For a group $G=\mathbb{Z}_{p^r}^k$ this is quite straightforward. Let $g$ have order $p^r$ in $G$ (if not then we are effectively working in $\mathbb{Z}_{p^s}$ where $s < k$). Applying an automorphism of $G$ we can assume that $g=(1,0,\ldots,0)$. Endomorphisms of $G$ correspond to matrices over $\mathbb{Z}_{p^r}$. The image of $s$ is the first row (or column if you put the map on the other side) and we see that the image of $s$ is uniformly distibuted over all of $G$.
Now consider a general finite abelian $p$-group $G$. Let $g\in G$. We can write $G=\langle h\rangle\times H$ where $g=p^s h\in H$ and $h$ has order $p^m$ for some $m\ge s$. We can specify an endomorphism of $G$ by mapping $h$ to any element $h'$ of order $\le p^m$ and taking any homomorphism from $H$ to $G$. Then the $h'$ are uniformly distributed amongst the elements of order $\le p^m$ in $G$ and $g'$ is mapped to $g'=p^{m-r}h'$. These $g'$ are uniformly distributed over a certain subgroup of $G$.
For general finite abelian $G$ split up $G$ as a product of its Sylow $p$-subgroups. Then $g\in G$ splits up into its primary components and each of these behave in the same way, under a random endomorphism, as in the $p$-group case above.