Assessment Center vs. Online Psychometrics: Cost, Speed, and What You Actually Get

When a company is filling a managerial role, sooner or later someone asks: "Shouldn't we run the finalists through an assessment center?" It's an established tool — and also one of the most expensive steps in the entire hiring process. This article compares what you actually get from an assessment center versus an online behavioral screen, so you can decide on numbers rather than habit.

Definitions first

An assessment center (AC) is a half-day to two-day program where a panel of assessors observes candidates in simulations, presentations, group exercises, and interviews. The output is an evaluation report per candidate.

Online psychometrics / behavioral screening is a structured questionnaire-and-scenario instrument the candidate completes remotely. It maps behavioral patterns — reaction under pressure, relationship to feedback, decision style — and produces a report for the hiring team, typically within 48 hours.

The comparison, on five axes

1. Cost

External assessment centers in Central Europe commonly run from hundreds to low thousands of euros per candidate, depending on seniority, panel size, and program length — plus the overhead of venues, internal staff time, and calendar coordination.

Online screening runs in the single to low double digits of euros per candidate. A complete managerial screen in Cernis, for example, is 12 credits — €12. The difference is two to three orders of magnitude.

2. Speed

An AC means synchronizing candidates, assessors, and venues — two to five weeks from booking to report is normal. That's a long time when a leadership seat is open: your best finalist may accept another offer in the meantime.

An online screen goes out the day you send the invitation and the report is back within 48 hours.

3. Standardization

AC quality lives and dies with the assessors. Two different assessors can walk away from the same group exercise with different conclusions — and an experienced candidate knows how to perform a group exercise. An online instrument asks every candidate the same questions and scores them the same way, so comparing two finalists happens on one scale.

4. Candidate experience

A full-day AC is a significant time investment for a senior candidate, and many experience it as an endurance test. An online screen takes a fraction of the time, completed whenever suits them. On the other hand, some candidates read an AC invitation as a signal the company is serious about the role. Both formats are legitimate; the question is how much friction your funnel can afford.

5. Regulatory fit

For any candidate-evaluation tool in the EU, the same rule applies: the output is decision support for a human, not an automated decision (GDPR Art. 22, EU AI Act). Ask any vendor — AC or online — how they handle candidate consent, data storage, and the right to human review. A tool with these built in saves you the legal work.

When an assessment center makes sense

When online screening is the better call

The practical takeaway

It isn't necessarily either–or. A sensible default for most companies: online behavioral screening as the standard step in every managerial hire (cheap, fast, comparable), with an assessment center reserved for the most senior appointments. If you want to see what an online screen's output looks like, view a sample Cernis report — and you can have your first candidate screened the same day.

Cernis is a decision-support tool. Its output informs your judgment and your structured interview — the final decision is always made by a person.