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Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

July 30th, 2009 @ 11:28 am

83 Comments

Categories: Job Search

Tags: Question, Recruitment & Selection, Games, Corporate Communications, Human Resources, Workforce Management, Personal Technology, Marketing, Jessica Stillman

How to avoid a common interview pitfallEven if you’ve perfected your pitch and learned to summarize your accomplishments in a compelling and concrete way, interviews are not safe ground, especially for those who are relatively new to them. Interviewers have plenty of tricks up their sleeves, not least of which is questions seemingly designed expressly to trip you up. Putting aside the loathed “what are your weakness?” question, blog Cube Rules describes another type of interview question that seems to have no correct answer, calling these “forced choice questions” and giving examples:

  • “What is more important to you, the money or the job?” Great, if I say “the money,” the hiring manager doesn’t think I’m motivated to do the work. If I answer with “the job,” the manager doesn’t think I’ll be upset with a smaller salary offer.
  • “Do you prefer to work alone or with others?” Swell, I can like to work by myself and be thought of as a poor team player with no collaborative abilities, or else I work so well with others I can’t get anything done by myself.

Helpfully, Cube Rules also throws the floundering interviewee a life buoy, suggesting ways out of the bind. Perhaps the simplest solution is to says yes to both answers. For example, in response to the second question above, CR suggests a possible reply: “I like working alone when I need focus and productivity to complete my work. But I like working with people to brainstorm ideas, help get better solutions to problems and help others for what they need.” And if saying yes to all options doesn’t work? Then there is an alternative:

A second way to answer the forced choice is to pick a third option that isn’t presented by the interview question. “Do you work better with a manager that gives you free reign to complete your work the way you want or do you like being micromanaged to get your work done?”

For that type of question, you ignore both options presented and offer up a third alternative to answer this question. “I like a manager that provides clear direction, is open to seeing early versions of the work so we can make sure I’m on track, and to help clear obstacles that might prevent me from getting done.”

Thanks, Cube Rules, that’s one problem sorted out. Of course interviews still have plenty of other dangers. What’s the most impossible-to-answer interview question you’ve ever been asked?

(Image of classic video game pitfall by MontageMan, CC 2.0)

 
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  •  
    1

    Helen B

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    A tough one: If I called manager x in your organisation, what would they say about you? (the recruiter knew this particular manager, but I hadn't worked for them for at least 3 years)

  •  
    2

    lawyerdude666

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Another way to deal with it is to make the choice an inseparable one. "Well, the job and the money are inextricably intertwined, don't you think?" That throws it right back at the interviewer. You could even add why you think so after stating they're intertwined. If she throws it back at you and says you have to pick one, tell her you couldn't do that if she wants you to give a responsible answer. Now if she presses the issue she's put herself in a bad spot. But if she really continues and says you have to answer one or the other, take out a coin and flip it. You have nothing to lose because you probably don't want to be working for someone like that anyway because they're clearly a control freak.

  •  
    3

    christo26@...

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    How about silly ones like "Where do you see yourself in 5 years"
    or "is success one of your defining characteristics" or "what first
    attracted you to ACME co.?"...

  •  
    4

    lawyerdude666

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Helen, as for your question, you could always say something like:

    "Well, if he/she wanted to be fully honest with you he[/she'd say I was a [list your assets: positive, conscientious worker who consistently met deadlines, collaborated when necessary, worked well independently with little need for oversight, etc.]. If for some reason his/her memory is not good or had issues he/she never discussed with me, I suppose the answer might vary somewhat. But I'm confident that the conversation would be primarily positive"

    That way, if the supervisor praises you, you come across as honest. If the supervisor criticizes you you've already planted the seed that he/she's forgetful, is holding a grudge, or didn't properly manage you.

  •  
    5

    JayDeeGee

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    the money

    When I interview I always ask them "could you please tell me - very accurately - what are you earning now in your current role and how is the package made up in terms of base, super, bonus, car allowance etc". Its probably a bit borderline in terms of it being fair/unfair question - but when put on the spot like this most people will answer honestly (as they presume you could find this out for the recruiter or the previous employer during refererence checking) and this means that you are not at the mercy of your recruiter who will always bump up the number in order to win a bigger commission.

  •  
    6

    fsloan

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    lawyerdude666, you wrote: "...she's put herself in a bad spot"

    She NEVER puts herself in a bad spot. MOST times, she has the leverage as this is not a tennis match.

    This is true particularly if she is the hiring manager or one of the principal decision makers.

    I most likely would respond (if i ever chose to actually seek employment LOL!), that money is important as it is an essential element when shopping for food. But from my experience, money is not a longevity factor if the job is not challenging or if the work environment is not conducive to complementing one's life's goals. Then i go on to say what the happy medium would be.... The nirvana-like situation would be one in which the company recognizes what i bring to the table, utilizes various parameters such as realistic cost of living factors, my experience, industry-wide market value combined with challenging projects, autonomy, integrity, respect, sprinkled with a dose of laughter.

    (LOL!)

    God Bless
    Faith Sloan

  •  
    7

    skipboe

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    With all due respect, your examples seem really lame... I would expect that you could do much better since you are being paid to...

  •  
    8

    VFRBoy

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    The "5 years" question is a trap, used to determine whether you
    will be looking for something else/better in a short timeframe.
    You must answer this one in a way that indicates you are
    committed to the job at hand, and that future options will
    present themselves at an appropriate time..

  •  
    9

    JayDeeGee

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Another hard one is "Tell me about an actual time when you had a disagreement with your manager, and how you handled this"

  •  
    10

    fsloan

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    JayDeeGee:

    I have a disdain for the question of what the interviewee's salary history is all about.

    Why?

    The answer to that is "Why?"

    The company should know the market value of the position in which they are seeking my expertise. if John Doe pays me $2 and the company values the position at $8, then throw an $8 offer on the table as a negotiating point. Just because one is currently being paid $2 does not mean they are not worth $8. And just because one is making $8 does not mean they expect $8 for the position being discussed. Also, the benefits, responsibilities, flexibility, company culture and other factors makes the whole package one which can truly be evaluated. I could care less about a company car or term life insurance or childcare since my 'child' is an adult.

    Here is what I ALWAYS said when asked this type of question (when I finally 'grew up')...

    I'd like to become more comfortable with what is required of me first before talking about the value of what I have to offer. I cannot quote an estimate for my expertise until I am sure of what is required of me. By the way, what is the ceiling we're working with. wink (LOL!)

    I either get a laugh or a snobbish 'how dare she' type of answer. in the case of the latter, i don't want to work with that person anyway. Why? I feel she lacks humor and/or refuse to step out of the structured interview questions box, or she is about controlling my expected answers. If I was offered the position and accepted, I would be happy for one week because of its 'newness'. Then life will be a living hell for the both of us after that because, shucks! i got into something which was doomed to fail before I walked into the door.

    But ... that's just me ... and yes, i have leverage yet ain't cocky or self-absorbed.

    God Bless
    Faith 'Da Real Babe' Sloan

  •  
    11

    bialygold

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    We've got some examples (some addressed humorously) here
    http://www.jiltedjournalists.com/Interviewtips.html
    focuing on what interviewers are really after, too, and some sample questions people have been asked for PR-community relations jobs and other positions recently if they can even make it to the interview stage.

    Again, these were derived with the laid-off journalist in mind, but they apply to other jobs too.

  •  
    12

    sunil.kumar

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    A very interesting article coz it makes one think of the similar questions we may have faced in our past life and how we could have avoided or enhanced our responses. Well, my take is that the strategy of any interview is to understand three key elements of a candidate, his skill, his attitude, his committment and his appetite for the job. While his skill can be easily measured by a set of related questions, it is very tough to unearth the attitude and approach. It is in such situation that these questions come handy. It is not important how smart or intelligent the question is, however the response needs to be convincing and reasonable. Some of the most dumbest questions require the most thoughtful answer or we stand dumb and freeze. In fact in real life we confront few of these questions and stand transfixed without answers. Given the current economic climate it is natural for an interviewer to ask what is more important ?work or money?. In conclusion, i appreciate the author who has thought of bringing the soft side of interview which is the hardest to crack as this will help everybody out there in such tough times.

  •  
    13

    aletheiazc

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Still don't know how to answer the age-old "What are your weaknesses?" Any hints?

  •  
    14

    Brendonovic

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    The most Difficult?

    Is when the interviewer doesn't know the answer to their own question.

    Very recently, I was asked to "apply what you've done in the past to this answer". After answering the question, using examples of similar occasions in the past, I was asked... "But hypothetically - what would you do" Confused, I answered hypothetically, trying to use knowledge from that organisation to justify what I "would" do... then I was asked "Yes, But can you give specifics"

    Sometimes there is no right answer! (c:

  •  
    15

    Bartelbroussard@...

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    How about the "Where do you want to be in 5 years?"

    I got ask this question by a panel of peoiple that would have worked for me if I had gotten the job. Their boss had interviewed me and then sent me in front of them. There were 5 before me that didn't get past her. I didn't know what to say for fear of looking to aggressive or not aggressive, I mean who really knows the company in the inside and I don't like to lie. So I said, "I hope to look back and see that I made a difference". Didn't fly, but they didn't like me the minute I walked in the door. As I left the main one would not shake my hand, said she had a cut in her finger. OK, I believe her.

  •  
    16

    Bartelbroussard@...

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Sorry about the mis-spelled word. (People).

  •  
    17

    rickfd

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Talk about link bait.

    Oh well... while I'm here.

    "Describe a situation where the client was irrate and how you handled it." lol.



  •  
    18

    ttown

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    largely agree w/ lawyerdude....

    Exclusionary choice ('which one of these') and/or 'ranking' (scale) types of questions provide opportunity (and I would suggest!) its a signal that it's time to take the lead in this interview..take a breath! look square at your interviewer, try to assess what it is they are trying to accomplish...

    Possibility at this point they've not read you very well?...perhaps they really are concerned that factor A (compensation) is going to dissappoint you and hope that factor B (mission critical) might make it worthwhile. Perhaps they are sensing you haven't grasped an 'imbalanced' workplace/job setting (long hours working alone etc). Or are they a manager that prefers 'rules' to 'principles', linear/hierarchial thinking?.....maybe they are distracted or not really skilled interviewer...

    Your key outcome for the interview is to validate (their hope!) that you are the right candidate for the position.....so an integral part of this is to make sure they do a good job of interviewing you!(IMHO)..help them out before they meander themselves into a rabbit hole of improbable realities or fail to reveal any unknown extremes important to [your] job satisfaction.....
    If they are asking questions like this, its time to make sure the interview continues to move volitionally toward your objective...CONNECT with the interviewer...ask some qualifying/verifying questions, give context to your answers and keep moving!
    tt

  •  
    19

    rickfd

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Thinking back I can remember a panel of four people quizzing me. Three sat in front of me and one off to the side. The one on the side lines kept blindsiding me with challenges to my responses. After about 20 minutes of his badgering, I got fed up. I completely ignored him. When he'd swing, I'd ask the person in front of me "Next question please." The next question would come. The bully was going nuts! lol. When he started foaming at the mouth I nonchalantly asked if they had more questions. "Uh.. no. That'll be all. Thanks for putting up with us." lol. Turns out the bully was leaving and I was coming in to clean up his mess.

    That was 15 years ago and I still get work from them.

  •  
    20

    sunil.kumar

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    aletheiazc:

    The best way to handle this situation is to pick some of your positives and phrase it as your weakness. For instance, i let us assume the interview was for a salesman's job then, i would say the following two to be my weaknesses (a) My weakness is that i am a little too perseverant (b) I like to strike relationships with absolute strangers (c) I am a patient listener. All these qualities are truly a must for any sales guy. So it works in your favor. Trust this helps.

  •  
    21

    JayDeeGee

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    I hear what you're saying fsloan, but interviewing people is a very significant part of my role and I ask that question every time and I always get an answer. If someone, as you suggest, gave me the 'how dare' answer or didn't respond appropriately then I would not consider them for the role. Full stop. My job is to recruit the very best people and the lowest possible cost to the organisation. It doesn't mean we underpay - far from it - but I would be failing in my job if I overpaid. Its a nasty world out there and thats just tough. When you are the employer - and effectively in the driver's seat during the interview - it is appropriate to use that position to your advantage. The forumula for what a candidate is worth is: What I am prepared to pay x what they are prepared to accept. Your story about negotiating and throwing an offer on the table - only happens in the movies. At the high end of the market (exec recruitment) you've already won the job if salary is being negotiated.

  •  
    22

    scribbler60

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    I wish - I sincerely do - that HR folk would realize that they're in existence to actually find the best people for the job and refrain from trick questions.

    I know, it's a stretch, but if HR ever wishes to be taken seriously, they've got to stop avoiding questions like that.

    True story: Some time ago I was asked these questions in a series of interviews with different firms (I swear I'm not making these up):

    "If you could be a vegetable, what sort of vegetable would you be?"
    "Management says you are required to work overtime for a particular project. Union steward says that no overtime will be allowed because contract negotiations are in progress. What would you do?"
    "What is your worst quality?"
    "How do you feel about working unpaid overtime?"
    "Describe yourself in one word."

    And these HR people are paid tens of thousands of dollars.

    The mind boggles.

  •  
    23

    sunil.kumar

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    christo26: It is quite natural for an interviewer to understand your underlying amibitions and aspirations. My answer to the 5 year question would be first an jovial one and then use that as a story line to convince that the joke was indeed a fact. For example: I would say i would like to see myself as a Manager/Director/VP or the designation of the interviewer or his boss depending upon what level you are being interviewed for. This will bring a laugh/smile on the face of the interviewer and the situation a little light. Now is the time to tell your aspiration, I would say, "coming back to your question, i would like to take one step at a time and gradually see myself in a position which has much more responsibility. A role which will help me contribute directly and positively to the organizations growth. A role which will help me guide and mentor future aspirants to be successful in their tasks. A role which will help me align the teams objectives to the organizational goals. I wud use one/all to make my case.

  •  
    24

    Yakimarv

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    When I was asked the question "Where do you hope to be in 5 years." I looked the interviewer right in the eye and said "working your job" and I think that I shook the guy up cause he terminated the interview right there. I was later called by regional manager and was hired. True answers never hurt but I think looking the person right in the eye and telling them something they dont expect

  •  
    25

    sickandtired

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Having interviewed thousands of folks in a long career in both public and private entities, I am more interested in truth and what someone can do for the company. The ******** that HR folks come up with during the interview process reflects more on the HR folks' ignorance than on the candidate's abilities. From personal experience, I believe that is exactly what has put our economy where it is today. If I asked the question "Where do you see yourself in 5 years?" I would rather hear from the respondent, "I will be sitting in the Virgin Islands drinking pina coladas thinking, I wonder what that idiot HR person is doing today--probably asking the same stupid questions of very smart people that passed him/her by years ago!" That takes balls--and THAT, ladies and gentleman is what equates to success. The rest is ********.

  •  
    26

    eyeSell

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    rickfd I got the "irate client" question during a phone interview the other day. I spun the answer to include the entire organization (team player) and what I learned (coachable) and got the invitation to the next step, another interview, next week. Never forget, interviews are like sales; what we really want is to continue the conversation and get the order (job). Peace-

  •  
    27

    musagilani

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    another tricky question which i faced in my life's 1st interview for a multinational bank from the pannel of four people was 'tell us something about your personality which you have not mentioned in your CV'.. i know there could be alot of answers to this question. but this was the first question and for a moment i went ummmmm... i thought that i have already mentioned in my CV about my personality which was worth mentioning.. as that was the Mid Level Sales Job, i replied; one thing i would like to say is i am a born aggressive person. and then i elaborate little more before they could took it in negative way. but interviewer was silent for a moment, may be he didnt know what to say more about it.

  •  
    28

    Manabozho

    07/30/09 | Report as spam

    Interviewers respond to self-awareness, honesty

    Face it: the interests of the interviewee and the interviewer are somewhat at odds. The interviewer wants to find the best fit out of the current field of applicants. The interviewee wants to be offered the job regardless, and have the power to accept or decline as s/he sees fit.

    RE: ?People vs alone? working conditions--Lots of research has shown that introversion and extraversion are very stable personality traits over time. A leading executive search expert once told me that multiple psychological models ratify this, and said, ?If you had to choose only one dimension to predict someone?s behavior, the introversion-extraversion is it.? What an interviewer may try to get at may simply be your preference in this area?do you thrive on stimulation all day long, or do you work best when you have long periods to concentrate on a task without interruption. Nobody?s a villain in this script, and both introverts and extraverts have catastrophic failure modes in the workplace. Most good workers figure how to accommodate their personal wiring, and succeed at the job. The interviewer may know that heavy people contact, or significant isolation, are part of the position, and may just want to put a round peg in a round hole.

    If you?re intent on presenting yourself differently than you really are, you aren?t doing yourself, the i/v process, or the potential employer a favor.

    RE: the money or the job?it?s an odd question, with extra ambiguity in this extreme recession. I?d be surprised if many interviewers asked it verbatim that way. As head of HR for an S&P 500 company for 20 years, I?d say the best policy is still to be honest, but with TACT. If you are feeling very resentful about what the recession has done to your job prospects, and don?t feel you?d adapt well to a lower pay rate, just say that "you?d like to match what you earned before," and leave it at that. You don?t need to tee off on everything that?s wrong with your life since the recession dumped you into the job market.

    If you have flexibility about pay, you could say that you really like the opportunity here, and just want a fair offer. (If you GET an offer, remember, you can still reject it!) My own experience: the best company I ever worked for, with the most opportunity, started with a job where I took a 40% pay cut in the early-?70?s recession. Many companies wouldn?t even consider bringing someone aboard with that differential?seems too risky for early quit or simmering resentment. I did neither. With hindsight, having an open mind to a big pay cut to join a great company was about the smartest thing I ever did for my career.

    But if you show the interviewer that your earning capacity is tied to your anger button, they?ve likely got a few dozen equally good applicants who don?t have your problem.

  •  
    29

    DebF

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    I agree with skipboe - what a pointless article. Incidentally, was "free reign" a Freudian misspelling or just plain ignorance?

  •  
    30

    red_berry

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    Response to Nr 14: Aletheiazc "What are your weaknesses?"

    To Nr 14: Aletheiazc re. your question how to respond to the question "What are your weaknesses?"

    I have often encoutered this question, it is actually simple, mention a strength (must still be true) and tell the interviewer the other end of the strength (the other side of "the story"), use psycology:
    - "I believe in customer service and it has on occasion caused me to have to work over time to ensure that I continue to meet all deadlines."
    - "My track record has proved that I am a high performer on assignments I have been entrusted with. I believe this is due to ownership of the assignments and simple hard work, for which the end results have been extremely rewarding. However, I also expect that my team members deliver on expectations which might not always suit all team members."
    - "I am a perfectionist and unfortunately sloppy work does not impress me."

  •  
    31

    jad67

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Your man above rightly denigrates the panel layout stunt, beloved of big corporations trying to be dynamic, where people are dotted around the room like FBI agents.
    I've seen this:- somebody off to one side shouted things like "How many pigs are there in China?" in order to test the resolve of a very junior candidate, who could have been forgiven for replying "not as many as there are clowns in here".


  •  
    32

    chleoku@...

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    another good one: What's your weaknesses?

  •  
    33

    Konini

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    Come on, come on!

    And the person being interviewed is thinking, what an idiot! Even if all these questions and answers weren't repeated ad nauseum around the net, couldn't they ask questions that build a relationship and show some grasp of the work we will be doing together?

    Believe me, when someone hears a question like that they are only staying for the money. Think carefully, that means no one is offering them more.

    If your recruiters cannot find you people who are leaving 5% on a table some where else, you are not winning. Your 'labour costs' are too high. That is your profit margin in many businesses and you are now hiring people to make it look as if you have a business. Expensive hobby. Go scuba diving - cheaper and more enjoyable.

    Come, come. The interview is your chance to build relationships that manage the inevitable grey areas of a business contract and take us into the mutually delightful area where we enjoy doing our best for each other.

    And if we cannot proceed, because we cannot afford them, at least we keep them as a potential ally and customer.

  •  
    34

    Harry Krishna

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    ll o9f them were dumbfounded except one who answered quite
    rightly: If you find a better candidate than me. (He got the
    job).
    Another one did say that if his experience and profile did not
    match those required for the post and was placed on the
    waiting lit.

  •  
    35

    Harry Krishna

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    My embarrassing question to candidates for the post of
    Software Engineer was: Can you give me one reason you
    should no be given the job?
    All of them were dumbfounded except one who answered
    quite rightly: If you find a better candidate than me. (He got
    the
    job).
    Another one did say that if his experience and profile did not
    match those required for the post and was placed on the
    waiting list.

  •  
    36

    vampirekwc

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Any interviewer worth anything can see through the whole "turn a weakness into a strength" routine. Every coach, every book, every web site out there gives that same advice, and interviewers know that. Candidate answers to this question are generally rehearsed and useless. Honestly, I think any interviewer who is still asking "What are your weaknesses?" is either lazy or needs training on how to interview.

    Asking people that question never got me a useful answer. Now, instead of asking point blank for a list of weaknesses, I ask them questions where their answers tell me their weaknesses, but there's no easy way out. For example:

    "What was your biggest professional disaster and how did you cope with it?" This gives me insight into their possible job-related flaws.

    "Think of someone from your past that you would never use as a reference. What are three adjectives they would use to describe you? Please explain." I can't take credit for this one...I heard it somewhere else. But every time I ask this question, I get an honest answer.

    Another one I ask that can shed light on weaknesses is "As a [job title here], what annoys you?" Sometimes their gripes are typical of people in their position. Other times, the answer shows serious flaws in the candidate's work ethic, maturity, or skill level.

    And as far as being the candidate and getting asked the trick questions (What is more important, A or B?), I wouldn't recommend wasting time going back and forth or trying to "figure out" what the interviewer is after. An interviewer who plays games is a huge red flag in my opinion. I would state point blank, "I think that is an unfair question: I don't see how either answer could make me look good. What are you trying to accomplish with this question?" This lets them know I'm not interested in playing games and that I'm astute enough to see through their BS. If they press those types of questions, I figure it's not a job I want. I would end the interview and leave (luckily I've never had to do that, but I just don't have the patience for nonsense).

    And I think questions like "What kind of vegetable would you be?" are more for gauging response/attitude rather than getting a real answer. I think any vegetable would suffice, as long as you answered in good humor. I mean really, is an interviewer going to say to the hiring manager, "I don't think Mr. X is our guy...of all the great veggies out there, he would actually choose to be a tomato!" The answer just doesn't matter, it's how you answer. I would never ask this type of question, but if an interviewer asked me this question, I'd try to have a little fun with it (just for the record, I'd be a pumpkin).

  •  
    37

    theculturecode

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    the nastiest question i still don't know how to answer to is: 'what's your added value to this company?' or 'why should we hire you'? (as in..we have 50 more candidates, what makes you better than them? )
    like, should i start braggin or .. how the hell do i know what i've got better than others, when i don't even know those folks? and how am i, to add value to a multinational?
    bear in mind, this question comes after highlighting how i adhere to the company's vision, mission and working principles, and after i've explained my competencies and strongest points with relevant examples.
    it always leaves me baffled...

  •  
    38

    sfsherman

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Early in my career, the hardest question was when the
    interviewer asked, "Do you have any questions for me?" But,
    that question is like all other tough ones. It just takes doing
    the homework and an understanding of how to answer it to
    position yourself to get the job.
    Ten Tips to Succeed in a Job Interview: http://tinyurl.com/l9qexf

  •  
    39

    theculturecode

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    to vampirekwc:
    hahaha, what kind of vegetable would you be! that's a funny one. but in my short hr/interviewer xp i had to check the creativity of the candidates, and the question went:
    'imagine you're in antarctica, running naked wearing only a tie around your neck? suddenly you see a gorilla chasing you. what do you do?'
    yeah, the answer to that doesn't matter. it's the reaction! how do you cope with whacky, unforeseen situations?

  •  
    40

    pdinfull1@...

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    I'd stop and give the gorilla the tie, because that's why he's chasin' me.

  •  
    41

    Jkottemann

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    The first time I was asked "what's your greatest weakness?" I was in the midst of the toughest interview I have ever experienced. The job was in a large city and I was a country kid. The job was in a medical laboratory and I had no clinical science background. I was so intimidated. I was so nervous. I looked her straight in the eye and said "it's got to be fresh baked bread." She was shocked; I was stunned I had said something so stupid. The tension was broken. We both laughed heartily. That was 20 years ago and we still laugh about it -- our jobs have taken us in different directions but we've remained friends.

    As to the veggie question, always use something obscure -- say "Okra". You'll be asked "Why?" and you can explain that ths veggie is largely ignored and rarely found on the menu but it adds so much flavor and fullness to a New Orleans gumbo that you can't imagine life without it. The question is more about creativity than anything else.

  •  
    42

    stonewalla

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    To Faith:
    You truly are "Da Real Babe"! Your response about the money question was right on it. I answered the question almost word for word the way you did, when I got my current job that I have had for 3 1/2 years.
    I look at the interview as two-way communication. I am not looking to see if they'll "Pick me! Pick me!" to work for their organization. I ask a lot of questions and sometimes I will turn a difficult question around and say something like, "Hmm, I'm not sure. How would you anwer that question?" I immediately try to gauge the acceptance of humor and creativty with my questions. I am looking to see if they are representing an organization that is worthy of my skill and talent. I have since received 3 raises, a bonus & 2 recognition rewards but I have also received a salary reduction and survived 4 rounds of workforce realignment.
    I commute 2 hours roundtrip everyday and have had multiple offers (at equal or above my current salary) that are much closer to home, but I love my job and I love the people with whom I work and interact on a daily basis. Money isn't everything when it comes to employment, I just want to be rewarded for what I provide my employer and it is always much more than the assigned tasks listed in my job description.

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    43

    JayDeeGee

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    "If you could be a vegetable, what sort of vegetable would you be?" - I'm sorry but you made that up. It never happened. I wish people wouldnt illustrate their points with false examples. It doesn't contribute to the to discussion and it is also patronising to other people. I mean to say......you honestly think we're all stupid enough to buy that cr@p? Same with the antartica/gorilla/tie example - whatever!

  •  
    44

    majorstu

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    A couple of real world examples.

    I had a very good relationship with my first manager in a job, got performance reviews with comments like "takes charge, gets things done". Then that manager retired and I got a new one, suddenly the atmosphere changed and my first review commented, "oversteps the bounds of his authority".
    I use this response when asked about weaknesses, adding that the weakness is that I try to work through the problems and get the mission accomplished, but sometimes misjudge other people's perceptions of my attitude.

    On another occasion, I was working as a resident applications engineer. My primary job was to be the eyes and ears for our company, and to take the point in addressing customer issues. I was counseled that sometimes I could be a little too passionate as an advocate for our customer.

    When asked about our weaknesses, it's all about other's perceptions, isn't it?

  •  
    45

    techrabbi

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    to the question "what is your greatest weakness?" i like to say, "i don't often interview well."

  •  
    46

    cathmary

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    One comment I am not seeing here is that the interviewer doesn't always know how to interview!!
    When I first started interviewing entry-level candidates (at a then Big 8 accounting firm) I was in my
    late 20's. I was told what questions were illegal, but after that I was on my own. I think a lot of lame
    questions not pertinent to the job evolve out of similar situations: when is it you are taught how to
    interview? After all, you're really looking to see if the person has the chops to do the job AND to see
    if you get along with them. That's it.

    As far as Helen's question re: what would your manager say? Well, anyone that managed me within 3 years
    would already be on my reference list. And that's how I'd answer that question. Heck, nowadays,
    references say very little for fear of a lawsuit so they are virtually pointless.

    As for Faith Sloan, I agree and disagree. 100% agreement with the salary question. There is absolutely
    NO place for that kind of detail as jaydeegee mentions even in the salary negotiations, let alone
    during the interview! The salary negotiations should only to relate to what the market pays for the
    NEW job. What the candidate is being paid at his current job has no bearing on the salary discussions.

    I disagree, on the other hand, with Faith's comment that the interviewer holds all the cards. No, they
    don't. In fact, it could be a smear on them if they hire candidates who consistently don't work out.
    That aside, why is is we don't hesitate to be picky about what car we drive, where we live, who we date,
    etc. etc. but we effectively kow-tow to the interviewer as if the position is the only one in entire world?
    We should be considering if we WANT to work at that company and/or for that interviewer.
    If we're a square peg and the only openings at a company are for round holes, keep looking. Somewhere out
    there is a company that can use square pegs.

  •  
    47

    Jstone1975

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    A friend of mine was an HR Manager at an inside call center in a major museum. He frequently had to interview potential customer service representatives. The problem was that there were so many interrelated programs that were involved and the logistics behind setting up, for example, visiting school groups that many new hires failed miserably rather quickly. He started asking "Can you define 'common sense' for me and do you think you have it?" This weeded out a lot of people!

  •  
    48

    vampirekwc

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    JayDeeGee,

    Those types of questions are most certainly asked in interviews. I've been asked which animal I'd be before. And I worked with someone who always asked candidates what superhero they'd be. I think they're silly questions and don't tell you much unless the candidate responds in a hostile way.

    But make no mistake, interviewers ask those questions all the time.

  •  
    49

    Ken Ferry

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    To JayDeeGee:

    Sorry to be the one to break the news to you, but your company is doomed to failure through mediocrity. Your hire-the-best-for-the-least philosophy will only work in a tanked economy. As soon as things start to turn around, these cheap hires will all jump ship, taking all your trade secrets with them.

    Even in a bad economy, you are guaranteed not to get the best talent because the company they currently work for is doing everything in its power to keep such valued staff. But then that's a concept outside of your ability to comprehend.

  •  
    50

    cgayton@...

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Fairly common question: How well do you work under stressful conditions? This can be a difficult question because you may wonder if the conditions are so stressful that they have to ask potential candidates in advance do ward off anyone who isn't comfortable under those circumstances. All jobs have stressful moments, so if the question is asked I immediately wonder if it is a the nature of the job. When I have been asked this question, I followed-up with questions about specific situations or gave an example of how I handled a particular incident. But I consider it a red flag.

  •  
    51

    Newera

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Dear oh dear...

    I think people have this the wrong way around!

    When I'm interviewing, I want to make sure the applicant has every opportunity to respond - the aim is NOT to catch them out!

    If a potential employer is trying to trip you up and/or make you look foolish at the interview stage - what does that say about the company?
    If someone asked me about superheroes I'd walk out!

  •  
    52

    jmooreii@...

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    I know a lady that always asks this question..."Describe your closet."

    A guy I know likes to ask..."Tell me something you do that's not on your resume" or "What do you do for fun?"

    I like to ask an unusual question during an interview...something like those two...don't really care how they answer...more interested in how they think on their feet. How do they answer a question they don't have a prepared answer for. Most interviewees these days do their homework and have prepared answers for all the standard questions...so need to trip them up somehow and see if they can perform under pressure.

  •  
    53

    marknbeth1

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Thank you, Thank You! I read 46 responses, some great, some horrible. FINALLY I got to a response that I felt was clever enough to remember this entire article.

    I'm a square peg, looking for a square company offering a great square opportunity! Thanks cathmary!

    By the way, organization is spelled with a 'z' for those using the substitute 's'.

  •  
    54

    dugl@...

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    The sneakiest question I was ever asked occured many years ago, and occurred AFTER the official interview was over.

    As I was walking down the hallway heading for the exit with the HR guy who interviewed me, he off-handedly said, "You really look familiar. I must know you from somewhere....hmmm..... maybe from church. Which church do you go to?

    Innocently I replied that I didn't attend church but my wife and kids attended the Church of Latter Day Saints. Well, being in the Bible Belt that turned out to be the wrong answer for sure, but it never occured to me until later when I went from being at the top of the list (when can you start?), to "Well, you're a little long on experience on some areas, and a little short on experience we're looking for in other areas."

    It wasn't a huge setback as I received another offer within a few days, but I never forgot that little trick. Nor have I ever used it. As an employer I do want to know a potential employees mindset and heart, but I'm not going to be disingenuous to figure it out. I've developed my own set of questions to do that. happy

  •  
    55

    rwester

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    Out of the Box Interview Questions

    I too, was surprised to read JayDeeGee's response to the "vegetable" question. These kind of questions are becoming more popular in interviews. I really think they are designed to see how you would respond and if you can think "out of the box".

    I was asked, "How many quarters would it take stacked to reach the top of the Empire State Building?"

    It did indeed catch me off guard. My response terrible. I said something about not even knowing how tall the ESB was. I guess I'd start off by researching Google.

    Now that I look back on it (since I didn't get the job), I think it would have been better to tie it in with the job I was applying for (IT support specialist). Not knowing an exact answer...but explaining potential steps you would use to try to find the solution.

    I am curious how others might have answered this one.

  •  
    56

    LyndaTurner

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    People, People....Interviews are only conducted after people are qualified (skills & experience wise) for the job. The interview is a process we use to disqualify candidates not qualify them. We are looking for reasons not to hire someone for the postion by asking a series of questions that help us do that and we determine those questions based on our (the interviewers or companies) preference. Answers vary greatly, but we know the right person will stand out. It is 80% chemistry and who will fit in with the organization that determines the hire. This includes attitude, desire, commumication skills (body language), appearance, humor, wit, patience, stamina, etc. We sometimes put people through 3-5 interviews, take a concensus of opinions from all involved and still don't extend any offers. "When in doubt, don't." There are no right or wrong answers, there are no right or wrong questions. The people who get the jobs are ususally the ones that are most comfortable in their own skin and make the interviewer feel comfortable in theirs. Know who you are! You need to do your homework and demonstrate the desire for the job you are applying for. Honesty is always the best policy. It's a numbers game and we find that during a recession we have to interview 6-12 qualified people to find the right one (Recruiters give us the best options). The right number for you, if you are looking for a job, can be reduced if you do what some of you have already said: Apply to the companies and jobs that will only offer you what you are looking for. Check out their Mission Statements, reputations for fair and reasonable compenstion, Customer Base/Service Policy, turnover rate, etc. It is always going to be the best compromise for both the employer and employee and sometimes that is 50/50 or 60/40 or 40/60 or even 70/30 or 90/10....but you decided what you want to work for. Realize that you don't lose if you don't get the job. All life experience is valuable if you learn from it. If you won't play their game they won't hire you. If you won't challenge them, they won't hire you. If you are all about what's in for "me" they won't hire you. Keep looking, learn from your experiences and believe you deserve the best becasue you give the best! Do your homework and be persistent in your search. Rembember, companies change with each new management. It is all about Chemistry and what is best for the company. You determine if you want to be part of their equation or not just by being who you are. Don't waste your time. Know who you are, what you have to offer, and where you want to go. If you know these truths about yourself, you will be able to answer any question and work for any company lucky to have you.

  •  
    57

    lawyerdude666

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    rwester, you can answer honestly by saying, "for me to be able to answer that I'd need two more bits of information that I don't have off the top of my head. I could tell you how I'd go about *finding/figuring out* that answer for you. But until I know the exact height of the building and how tall a stack of quarters is, I'd just be pulling a number out of the air and I suspect that's not something you'd want me to do."

    So many times these questions are not about the answer but, just like the bar exam, your reasoning process.

    Also, for things like the gorilla question, I'd have told the interviewer that what I'd do is wake myself up and swear off Tequila for awhile. Truly. I once had these two self-enamored pricks from a white shirt firm interviewing me and in their "most serious judge/jury/executioner faces with their hands folded" position asked me "So, Jonathan, what truly intimidates you?" As God is my witness I didn't skip a beat, looked up over their heads and (in a pseudo Shatner performance) said, "Really. Big. People.", emphasizing it like I was trying to reach up and hug a grizzly. The look on their faces was priceless: mouths ajar, two seconds of not knowing what to say. No, I didn't get the job, but it was great knowing *they* didn't intimidate me.

  •  
    58

    bright_zhu

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    After such a long time reading, finally I gonna the end. Honestly, I do not think lots of pitfall is really pitfall. For what? If you want to get a job, that means you want to get the job fit for you. So, if you answer these questions honestly, that is enough, althrough I have not confronted a interview.
    Honesty is the base of a person. Anyone will bring profit to the company provided he/she is honest.

  •  
    59

    lawyerdude666

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Sorry, Zhu, but I've known plenty of people who were honest as the day is long but dumber than bricks and added absolutely nothing to their team or department. Most eventually quit or were fired, though some managed to linger. The key is not being honest, but understanding the system and playing with it rather than trying to fight it. 'Cause you'll never win that fight.

  •  
    60

    Ron McManmon

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Lynda Turner ? comment #57? I can't agree with you more. I love this dialog and feel it is one of the most beneficial discussions I have seen in a long time.

    Essentially the challenge with interviews is the interviewee doesn?t understand the process; and why should they when most interviewers don?t know why they are asking the questions, in most cases. Many years ago I would ask the Hiring Manger what their ?gut feeling? was of the pool of candidates that were going through the interviewing process. At this stage of the process all of the candidates were more than qualified and it boiled down to who felt most comfortable in their own skin? AND the reason a candidate would covey this perception is because they knew what they were looking for and it was a natural fit? or ?Square peg in a square hole?.

    PASSION cannot be faked but it can be felt and this is why (my "gut feeling") the final decision usually boils down to a ?gut feeling?. So, if you know what you are looking for I guarantee that there is an opportunity out there that is a perfect fit. Now, you have to get out there and find it; and this would lead me in to a Marketing 101 discussion TBD.

    BTW... Personally I find the question, ?Where do you want to be ten years from now??, a questions that I would have a lot of fun with and if I can?t have fun in an interview it would not be a good fit. So, bring it on?

  •  
    61

    opabrown

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    When asked about my weaknesses, my response "My weakness is chocolate, it bring me to my knee's.

    For a little fun try asking:

    1. Tell me what cartoon character you are most like and why?
    2. You have told me why I should offer you a position. Give me one reason why I should not offer you a position?
    3. Tell me how many quarters it would take to reach the top of the empire state building?

    By the way all of these are answerable questions. Try your luck.

  •  
    62

    opabrown

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Oops!!! The Empire State building question should continue to say "if stacked on their edge."

  •  
    63

    JohnDz

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Regarding the dreaded pay question, the last time I was asked this question I responded along the lines of:

    "Well, I understand that this company, like any other, has it's own internal cost structure. Meaning there is already a range assigned to this position based on it's worth to the company, and what level of responsibility and accountability is commensurate with holding the position. I also know in general what the market rate is for this position, or other positions with similar qualities, and requiring the background that I posses.

    Knowing that if I am the candidate that you believe will fit the needs of this position, I believe that you will offer me the position, want me to accept, and look at this company as with a long term perspective. Holding these assumptions as true, I expect a fair and reasonable offer, which will take into account my education, practical experience and the many intangibles I will bring to the company when I assume this position."

    Usually they are just expecting a dollar range in response. After 10 seconds, they realize I'm not going to give them one and understand I won't be selling myself short, but that I'm not afraid to start looking again if they try to low ball an offer.

  •  
    64

    Ron McManmon

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Lynda Turner ? comment #57? I can't agree with you more. I love this dialog and feel it is one of the most beneficial discussions I have seen in a long time.

    Essentially the challenge with interviews is the interviewee doesn't understand the process; and why should they when most interviewers don't know why they are asking the questions, in most cases. Many years ago I would ask the Hiring Manger what their "gut feeling" was of the pool of candidates that were going through the interviewing process. At this stage of the process all of the candidates were more than qualified and it boiled down to who felt most comfortable in their own skin... AND the reason a candidate would covey this perception is because they knew what they were looking for and it was a natural fit... "Square peg in a square hole".

    PASSION cannot be faked but it can be felt and this is why {my gut feeling} the final decision usually boils down to a 'gut feeling. So, if you know what you are looking for I guarantee that there is an opportunity out there that is a perfect fit. Now, you have to get out there and find it; and this would lead me in to a Marketing 101 discussion TBD.

    BTW... Personally I find the question "Where do you want to be ten years from now?", a questions that I would have a lot of fun with and if I can't have fun in an interview it would not be a good fit. So, bring it on:)

  •  
    65

    Anne13

    07/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Also a very bad question, "What are your strengths and
    weaknesses?"

  •  
    66

    brotheryo@...

    08/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    RE:marknbeth1

    organization is spelled with an "s" in British English. Which is sometimes more accepted globally than American English. (The sun never sets on the British Empire.)

    Doesn't seem people really care about spelling anymore. If you did, you wouldn't get to the end of this discussion board.

  •  
    67

    Zilmar

    08/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Re:rwester-
    As to the quantity of any object needed to equate the Empire State, one could answer: "- Exactly one thousand objects measuring one thousandth of the building height". In fact, it probably is a better answer than the question deserved.

    Zilmar, S?o Paulo, Brasil

  •  
    68

    Licky

    08/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    I probably respond with something short like..."I guess the money is pretty much what makes it a job right? Otherwise, it is just work. I believe I am interviewing for the job you mentioned. Besides, both you and I aren't really interested in working for money, its just that the bills are so interested in money." Try to make it funny, but yet profound.

  •  
    69

    dohashawki

    08/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    I totally agree with @lawyerdude666 , the best way to
    answer questions like that is to give a third answer and in an
    intelligent way. And definitely if they keep insisting on
    answering, this means that the best decision is not to work
    for this organization, because yes this person would be too
    much of a rigid person and control freak.


    And yes @christo26@..., these silly questions are really
    irritating... Will someone ever say "no I am not success
    material???????" , I mean why ask a question when you know
    you will get a well prepared answer for it that means nothing

  •  
    70

    Mr Rusty

    08/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    How about "What aspect of work do you enjoy least".

  •  
    71

    theculturecode

    08/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    for the ppl who find it difficult to ask questions to the hr responsible or the line manager (or both, in case it's a joint interview), here's a thought: remember that behind the role, they are also employees of the same company. besides, we've all been in a few companies by now, and we know what we want for our next career challenge, don't we?

    so for the hr responsible, possible questions would be:
    - what are the learning opportunities the hr team offers?
    - do you update the training catalogue on a regular basis, by asking feedback to your employees?
    - can i really trust the hr team for personal issues with my manager (confidentiality?)
    - does the hr team facilitate a coaching/mentorship program?
    - what are possible career paths for my level?

    for the line manager:
    - how would you solve a conflict between 2 members of your team?
    - how do you capitalize on a culturally diverse team?
    - would you feel threatened if one of your employees constantly brings brilliant ideas?
    - would you let one of your employee take the bullet for one of your mistakes, if this could cause you loosing your job, or face, in front of top management?
    - would you be willing to take the bullet for one of your employee's mistake?
    - how do you make sure your team works at full potential?
    - how do you keep your employees motivated in times of crisis/ corporate restructuration?
    - do you know how to manage gen Y employees and are you aware of what keeps them challenged?
    - are you aware of the Equal Pay Day?
    - how do you keep women in your team motivated, if their male colleagues earn 1/4 more per year, for the same level/competencies?
    - what activies keep you well informed of the latest buzz in your industry
    - what is the perfect employee, in your regard?
    - what are the things an employee should never do while working for you?

    i could give you more, but you'd need to pay me for that:)

    for the lawyerdude: waaaaaaaay to go! LOL!! i'd pay to be able to see those faces hahahaah! and stay off the tequilla!

  •  
    72

    AlanK88

    08/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    money = egg?

    Job = chicken?

  •  
    73

    Mrs. Rashid

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Another question that i was asked was that will you leave us if you get a better opportunity?... and I said ofcourse every one is looking for the better. After this, I thought I would never get this job.... but I dont know how.... I got it.

  •  
    74

    tramky

    08/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    This is why I loved owning my own business--didn't have to sit for this inanity in interviews. I don't believe for a minute that 'productivity' in American corporations is on the rise. The statistics that are released by the Fed or the Department of Labor about productivity must be reflecting something not actually happening in companies.

    As an older person (61) here's one question I'd ask the interviewer: how many people over the age of 50 have you hired in the last 2 years? Their answer to that question will determine whether I end the interview then & there or let it continue. Of course, being 61 means that I won't be getting any interview.

  •  
    75

    InsuranceBrokerinPA

    08/21/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    Good one tramky. I am seeing a lot of age discrimination now as I try to re-enter the work force. Things are going terrific and then when it comes to the benefits, I mention I need to add two fiftysomethings to their group health plan and then all bets are off.

  •  
    76

    kennethmark

    08/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    I must say, there a lot of interesting responses posted to this article. I am a bit surprised by the hostility generated by the very idea of difficult interview questions. I agree, there are some bad interviewers and bad interview questions out there. But most of the "tough" questions that have been suggested are fairly decent and reasonable. At the end of the day, interviews should not be about tricks or traps. An interview, ideally, should be a mutual exploration to find out if there is a good fit between the job requirements and the candidate. Fit includes skills and experience, but also motivation (job/money, where are you in 5 years, what aspect do you enjoy least, etc.), compensation, interpersonal skills, cultural fit, and "baggage". Except where the candidate has some fatal flaw that they must hide to be employable, it is in both parties best interest to clearly understand what the other party is all about. It is failing to do this that leads to bad hiring decisions which result in misery for everyone.

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    77

    jfh7719

    09/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    As an HR professional, I ask questions that will yield meaningful answers. There's no need to ask something inane to get people out of the usual interview mode. I catch many people off guard with "Tell me about a time you failed" and yet this gives me insight into the candidate's definition of failure, how the person corrected the situation, how straightforward the candidate is, and whether or not the person learned anything from the situation. It is very telling when the candidate snaps, "I've never failed!" or goes on to tell how the failure wasn't their fault and blames a colleague. On the positive side, this question has gotten some people to discuss their approach to problem solving and learning from errors.

  •  
    78

    Carla LaPorte

    09/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    How about the "Where do you want to be in 5 years?"

    I've found that succinctly answering this question with, "I hope to be doing interesting and challenging work for [Company name]" works well.

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    79

    Donna21

    09/28/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    The one that got me was a variation of the 3 words question. After a full morning of interviews at a BIG company (and dinner w/ part of the serach committee the night before), I was taken to the office of someone whose position was unclear to me (her responsibilities were in line w/ my background, so I figured I'd be working w/ her somehow, but she didn't seem to be a part of the work group or reporting sturcture of anyone else I'd spoken with).

    So, already on shaky ground, her first question to me is "Name 3 words that you would use to describe yourself." OK, deep breath, I finally came out with 3. She doesn't ask for explanation, just nods and continues, "What are 3 words that your friends would use to describe you?" It just get's worse, no followup, and 2 more variations (coworkers and boss) to each of which I tried to find a different answer - but maybe that was my mistake. Maybe I should have jsut said the same 2 words.

    I would have been much more comfortable w/ the vegetable or gorilla questions. And I have felt more comfortable w/ the one about naming a bad experience (a job failure or dealing w/ an impossible boss/colleague) and explaining how I dealt with it - and if I would do the same today.

  •  
    80

    EASTeam

    09/29/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    You could always sing, "I work alone. Yeaaah haaaa with Nobody Else!
    You know when I work alone, I prefer to be by MYSELF!!" :~)

    Kirk Abraham
    Engineering Solutions Team

  •  
    81

    huien01

    10/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    I was once asked, "what's your net worth?". Totally taken
    aback by the highly personal (and illegal!) question, I muttered
    something about having enough that I didn't need the job, I just
    wanted one that allowed me to contribute to the best of my
    abilities. Surprisingly, I not only got the job but was fast-
    tracked in the company.

  •  
    82

    michaelpdrake

    10/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    It has been said that someone can tell more about you by
    the questions you ask than the answers you give. Were I to
    be asked such puerile questions at the level I am looking to
    be hired, I have chosen my target company unwisely. If
    they are out to trip me up in the interview it shows how
    badly run their company is. At all times managers must
    seek to get the best out of people not see them fail. Far
    better to ask the candidate to describe a highlight of their
    past work the and use a legitimate challenge to elicit the
    'response under pressure' for an analysis of true grit.

    Faced with the original cheap attack I would recommend a
    polite withdrawal.

  •  
    83

    mphcoach

    10/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Avoid a Common Interview Pitfall

    ...and there's an irony in all the so-called 'trick' questions that are posed here.

    Good interviewers want to find out detail about the individual if they are any good as interviewers. Power crazed, ego-tripping interviewers are no good to the organization.

    Go for their job.

    Martin Haworth
    How to Win at Assessment Centers

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