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| JobMetaSeek | Thursday, August 21, 2008 |
| You Are Here: JobMetaSeek > Career > Advice > Interview > 25 Most Difficult Job Interview Questions |
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25 Most Difficult Job Interview QuestionsBeing prepared is half the battle. A comment on a post here had me digging for this list of 25 tough job-interview questions. If this is overload for you, the most-important thing to do is be yourself. If you haven't lied on your resume, and you haven't lied about your skills in a screening, then don't worry. Just be yourself and have fun with it (in the professional sense, of course). The person interviewing you is as interested in locating the right person as you are having them select you. You are most-likely to be that person when you allow who you really are to come through. Enough with the intro... Here's the list, excerpted from PARTING COMPANY: How to Survive the Loss of a Job and Find Another Successfully : 1. Tell me about yourself. 2. What do you know about our organization? 3. Why do you want to work for us? If you feel that you have to concoct an answer to this question - if, for example, the company stresses research, and you feel that you should mention it even though it really doesn’t interest you- then you probably should not be taking that interview, because you probably shouldn’t be considering a job with that organization. Your homework should include learning enough about the company to avoid approaching places where you wouldn’t be able -or wouldn’t want- to function. Since most of us are poor liars, it’s difficult to con anyone in an interview. But even if you should succeed at it, your prize is a job you don’t really want. 4. What can you do for us that someone else can’t? 5. What do you find most attractive about this position? What seems least attractive about it? 6. Why should we hire you? 7. What do you look for in a job? 8. Please give me your definition of [the position for which you are being interviewed]. 9. How long would it take you to make a meaningful contribution to our firm? 10. How long would you stay with us? 11. Your resume suggests that you may be over-qualified or too experienced for this position. What’s Your opinion? 12. What is your management style? 13. Are you a good manager? Can you give me some examples? Do you feel that you have top managerial potential? 14. What do you look for when You hire people? 15. Have you ever had to fire people? What were the reasons, and how did you handle the situation? 16. What do you think is the most difficult thing about being a manager or executive? 17. What important trends do you see in our industry? 18. Why are you leaving (did you leave) your present (last) job? 19. How do you feel about leaving all your benefits to find a new job? 20. In your current (last) position, what features do (did) you like the most? The least? 21. What do you think of your boss? 22. Why aren’t you earning more at your age? 23. What do you feel this position should pay? If you are asked the question during an initial screening interview, you might say that you feel you need to know more about the position’s responsibilities before you could give a meaningful answer to that question. Here, too, either by asking the interviewer or search executive (if one is involved), or in research done as part of your homework, you can try to find out whether there is a salary grade attached to the job. If there is, and if you can live with it, say that the range seems right to you. If the interviewer continues to probe, you might say, “You know that I’m making $______ now. Like everyone else, I’d like to improve on that figure, but my major interest is with the job itself.” Remember that the act of taking a new job does not, in and of itself, make you worth more money. If a search firm is involved, your contact there may be able to help with the salary question. He or she may even be able to run interference for you. If, for instance, he tells you what the position pays, and you tell him that you are earning that amount now and would Like to do a bit better, he might go back to the employer and propose that you be offered an additional 10%.
Don’t sell yourself short, but continue to stress the fact that the job itself is the most important thing in your mind. The interviewer may be trying to determine just how much you want the job. Don’t leave the impression that money is the only thing that is important to you. Link questions of salary to the work itself. But whenever possible, say as little as you can about salary until you reach the “final” stage of the interview process. At that point, you know that the company is genuinely interested in you and that it is likely to be flexible in salary negotiations. 24. What are your long-range goals? 25. How successful do you think you’ve been so far?
Robert Merrill. A technical recruiter and talent consultant for executives, hiring-managers and job-seekers. See LinkedIn profile for more details. |
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