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Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

August 3rd, 2009 @ 5:17 am

19 Comments

Categories: Job Search

Tags: Weakness, Recruitment & Selection, Human Resources, Workforce Management, Jessica Stillman

How to answer difficult interview questionsLast week’s post about how to answer some troubling interview questions set off a hugely interesting conversation among readers who joined in to share their experiences with difficult interviews, as well as their best advice for how to respond to tricky situations. Out of a flurry of comments, three types of interview questions emerged as the most vexing for readers:

  1. Questions about weaknesses or failures – these questions are framed to get you to criticize yourself or to cough up examples of past problems. Examples include the straight up “What are your greatest weaknesses?” and more round about versions such as “Tell me about an actual time when you had a disagreement with your manager” or “Describe a situation where the client was irate and how you handled it.”
  2. Questions on pay and  level of ambition – no one wants to sell themselves short but how high is too high?
  3. Oddball questions — these are designed to shake up the interviewee and elicit unscripted answers. Examples abounded in the comments and included everything from “Describe your closet” to the slightly unbelievable but hugely imaginative “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?’

Thankfully, readers also came through with suggestions –– some hilarious, some dubious, some spot on — for how to respond. Reader Yakimarv, for instance, offers a ballsy response to the question “Where do you hope to be in five years?” He reports: “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 a regional manager and was hired.”

Meanwhile, majorstu suggests one way to frame a strength as a weakness without making the effort absurdly transparent and unconvincing. His solution: use a concrete real world example of how what constitutes a plus to some could be an issue for others. His answer:

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.

Techrabbi, however, keeps his answer to the weaknesses question short and sweet: “to the question ‘what is your greatest weakness?’ i like to say, ‘i don’t often interview well.’”

Thanks to all for the thought-provoking comments. Keep ‘em coming.

(Image of the view from the interviewer’s seat by David Davies, CC 2.0)

 
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  •  
    1

    talhooj1

    08/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    I think for weakness question, one should say that i am a regular sportsman that wasted lots of my time for studies, this was the view of my parent throughout my education, but i finally achieve success and i learn the art of team work through sportsmanship.

  •  
    2

    sagarnmehta

    08/04/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    Weakness and Strength are relative terms. I find time management as my weakness, when work is not much demanding or challenging, motivation to be on time gets reduced. But on contrary it changes and improves. So I feel these questions checks many other characteristics and mere leads to next question .

    Say whatever, justify it and make a justifying point, that with weakness too you are still eligible for that position.

    About Making own pay scale eligibility, its a mixture of certain things:

    Thinking on certain parameters, one can justify truthfully how much one should is eligible for:

    1) Your market value & Co's Pay scale
    2) Your living Standards
    3) The unique value delivery of a person
    4) Previous Salary

    Antarctica question:

    I would say, RUN RUN RUN..and Scream when its too near..whats the option?

    That's how you frighten a wild animal in worst case, as i learned from Discovery Channel.

  •  
    3

    Harry Krishna

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    As HR Manager, one of my questions to interviewees was: tell
    me why you should not get the job? In other words tell me
    about your weaknesses.
    But the best answer would be if you find a better candidate.
    Another interesting question was: What do you think of
    humility? Most of them if not all would in some way reply that
    they have it. But humility is a very strange quality as once you
    say you have it, you don't!

  •  
    4

    nomsk

    08/05/09 | Reported as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    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??

    Offer him the tie...

  •  
    5

    pcorkery@...

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    Antarctica naked? Only one thing to do.... ask the gorilla for a dance!

  •  
    6

    jimmytortuga@...

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    -"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?"

    - "Freeze."

  •  
    7

    sutliff

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    "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?"

    Wake up.

  •  
    8

    bpt9697

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    I was once asked why man hole covers are round. I went the metaphorical route with my answer and rambled off something about not everyone being the same, can't fit a square peg into a round hole, importance of flexibility.... Turns out, man hole covers are round because any other shape could be positioned in a way to fall on the person's head who is down in the hole. In the end, I got the job. Turns out none of the other candidates tried to answer. Was also asked in the same interview what the quickest route from England to Chicago is by air - direct or over Canada? And I'm not a pilot! Ha!

  •  
    9

    Strockbine

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    Question: ?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??
    Answer: Since I am in the Antarctica with only a tie, I would quickly die of hyperthermia. Therefore, I would kill the gorilla and use the skin/fur to make footwear and a coat to keep warm. How about that for innovation!
    -Strockbine

  •  
    10

    libbypace

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    I was done in by what should have been an innocuous question.

    I was working for a well-known actor's production company in Los Angeles when I interviewed to work for a theme park designer in Japan. I was looking for a new job because I was angry about not getting the opportunities I wanted from the production company. The interview went very well, and I was really excited. We wrapped up and I gathered my belongings. In my head, I considered the interview to be over. But, as I left his office, the interviewer cheerfully asked, "How will [well-known actor] do without you?" Unfortunately, I had already turned off the interview filter between my brain and my mouth. Out popped something along the lines of, "Not my responsibility," in a hostile tone of voice. Yikes! Needless to say I didn't get the job.

    Just to be on the safe side, I now remain in interview mode until I'm all the way back home.

  •  
    11

    RimeGuy

    08/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    "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?"

    Take out my gun and shoot it. "Where did you get the gun?"
    Same place you got the gorilla!

  •  
    12

    sarini

    08/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    How about just saying there are no gorillas in Antarctica?

  •  
    13

    eknittel

    08/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    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??

    Offer it a cigar, when it died from laughter, I'd wear its coat ...

  •  
    14

    theculturecode

    09/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    LoL! thanks Jessica for using my gorilla/Antarctica tricky question. i'll mention it to my fellow Aiesec recruiters that also used this question during interviews, they'll have a good time reading the alternative answers.
    comparing the reactions of the readers' from the previous related article to now..i can definitely see improvement.
    great, that was my point too!

  •  
    15

    mersky

    10/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    WHew! I need to kill the Gorilla. No choice, get the meat,
    use his skin for my jacket.

  •  
    16

    lornaolynn

    10/22/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    In the North Pole - a Gorilla & a tie - please - hop on the ship that just arrived!

  •  
    17

    mphcoach

    10/31/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    Use the old radio/tv intervies technique. Say, 'What's really important here is...' and then go with a positive.

    For example, 'Tell me about a time when you failed'. Would go like this

    ''What's really important here is having the ability to have a balanced view and notice that when things go wrong, there are also opportunities. For example, just last month, I worked with my team to introduce a new accounting system. Despite all of our efforts, there were some elemenst that we could have done differently to make it much smoother. I got the people together and we worked out what we learnt and logged that for next time.'

    I give me the job with that answer!

    Martin Haworth
    How to Win at Assessment Centers

  •  
    18

    ms. e

    11/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    Good one: why would we hire you and not someone else. I learned that you must focus on what they are after, do not ever attempt saying anything outside their interest, and be as excited and passionate as you can. it is not enough to be very professional about the ordeal, with your sterling qualifications and competence. They want to hear there is no other world but that one, do not talk about any future without them. So, how do you show you are properly excited?

  •  
    19

    ms. e

    11/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Readers' Wisdom: How to Answer Difficult Interview Questions

    also: why would we hire you and not someone else?
    -focus on what they want to hear, there is nothing you would like to do more, you can do this effortlessly too, your future with them, etc and do not attempt to say anything outside the job, say going to some place someday. be alert, all questions are designed to see where you 'focus'...and they expect you to be so excited --ANYONE OUT THERE WHO KNOWS HOW TO GET EXCITED PROPERLY?

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