In the "Insights and history" section, it is sometimes worth taking a look at those projects where there is not just a vacancy to be filled - but where a succession decision has to be made that will stand up to internal and formal scrutiny. This is precisely where the Assessment Center (and the Management Assessment) comes into its own: not as a "show", but as structured management analysis with psychological aptitude diagnostics - clearly documented, comprehensibly substantiated and therefore audit-proof.
In the past year, we have had several assignments that exemplify why this methodology is once again so much in demand today:
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Medium-sized retail / sales (D.A.CH.): Management assessment for the succession of a sales manager in wholesale
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Flensburg University of Applied Sciences: Individual assessment center for a shortlist to succeed the chancellor
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CAU University of Kiel: Management Assessment Center as a selection process for the management of an International Center
These projects also show very well what the job of a personnel consultant can be "in essence": not only finding candidates, but also making decisions resilient.
What "audit-proof" means in the assessment center
"Audit-proof" is not a buzzword. It means that the selection decision is
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is basedon clear, pre-defined criteria (requirements profile, competency model, situations critical to success),
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is based onstandardized, comparable procedures (interview structure, case study, observation logic),
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isdocumented transparently (observations, evidence, justification - not gut feeling),
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remainslegally clean (e.g. AGG and GDPR-compliant; in a public environment, also with regard to formal procedural principles).
In short: audit-proof means that even months later it is still clear why someone was selected - based on job-relevant evidence.
Three projects - three contexts, one common requirement
1) Sales management succession in wholesale D.A.CH.: Management assessment in SMEs
In SMEs, succession is often doubly sensitive: it is about responsibility for results and cultural fit in an established organization. In sales roles, success depends not only on numbers, but also on management skills: team leadership, key account logic, prioritization and implementation in conflicting objectives.
The management assessment therefore does not examine "CV stations", but rather makes leadership and management behavior visible in realistic situations - including risks and areas for development.
Benefit: less risk of misappointment in the succession process because it becomes clear how someone leads - not just what is on their CV.
2) Flensburg University of Applied Sciences: Individual assessment for a shortlist to succeed the chancellor
Chancellor roles are key organizational positions - with a high degree of complexity: administration, finance, human resources, law, IT and committee work. At the same time, the role is anchored differently in universities than in traditional companies: Decisions are made in the interaction between management bodies, committees and administration.
This is where the individual assessment center has proven its worth: highly structured, tailored to the role assignment and with clear documentation logic. This makes the shortlist comparable - and the decision has a comprehensible basis for committees and stakeholders.
Benefits: Transparency, acceptance and a reliable basis for decision-making.
3) CAU University of Kiel: Management Assessment Center for an International Center
The third project involved a Management Assessment Center in a university context - as a selection procedure for a management position in an International Center. Here, too, the decisive factors were a structured procedure, clear comparability of the candidates and a clear, comprehensible basis for decision-making.
Our methodological core: management analytics meets psychological aptitude diagnostics
Many procedures fail not because of tools, but because they lack a methodological framework. Our approach combines two things:
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Management analytics
We translate the role assignment into observable success criteria: Which situations determine success/failure? Which conflicting goals are typical? What decisions need to be made? -
Psychological aptitude diagnostics
We ensure the quality of the assessments: structured interviews, consistent observation, separation of impression and evidence, bias checks, clear documentation.
The result is not a "gut decision", but a well-founded assessment of suitability.
Typical structure of a management assessment at Kontrast
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Requirements profile & competency model: role mandate, context, objectives, critical interfaces, success criteria
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Exercise design: job-related case study/simulation, structured interview modules
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Observation & evaluation: behavior anchor, multiple-eye principle, structured protocols
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Integration conference: consolidation of evidence, risk and fit picture
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Decision template: compact, comprehensible documentation for decision-makers
Why this fits the job of a personnel consultant
If HR consulting was just "matching CVs", there would be no need for an assessment center. CVs are often good for succession and leadership roles - the key question is:
Can this person fulfill the role effectively under real-life conditions?
Assessment centers are then not an "extra", but risk management: they reduce wrong appointments, increase decision-making reliability and strengthen acceptance - because behavior becomes visible and the justification remains viable.
Conclusion: Assessment centers are not a stage - they are decision security
The three projects show different contexts - and yet the same core: responsibility, complexity and the need to make a selection that stands the test of time. With management analytics and psychological aptitude diagnostics, we help clients to make succession and management decisions audit-proof - so that decisions are not only made, but are also sustainable in the long term.
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