Pre-hire assessment completion rates & candidate drop-off by industry

6 minute read

Posted by Emily Hill on 3 March 2026

What 200,000+ candidate journeys reveal about how hiring performance changes across sectors

Why do candidates complete nearly every assessment in some industries — but never even start them in others?

At first glance, the explanation seems obvious. Different sectors have different candidates, different expectations, or different hiring challenges.

But analysis of more than 200,000 pre-hire assessment journeys suggests something more revealing.

Across this dataset, every employer used a ThriveMap realistic job assessment, meaning differences in outcomes cannot be attributed to variation in assessment design or experience quality.

ThriveMap assessments are built to simulate the realities of the role itself — showing candidates what work actually involves before interview. This matters because most hiring assessments still focus purely on screening ability rather than helping candidates understand the job they are applying for.

Yet completion outcomes still varied dramatically by industry.

As Recruiting Brainfood analyst Hung Lee observed when reviewing the findings:

I’m not sure if we’ve ever seen sectoral segmentation on this type of data before; it’s fascinating and important to see how candidate behaviour on the assessment journey varies by industry. Important work here by Thrivemap – all recruiters should dig in.

This distinction is important. Industry differences persist even when assessment quality is controlled — suggesting that candidate behaviour is shaped less by assessment difficulty and more by how clearly candidates understand the role they are committing to.

Separate research in this report shows that fewer than 5% of organisations currently use assessments to educate candidates about the realities of the job itself. Most assessments still act purely as filters.

ThriveMap takes a different approach: using realistic job assessments to allow candidates to self-select in or out based on informed understanding.

What sectoral segmentation reveals here is not simply assessment performance — but differences in candidate commitment before the assessment even begins.

Assessment start and completion benchmark by industry

Assessment start & completion benchmarks by industry

IndustryStart RateCompletion RateDrop-Off
Utilities & Energy97.4%99.3%0.7%
Facilities Management & Public Services89.4%93.1%6.9%
Engineering, Rail & Industrial Technology82.9%96.1%3.9%
Transport & Public Transit78.7%91.8%8.2%
Real Estate & Property Development78.1%94.8%5.2%
Telecommunications & Technology Services79.7%88.8%11.2%
Logistics & Supply Chain76.3%91.1%8.9%
Financial Services & Consumer Lending66.2%84.2%15.8%
Environmental Services & Waste Management63.5%76.5%23.5%
Veterinary & Animal Care50.0%65.2%34.8%

The most striking differences appear not in completion — but in whether candidates start assessments at all.

Utilities candidates almost universally begin the process. In veterinary and some service-adjacent sectors, half of invited candidates never enter the assessment environment.

Because the assessment itself is consistent, these differences cannot be explained by assessment quality.

They reflect something upstream.

The real divide happens before assessment

Once candidates start an assessment, completion rates converge significantly across industries.

This suggests a critical shift in interpretation:

The primary point of candidate loss is not assessment difficulty or length — it is initial commitment.

Candidates appear to make an early decision about whether a role is worth pursuing before engaging with evaluation.

The assessment does not create motivation — it clarifies commitment.

When candidates experience realistic previews of day-to-day work, they can make informed decisions earlier in the hiring journey. Those who continue are doing so with clearer expectations about the role itself.

Average assessment completion time by industry

IndustryAverage Time to Complete
Real Estate & Property Development34.9 mins
Environmental Services & Waste Management31.9 mins
Telecommunications & Technology Services28.8 mins
Utilities & Energy28.5 mins
Facilities Management & Public Services26.6 mins
Financial Services & Consumer Lending24.3 mins
Engineering, Rail & Industrial Technology21.3 mins
Logistics & Supply Chain21.4 mins
Transport & Public Transit19.2 mins

Assessment duration varies by nearly 16 minutes between industries.

Longer assessments are tolerated when candidates perceive strong career value or stability. Where alternative opportunities are abundant, time becomes friction.

Assessment length, therefore, cannot be optimised in isolation — it must be calibrated against sector expectations.

This highlights an often-overlooked dynamic: candidates are willing to invest time when the assessment helps them understand what success in the role actually looks like.

Realistic assessments reduce uncertainty. Rather than asking candidates to complete abstract tests, they provide evidence of what the job involves — allowing candidates to decide whether the opportunity genuinely fits their expectations.

Completion time by role type

Completion behaviour by role type

Role TypeStart RateCompletion Rate
Public Sector Operational89.4%91.9%
Technical & Engineering86.4%96.7%
Early Careers / Graduate78.7%90.9%
Transport & Driving78.7%91.0%
Warehouse & Distribution76.9%93.3%
Administrative & Clerical72.4%72.8%
Sales & Commercial67.4%83.5%
Credit & Financial Processing62.9%80.6%
Customer Service & Experience50.6%62.4%

Role type mirrors the same pattern seen across industries: structured or specialised roles show strong engagement once candidates enter the process, while high-volume customer-facing hiring experiences greater early disengagement.

What sector segmentation actually reveals

Because assessment experience is standardised, industry differences expose variations in how candidates apply for jobs.

Some labour markets attract deliberate applicants who research roles and expect structured selection processes.

Others attract exploratory applicants applying to multiple opportunities simultaneously, committing later — or not at all.

Sector benchmarking therefore reveals differences in applicant intent rather than assessment effectiveness.

A shift in how assessment performance should be understood

Traditionally, hiring teams evaluate assessments as if candidate engagement develops during the hiring process.

This data suggests the opposite.

Candidate commitment is largely formed before assessment interaction begins.

Pre-hire assessments function less as engagement tools and more as commitment checkpoints — identifying candidates already prepared to invest effort in the opportunity.

Preventing job catfishing in hiring

One emerging risk in modern hiring is what ThriveMap describes as job catfishing — where candidates accept roles based on incomplete or overly optimistic job information, only to discover mismatches after joining.

Traditional assessments rarely address this problem because they evaluate candidates without revealing the realities of the role.

Realistic job assessments change that dynamic by aligning expectations early, enabling informed opt-out before hire rather than regret after onboarding.

(See our analysis on job catfishing and realistic hiring previews

The bigger implication for hiring teams

Industry benchmarking remains critical, but not because sectors require fundamentally different assessments.

Instead, sector context influences candidate certainty at the point of application.

Organisations interpreting completion rates without this context risk diagnosing the wrong problem — optimising assessment design when the underlying issue may sit earlier in the hiring journey.

The emerging lesson is simple:

Candidates rarely abandon assessments at random.

Most decide whether to continue long before the first question appears.

And when hiring experiences are grounded in realistic job previews, those decisions become intentional.

The role of pre-hire assessment is shifting — from filtering candidates to helping both sides understand the work itself.

In that sense, completion rate is no longer just a hiring metric. It becomes a signal that candidates are entering roles with clearer expectations, stronger alignment, and a lower risk of mismatch.

Read the full market report here: https://review-mkt.thrivemap.io/s/state-of-assessment-market-report-2026

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About ThriveMap

ThriveMap creates customised assessments for high volume roles, which take candidates through an online “day in the life” experience of work in your company. Our assessments have been proven to reduce staff turnover, reduce time to hire, and improve quality of hire.

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