Case Studies Mechanical Aptitude Test Predicts Productivity

The Challenge

A national provider of installation and repair services wanted to cut turnover and increase the productivity of its 3000+ field service technicians who were charged with installing and repairing customers' equipment in the field.

The Solution

The company used the Wiesen Test of Mechanical Aptitude (WTMA) to test a group of 142 incumbent Field Service Technicians. The employees' test scores were then compared to job performance data provided by management. Job performance was determined by ratings in five distinct categories, consisting of productivity and quality-of-work metrics that were combined into an overall score with a range of 5 to 15.

The Results

There was a statistically significant correlation (.21) between WTMA scores and job performance ratings. The test scores were used to divide the employees into three groups, those who did not pass (raw scores of 44 or below on the WTMA), those who passed (45-50) and those who received the highest scores (51-60). As can be seen in the chart below, the group with the highest WTMA scores had the best average job performance rating (average 11.4), while the lowest-scoring group had by far the worst average performance rating (average 9.3).

Job Performance Ratings Chart

This performance gap corresponded to dramatic differences in key business metrics, as the highest-performing technicians had higher rates of customer satisfaction, lower return rates, faster job completion times, and fewer customer complaints. Based on these results, the company rolled out pre-employment testing on a nationwide basis, using the WTMA to screen all applicants for its Field Service Technician positions.

*The WTMA is available for all geographies except Asia-Pacific. 

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Industry

Maintenance and Repair

Company Size

1000+ Employees