Situational Judgement Tests are easy to deploy, but they rely on hypothetical answers that are easy to coach and often fail to predict real performance. This can allow misalignment to surface only after hiring, when the cost is higher.
Choosing the right assessment method has a direct impact on hiring quality, candidate experience, and early attrition.
Situational Judgement Tests and Realistic Job Assessments are often used for similar roles, yet they measure very different things and deliver very different levels of predictive validity. While SJTs assess how candidates say they would respond to workplace scenarios, Realistic Job Assessments evaluate behaviour in job-relevant situations that mirror the reality of the role.
This page helps you understand those differences, compare when each approach is most effective, and navigate which assessment method provides clearer, more reliable signals of job fit earlier in the hiring process.
| Feature | Realistic Job Assessments | Situational Judgement Tests |
|---|---|---|
| Ideal for | Hiring at scale where real world performance, retention, and role clarity matter | Lightweight screening when realism and predictive accuracy are not the primary concern |
| Stage used | Early stage screening before interviews or offers | Early or mid stage screening |
| Format | Interactive, scenario based job simulations | Hypothetical scenarios with predefined responses |
| What is measured | Observed behaviour in realistic job situations | Judgement and stated preferences |
| Level of realism | High candidates experience real job tasks and decisions | Moderate scenarios are described rather than experienced |
| Predictive validity | Very high behaviour closely mirrors on the job performance | Medium intent does not always translate to performance |
| Coaching risk | Low behaviour is difficult to fake or rehearse | High best answer patterns can be learned |
| Consistency | Standardised experiences aligned to real job data | Standardised questions |
| Candidate understanding of the role | Very high pace pressure and trade offs are visible upfront | Limited context is partial or abstract |
| Impact on early attrition | Strong reduction by identifying misalignment early | Limited issues often surface after start date |
| Cost and scalability | Low cost per hire highly scalable with stronger ROI | Low cost highly scalable |

A Situational Judgement Test presents candidates with written, video, or illustrated workplace scenarios. Candidates are asked to choose or rank responses based on what they believe is the most appropriate action.
SJTs are commonly used in:
🎓 Graduate recruitment
🏛️ Public sector hiring
☎️ Customer service and supervisory roles
Their strength lies in standardisation and ease of deployment. However, SJTs rely on self-reported judgement, not demonstrated capability.
🧠 They assess what candidates think they should do, not what they will do
🎯 Responses are vulnerable to coaching and social desirability bias
📦 Scenarios often become generic to maintain scale
❌ Strong candidates may fail due to interpretation rather than capability
As a result, organisations often see candidates pass SJTs but struggle once faced with real-world pressure, pace, or ambiguity.
A Realistic Job Assessment (RJA) puts the reality of the role at the centre of hiring. Instead of asking candidates to imagine how they might behave, RJAs simulate the real challenges, decisions, and trade-offs they will face on the job.
Candidates work through realistic scenarios such as prioritising tasks, responding to pressure, and making decisions in context — while employers observe behaviour that directly reflects day-to-day performance. The assessment mirrors the pace, ambiguity, and judgement required in the role, not an abstract version of it.
RJAs are:
📊 Automatically scored against real success criteria
📏 Standardised so every candidate has the same experience
📚 Built from real job data, not generic scenarios
The result is a clearer signal of job fit, better-prepared candidates, and far fewer surprises after day one.

🚦 They assess real behaviour, not hypothetical judgement
Situational Judgement Tests ask candidates what they think they should do. Realistic Job Assessments show candidates what the job is actually like and assess how they behave when faced with real decisions, pressure, and trade-offs.
📍 They set realistic expectations before anyone is hired
SJTs describe scenarios in abstract terms. RJAs expose candidates to the pace, priorities, working conditions, and realities of the role upfront, reducing the risk of people accepting jobs they do not fully understand.
📈 They scale effectively without losing validity
SJTs scale easily, but often at the cost of realism. RJAs are designed to scale while preserving behavioural signal, delivering consistent experiences and scoring across hundreds or thousands of candidates.
⚖️ They reduce coaching and response bias
SJT responses are vulnerable to “best answer” patterns and social desirability bias. RJAs are harder to game because candidates must act in context, making behavioural signals more reliable and defensible.
💸 They reduce wasted interviews and mis-hires
SJTs can allow candidates to pass screening but fail later under real-world conditions. RJAs filter earlier and more accurately, reducing downstream costs linked to interviews, onboarding, and early turnover.
🔁 They reduce early attrition by aligning reality with expectations
Candidates who complete an RJA know what the role involves before day one. Those who progress are more likely to stay and perform because the job matches what they experienced during hiring.
Safelite applied the same RJA approach across high volume frontline hiring, replacing abstract screening with realistic, role specific assessments.
The result was a pre hire process that scaled cleanly, reduced wasted interviews, and delivered clearer signals of job fit earlier in the funnel.
📉 Significant reduction in cost to hire
📈 More accurate screening at volume
🔁 Better prepared hires with clearer expectations

Watch Mark Michel explain how it works
Realistic Job Assessments remove that guesswork. By assessing behaviour in realistic job scenarios and showing candidates the reality of the role upfront, they deliver more accurate signals of job fit, reduce early attrition, and lower total hiring costs.
When accuracy matters more than convenience, Realistic Job Assessments outperform Situational Judgement Tests.
