer.
This guide covers what happens on the day, what assessors are specifically looking for in each exercise, and the most common reasons candidates fail at this stage after making it this far.
What exercises are in a graduate scheme assessment centre?
Not every assessment centre includes every exercise — the mix depends on the employer and sector. But these are the six formats you're most likely to encounter:
Four to eight candidates work together on a business problem or case. No appointed leader — you're all observed simultaneously. Duration: 20 to 45 minutes. The most misunderstood exercise at assessment centres.
Almost universalOne or two interviewers, typically 45 to 60 minutes. Structured around the employer's competency framework. Expect five to eight questions, each requiring a specific STAR example.
Almost universalA business scenario with data to analyse, followed by a written report or recommendations. Tests structured thinking, data interpretation, and commercial judgement. Duration: 30 to 60 minutes.
Common in finance and consultingYou're given a topic or case in advance (sometimes on the day) and present your findings to assessors for 5 to 10 minutes, followed by questions. Tests communication, structure, and ability to handle challenge.
Common in consulting and commercialA simulated inbox of emails, reports, and requests. You prioritise and respond under time pressure. Tests organisation, judgement, and written communication. Duration: 30 to 45 minutes.
Common in public sector and bankingUsed by some employers (notably Unilever, BAE Systems) instead of or alongside competency interviews. Questions like "what energises you?" or "when do you feel most like yourself?" — designed to assess genuine motivation rather than rehearsed answers.
Growing in frequencyWhat a typical assessment centre day looks like
The schedule varies, but most full-day assessment centres follow a similar pattern. Here's a realistic example from a major employer:
Overview of the day. You're already being observed — how you interact with other candidates in this period matters.
The exercise most people underprepare for. Assessors watch every candidate simultaneously. 30–45 minutes.
Individual exercise. Read carefully before writing — most candidates rush this and miss key data in the brief.
Informal but not off the record. Current graduates often feed back observations to the recruitment team.
The highest-weighted exercise at most centres. 45–60 minutes. This is where preparation makes the biggest difference.
5–10 minutes to present, followed by 10 minutes of questions. Handle pushback calmly — disagreeing respectfully is not a failure.
Prepare two or three genuine questions. "What does success look like in the first rotation?" is better than "what's the culture like?"
The informal parts of the day — lunch, coffee breaks, the welcome session — are still part of the assessment. Treat every interaction with current employees as observable. You don't need to be "on" constantly, but you should be engaged and professional throughout.
What assessors are actually scoring
Every exercise at an assessment centre is mapped to a set of competencies from the employer's framework. Assessors score each candidate on each competency after each exercise — they're not forming a general impression, they're marking against specific criteria.
| Exercise | Primary competencies assessed | What assessors look for |
|---|---|---|
| Group exercise | Teamwork, communication, leadership, listening | Contribution quality, building on others' ideas, managing disagreement, not dominating |
| Competency interview | All core competencies — varies by employer | Specific STAR examples with measurable outcomes, self-awareness, genuine motivation |
| Case study / written | Analytical thinking, commercial judgement, written communication | Structured argument, relevant recommendations, quality of written English |
| Presentation | Communication, confidence, ability to handle challenge | Clear structure, engaging delivery, how you respond to probing questions |
| In-tray exercise | Prioritisation, judgement, written communication | Appropriate prioritisation logic, concise responses, no critical items missed |
| Strength interview | Genuine motivation, self-awareness, energy | Authentic answers — rehearsed responses score poorly; inconsistent answers flag as dishonest |
The group exercise: the most misunderstood part of the day
Most candidates approach the group exercise with one of two wrong strategies. The first is trying to dominate — talking the most, pushing their own ideas, treating it like a debate to win. The second is staying quiet to avoid saying the wrong thing. Both are penalised.
Assessors are watching for collaborative leadership: making a meaningful contribution to the group's thinking, building on what others say, managing time collectively, and helping the group reach a conclusion. You do not need to be the loudest or the person with the best idea. You need to be the person who made the group work better.
- Inviting quieter members to contribute — "We haven't heard from everyone yet"
- Building on others' points rather than restating your own
- Calling out the time check — "We've got ten minutes left, shall we move to recommendations?"
- Summarising where the group has reached at natural pause points
- Disagreeing constructively — "I see it differently, here's why" rather than shutting an idea down
- Staying calm and listening visibly when others are speaking
- Talking over other candidates or interrupting repeatedly
- Ignoring contributions from others and returning to your own point
- Staying completely silent or contributing only when directly asked
- Appointing yourself leader and directing others
- Becoming visibly frustrated when the group disagrees with you
- Focusing only on winning the argument rather than reaching a good group answer
"The group exercise is the one that surprises people most at assessment centres, because candidates assume they need to stand out by having the best idea. But assessors aren't scoring ideas — they're scoring behaviours. The candidate who makes three good contributions, listens actively, and helps the group structure its thinking in the last five minutes will almost always outscore the one who dominates the conversation with one strong position and ignores everything else."
The competency interview: how to prepare
The competency interview at an assessment centre is longer and more probing than anything earlier in the process. Assessors will follow up your STAR examples with questions like "what would you have done differently?" or "how did the other person respond?" — they're testing whether the example is real and whether you've genuinely reflected on it.
Prepare eight to ten strong examples before the day covering: leadership, teamwork, problem-solving, working under pressure, communication, influencing others, commercial awareness, and resilience. Know each example well enough to be pushed on it. The worst thing you can do is run out of examples mid-interview or give the same one twice.
At the end of the interview you'll be asked if you have questions. Prepare three — but frame them as genuine curiosity, not a test of your research. "What surprised you most about the scheme when you joined?" to a graduate assessor is a far better question than "what are Barclays' growth plans for the next five years?"
"I went to four assessment centres before I got an offer. Looking back, the first two I failed because I was trying too hard to impress individually — I'd dominate the group exercise and then give very polished but clearly rehearsed interview answers. The one I got an offer from, I genuinely forgot to perform and just focused on doing a good job in each exercise. I think that showed."
How to prepare in the week before your assessment centre
The week before is not the time to learn new content — it's the time to practise formats. Here is a realistic preparation schedule:
| Day | Focus |
|---|---|
| Day 1 (6 days before) | Reread the employer's competency framework and values. Map your eight to ten STAR examples to each competency. |
| Day 2 | Practise the group exercise format with two or three friends using a free business case. Focus on listening behaviours, not winning the argument. |
| Day 3 | Mock competency interview — answer five questions out loud, timed at two minutes each. Record yourself. Watch it back. Fix filler language and vague outcomes. |
| Day 4 | Work through a case study using material from the employer's sector. Practice structuring a written recommendation in 30 minutes. |
| Day 5 | Prepare your presentation structure if given a topic in advance. Draft your three questions for the employer Q&A. |
| Day 6 (eve before) | Light review only. Prepare your outfit, documents, and route. Get eight hours of sleep — tiredness is the most underrated assessment centre variable. |
"Something nobody tells students: feedback after an assessment centre is almost always available if you ask for it, regardless of whether you got the offer. Call or email the recruitment team directly and ask for a debrief. Most employers will give you specific scores by exercise and tell you where you fell short. That information is worth more than any generic assessment centre prep guide — it tells you exactly what to fix before your next one."
Topic expertise: Graduate recruitment, Assessment centres, Careers
FAQs on graduate scheme assessment centres
Most graduate scheme assessment centres last between half a day and a full day. Half-day centres (three to four hours) are common at mid-tier employers and typically include a group exercise and one interview. Full-day centres (six to eight hours) are standard at major employers — finance, consulting, public sector — and include four to five exercises. Virtual assessment centres, which became common post-2020, typically run for three to five hours.
Business professional unless the employer explicitly states otherwise. For finance, consulting, law, and public sector: suit or formal equivalent. For technology, FMCG, and retail: smart business casual is acceptable, but err towards formal if unsure. What you wear does not directly affect your scores, but being visibly underdressed creates a negative first impression that can colour assessors' perceptions throughout the day. If in doubt, call the recruitment team and ask.
Yes and no. Employers score each candidate against a competency benchmark — not against each other. In theory, if everyone at your assessment centre is excellent, everyone could get an offer. In practice, intake numbers are fixed, so the process is competitive. The important mindset shift: don't try to make other candidates look bad in the group exercise. Assessors will notice and penalise it. Helping the group succeed is how you score well individually.
It varies. Some employers give same-day or next-day verbal feedback — particularly in finance and consulting where assessment days are high volume. Most give written feedback within five to ten working days. Public sector employers can take two to four weeks. If you haven't heard within the timeframe given on the day, it is entirely reasonable to email the recruitment contact and ask for an update. Don't assume silence means failure — it often just means the process is running behind.
Possibly, but it's difficult. Assessment centres aggregate scores across all exercises — no single exercise is automatically eliminatory unless you score below a minimum threshold. If you perform poorly in the group exercise but very strongly in the interview and case study, the overall score may still be sufficient. The weighting varies by employer. If you feel the group exercise went badly, focus on performing at your best in every remaining exercise rather than dwelling on it.
Request feedback immediately — most employers will give it if you ask. Find out which exercises you underperformed in and specifically what behaviour or evidence was missing. Most employers allow you to reapply in the following cycle. Some impose a 12-month wait before reapplying to the same scheme. Getting to an assessment centre is a strong signal that your application and early interview performance are competitive — the gap to fix is usually specific and addressable with targeted practice.
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Connor is a seasoned content expert at Unifresher, specialising in publishing engaging and insightful student-focused content. With over four years of experience in data analysis and content strategy, Connor has a proven track record of supporting publishing teams with high-quality resources. A graduate of the University of Sussex with a BSc in Accounting and Finance, he combines his academic background with his passion for creating content that resonates with students across the UK. Outside of work, Connor enjoys staying active at his local gym and walking his miniature dachshunds.
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Aminah is a dedicated content expert and writer at Unifresher, bringing a unique blend of creativity and precision to her work. Her passion for crafting engaging content is complemented by a love for travelling, cooking, and exploring languages. With years spent living in cultural hubs like Barcelona, Sicily, and Rome, Aminah has gained a wealth of experiences that enrich her perspective. Now based back in her hometown of Manchester, she continues to immerse herself in the city's vibrant atmosphere. An enthusiastic Manchester United supporter, Aminah also enjoys delving into psychology and true crime in her spare time.
