Job interview questions I struggle with....

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welsh dragon

Thanks but no thanks. I think I'll pass.
Shouldn't you know that before you even apply for the job?


Yes. Thats why I said find out what they do. Once you do that, there may be something you can ask them about the business in general, and it will show that you took the time to find out before the interview.
 

welsh dragon

Thanks but no thanks. I think I'll pass.
Sorry - it didn't quite read like that...


No problem. :okay:
 
There is always a stock question to ask that is obvious but often missed. "Is there anything you feel like you need more clarity on, any areas of concern that I could address before I leave?". This gives you the opportunity to address anything you may have glossed over that they are looking for and eliminate an area of concern.

I always finish with a cheesy comment such as "thank you for the interview, it's been interesting and I have enjoyed it, looking forward to hearing about the next steps in the process?" This shows interest and if you are the only candidate in say 10 to say thank you than you will stand out.
 
The main interview question i struggle with is...

Do you have any questions?

Only works of one of the interviewers had actually started at the job role you are applying for, but...

"Yes I do. When you started your career in this role, what hurdles and challenges did you find that you didn't expect, and how did you overcome them?"

Shows you are looking forward, planning to stay in the role, a problem solver, keen etc.
 
Whatever you do, don't accidentally research the company, on the other side of the industrial complex, with a very similar name, to the one you are having the interview with. It probably wouldn't end well :whistle:
 

Smurfy

Naturist Smurf
If they've behaved like self-important idiots during the interview, and you've already decided you wouldn't want the job if they offered it, just ask them a question that offends their leadership prowess. A good starter is 'What is your strategic plan, and how much are you investing to make sure the business stays ahead of the competition?' Once they've answered that, and their faces have displayed their displeasure, you can question some part of their answer. They probably won't invite a third question! ^_^ :evil:
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
I remember asking a few technical questions, at one interview years ago - more in order to sound interested and knowledgable than to get the answer. I should stress these were perfectly sensible question not smart-arse questions at all. Unfortunately each answer was precedeed by a cough and foot shuffling as they had to admit to some embarrassing crapness in their set up. Every attempt I made to delicately change tack by asking something else led to another embarrasing admission. Oh well

Mind you, on the other side of the table my then boss and I were interviewing an excellent internal canditate, essentially a shoe-in for the role and boss's token questions were a bit feeble sounding so I asked a few so that we at least sounded a bit professional so the candidate didn't turn down the job thinking we were a pair of buffoons. Years later the chap, by now a mate, told me he was.really worried about the interview as I'd given him a real grilling. I'd only been trying to sound vaguely professional!

More.seriously, when I've been recruiting I'm trying to answer two things: can they do the job, and will they be a pain in the arse.

As you (OP) mentioned be prepared for "give me an example of where you've done X".- and x could be "exceeded customer's expectations" "delivered under pressure" and so on - with the content part sometimes in poncy language "world class results". The key thing is to be expecting the "give me an example format" and not being thrown by poncy phrasing - you just have to give a vaguely relevant answer from your CV - "on the such and such project I was responsible for x or did y which shows whatever-the-question-was" Your op shows you've got the idea of this already

Not everone's asking in this style but can throw you if. It makes candidates easier to score / compare so isn't a bad style.

Need a stock answer for "what are your strengths,".and ditto "weaknesses".ie you present another strenght as if it was a weakness "eg I get frustrated.when things take to long" "or I am too patient with difficult customers" etc. These are lazy questions anyway.

It's legitimate to answer "have you any questions." by simple "you've covered everything I was going to ask. but when will you let me know" . But a couple of sensible, not too poncy work related questions are good"

Not "can I go on the sick straight away", or "is it Ok to bunk off early"
 
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