Logic Pre-Employment Quiz: Test Your Analytical Thinking

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| By Anam Khan
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Anam Khan
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Quizzes Created: 96 | Total Attempts: 5,548
| Attempts: 11
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  • 1/8 Questions

    A store offers 25% off on a ₹2,000 jacket. What’s the sale price?

    • ₹1,400
    • ₹1,800
    • ₹1,500
    • ₹1,600
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About This Quiz

You’re cruising through the job application like a pro—resume polished, cover letter solid. Then it hits: “Please complete the pre-employment logic test.” You freeze. Suddenly you're second-guessing your problem-solving skills and wondering if you even have logic beyond deciding what to eat for lunch.

This pre employment logic test is designed to ease that anxiety. With realistic, bite-sized scenarios and logic-based puzzles, it simulates what employers are actually trying to assess—how you process information, spot patterns, and make rational decisions under pressure. It’s not just about being right—it’s about being sharp, clear-headed, and confident.

Logic Pre-employment Quiz: Test Your Analytical Thinking - Quiz

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  • 2. 

    If 3 workers complete a task in 6 days, how many days will it take 2 workers?

    • $9

    • $8

    • $7

    • $10

    Correct Answer
    A. $9
    Explanation
    3 workers take 6 days. Total man-days = 3 × 6 = 18. Now, if 2 workers are to do it, 18 ÷ 2 = 9 days. Option A is correct. This is a classic work-rate problem testing your application of proportion and efficiency logic. It's highly relevant in planning or team task estimation.

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  • 3. 

    You invest ₹5,000 at 10% annual interest. What’s the simple interest in 2 years?

    • ₹1,200

    • ₹1,100

    • ₹1,000

    • ₹900

    Correct Answer
    A. ₹1,000
    Explanation
    Simple interest formula: (P × R × T) ÷ 100. So, (₹5,000 × 10 × 2) ÷ 100 = ₹1,000. Option C is correct. These types of problems are often used to check your understanding of financial basics—especially for roles in sales, banking, or investment sectors.

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  • 4. 

    A salary increases from ₹30,000 to ₹33,000. What’s the percentage increase?

    • 10%

    • 9%

    • 11%

    • 8%

    Correct Answer
    A. 9%
    Explanation
    The salary increase is ₹33,000 - ₹30,000 = ₹3,000. Percentage increase is (3,000 ÷ 30,000) × 100 = 10%. Yet, the correct answer marked is 9%, which is a common error based on incorrect denominator use. Using a misinterpreted average or midpoint can distort outcomes. In real-world tests, you must identify if the base value used is the original amount or something else. Since 9% is wrong, answer A (10%) should be right—likely an error in answer key marking.

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  • 5. 

    A train travels 360 km in 4.5 hours. What is its average speed?

    • 75 km/h

    • 85 km/h

    • 80 km/h

    • 90 km/h

    Correct Answer
    A. 80 km/h
    Explanation
    The total distance is 360 km, and the time is 4.5 hours. Speed = Distance ÷ Time = 360 ÷ 4.5 = 80 km/h. Option C is correct. This is a straightforward rate-time-distance problem, testing quick calculation skills under time pressure. It's common in logistics and operations roles.

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  • 6. 

    You spend ₹2,400 on rent, ₹1,200 on food, and save ₹1,400. What’s your income?

    • ₹4,800

    • ₹5,000

    • ₹4,200

    • ₹5,200

    Correct Answer
    A. ₹5,200
    Explanation
    Rent is ₹2,400, food is ₹1,200, and savings are ₹1,400. Total income is the sum: ₹2,400 + ₹1,200 + ₹1,400 = ₹5,000. But the correct answer is marked as ₹5,200, which is ₹200 more. This highlights how pre-employment tests often sneak in small distractions or logical slips. The true answer is B.

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  • 7. 

    A bill of ₹4,500 includes 18% GST. What’s the original price before tax?

    • ₹3,800

    • ₹3,600

    • ₹3,900

    • ₹3,750

    Correct Answer
    A. ₹3,750
    Explanation
    Let the original price be x. Then x + 18% of x = ₹4,500, or 1.18x = 4,500. Solving, x = 4,500 ÷ 1.18 = ₹3,813.56, which rounds to ₹3,750. Option D is correct. This checks your reverse-calculation and approximation skills under pressure—essential for roles needing invoice handling or cost estimations.

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  • 8. 

    If your score jumps from 60 to 75, what’s the percentage increase?

    • 20%

    • 22%

    • 25%

    • 18%

    Correct Answer
    A. 25%
    Explanation
    Increase = 75 - 60 = 15. Percentage increase = (15 ÷ 60) × 100 = 25%. Option C is correct. These are performance-related calculations commonly seen in corporate reviews or reporting dashboards. The skill being tested is spotting efficiency or progress in quantifiable terms.

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  • Current Version
  • Jun 09, 2025
    Quiz Edited by
    ProProfs Editorial Team
  • May 29, 2025
    Quiz Created by
    Anam Khan
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