Saturday, April 11, 2020
Favorite Job Interview Questions May Not Be The Best - Part 2 - Work It Daily
Favorite Job Interview Questions May Not Be The Best - Part 2 - Work It Daily In Part 1 of this series, I analyzed the first six questions from a LinkedIn article on the âFavorite Job Interview Questionsâ from 13 CEOâs. I used a simple scoring scale, -2, -1, 0, +1, +2 and the âtotal scoreâ for the first six questions was -7. Letâs see how the score changes with the next six questions. 7. Tell me about a project or accomplishment that you consider to be the most significant in your career. This is an excellent question +2. It could be improved slightly by focusing first on the âmost significant accomplishmentâ in the candidateâs current job. Ask the same question again (and again) for each of the candidateâs previous positions. This creates a performance-based track record that, for an outstanding candidate, will show a progression of increased responsibilities and greater achievements (e.g., greater impact, higher sales, larger team, etc). Every candidate searching for a job should be able to provide detailed answers to this question for different positions. The total is -5. 8. Whatâs your superpower â" or spirit animal? The lowest score Iâm using is -2, but this question really deserves something lower. Whatâs really a concern, but not a surprise, is that the example led to hiring someone thatâs âamazingâ at the job. Thatâs either pure luck or something that was based on other valuable information obtained in the interview. The âfavorite animalâ question is considered one of the bad interview questions by the majority of professionals who take interviewing seriously. Whatâs dangerous is when someone seems to think this question âworksâ and continues to use it. And thereâs certainly no objective way to distinguish among the good and bad animal answers! Iâm wondering if thereâs ever been any objective research correlating animal types to performance. Back to -7. 9. Weâre constantly making things better, faster, smarter or less expensive. We leverage technology or improve processes. In other words, we strive to do more â" with less. Tell me about a recent project or problem that you made better, faster, smarter, more efficient, or less expensive. This is a good question +2. Iâd suggest making sure the candidates knows itâs OK to âthink about it for a few minutesâ before answering. A professional interviewer wonât pressure a candidate and will even encourage a few moments of silence. Iâd also make the question a little more specific, changing âa recent project or problemâ to âa significant accomplishment.â I want the best examples, not just another example. The total is back to -5. 10. Discuss a specific accomplishment youâve achieved in a previous position that indicates you will thrive in this position. This starts as a good question but then fades â" because itâs not clear whatâs required to âthrive in this positionâ +1. The question would be better if it referred to a particular expectation of the position. I developed âPerformance Profilesâ for camp counselors several years ago. One of the key objectives was âgetting to know the campers personally by the end of the first day.â Stating that objective, then asking this question would be excellent interviewing. The total is now -4. 11. So, whatâs your story? This matches the classic âtell me about yourself.â Itâs a bad question, -2, but not completely for the reason most people think. Itâs bad because the overwhelming majority of candidates arenât prepared to give a good response. Itâs unfair expecting a candidate to know what youâre looking for â" itâs even going to be perceived as threatening by some. Read that question again. Does it sound like itâs showing genuine interest or even in printed form does read as a challenge? Iâve tested the âtell me about yourselfâ question with 100âs of candidates. Less than 10% provided answers that were âAâ responses. Most were wandering or irrelevant. Itâs not looking good â" the total is now -6. 12. What questions do you have for me? This question is standard and should be asked in every interview â" itâs a +2. But the person liking this question states that he loves asking it âearly in an interview.â I disagree. It should be asked later in an interview, after thereâs been real rapport established, after any nervousness has dissipated, after youâve created a solid sharing about expectations. Timeâs running out but the score is back to -4. 13. Tell me about a time when things didnât go the way you wanted â" like a promotion you wanted and didnât get, or a project that didnât turn out how you had hoped. Iâm not a fan of the âtell me about a timeâ¦â pure behavioral questions but I still give this a +1. If the interviewer is doing a good job of fact-finding around a candidateâs most significant accomplishments, this is a good example of how to âpeel the onionâ for details. Put into the context of a significant accomplishment will make it much more valuable than just another âtell me aboutâ¦â question. The final score over 13 questions is -3 â" not the hoped for, but probably the expected, result. In the third part of this series, Iâll provide some specific examples of how to answer these questions. See more on âBad Interview Questionsâ at www.212-careers.com Related Posts How To Keep Tough Interview Questions From Ruffling Your Feathers #1 Secret To Getting A Job Interview How To Handle Terminations In An Interview About the author Jim Schreier is a management consultant with a focus on management, leadership, including performance-based hiring and interviewing skills. Visit his website at www.farcliffs.com. Disclosure: This post is sponsored by a CAREEREALISM-approved expert. 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