Job Interview Questions You Need to Know
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Ever get stumped by a job interview question? Well, perhaps it was because you never imagined such strange, silly or extremely direct questions would come your way. It's part of the job search volley that you will be made to feel uncomfortable. They want to see how you handle pressure, and if you can keep your composure and answer with a measured, thoughful response. CIO.com has put together a list of such questions, some that are more conventional, but others that are becoming more standard in a recession and tough economy. Companies are going to due their diligence on you, so better to be ready for it than to look like someone smacked you in the head with a wet fish. The article has comments and suggestions on how to answer each of these questions. From the CIO.com article:
On the "why you were selected to be laid off question," Brian Nettles, a director of systems at CB Richard Ellis, told CIO.com the following: Nettles says a job seeker's anger toward his former employer sometimes surfaces when answering this question. Yet a candidate who speaks negatively about a former employer "shows a lack of self-control or discipline," he says. In a subsequent post, CIO.com's Meredith Levinson writes about unconventional interview questions. They are:
You should think about how you would answer all of these questions effortlessly and with grace. Take some of them with a grain of salt, but answer them and try to get to what the person is really wanting to know. If you think's its a ludicrous question, ask politely for some clarification and calmly give an answer that shows you can handle bumps in the road. How do you answer that IP address question? Simon Stapelton, a chief innovation officer in the United Kingdom, says in that blog post that he wasn't sure exactly how he answered it other than to say: [He] would not be the loop back address (the IP address of one's own computer.) He thinks he was asked this question to demonstrate that he understood how IP addresses worked. Again, asking for some additional clarification can be helpful before shooting from the hip. In Stapelton's case, he got the job. |
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Comments (7)
For the IP address I would pick Google because I would want to be the location everbody comes to to get answers!
Posted by Dennis Hofer | July 21, 2009 12:47 PM
My wife is currently job hunting and she got a rather unusual question the other day: "Do you know how hurricanes are formed?"
Not exactly the sort of question someone applying for an accounting position at a retirement home would expect to get.
Posted by Jeff Shultz | July 21, 2009 1:08 PM
Don't be an IP address; be DHCP and DNS; be refreshable and recognizable no matter what.
Posted by GMD | July 21, 2009 1:19 PM
Executive job seekers frequently spend most of their time perfecting their resumes and nurturing their networks.
Many would do well to work on their INTERVIEWING! Tip--get a cheap video camera (or pay someone) to video yourself responding to the interview questions contained in the eWeek Blog. See ya at the Top.. eResumes4Vips
Posted by eResumes4Vips | July 21, 2009 2:07 PM
I thought some of these were rather interesting.
Posted by JAMIE RISCH | July 21, 2009 2:49 PM
Glad to see that the old 'where do you see yourself in 5 years?' has dropped off the list.
Posted by Diane | July 21, 2009 7:31 PM
This article is definitively usefull for a new graduate like myself. Once, I read that Microsoft even asked their applicants "why is man hole spherical in shape?". I went on looking for the best answer possible. To this day, there isn't a best answer. This is just to prove how one would react and compose under unexpected situations.
I'm done rambling.
Pat
Posted by Patrick Do Trong | July 23, 2009 8:08 PM