Thursday, 7 July 2011

The Best Answers to Tough Interview Questions-Part III

What's your greatest achievement to date?

Be sure that the achievement you describe here is relevant to the job you're interviewing for. Also, be careful that your answer doesn't  sound as if the best is behind you. Mention something great that you've achieved, but clearly communicate your belief that the best is yet  to come. 

"I'm proud of the fact that I graduated on time with a solid GPA while I played varsity basketball for four years. A lot of women on my  team either took a reduced course load or let their grades suffer. I believe the reason I got through it all was sheer determination; I never  even let myself visualize anything but finishing on time and with good grades. So I firmly believe, as a professional counselor, in the  importance of a positive outlook." Give
an example of a time when you were asked to accomplish a task but weren't given enough information. 

How did you resolve  this problem?

Although this example may seem trivial, the candidate demonstrates maturity and an ability to approach work conceptually. The  interviewer will want to know that you understand that just getting the job done isn't enough. Your response should show resourcefulness  and initiative. 

"At my last internship, my supervisor, an account executive, asked me to assemble five hundred press kits for a mailing. I wasn't sure in  what order the pages and press releases should go, but my supervisor had already left for a client meeting. Afraid of putting the  information together in the wrong order, I managed to track down her cell phone number and called her in her car. She explained the  order of the materials over the phone, and in the end I managed to prevent a mistake that would have cost hours of work and a delay in  the mailing-not to mention a few headaches." Tell me about your least-favorite manager or professor.

Answering this question will be a bit like walking across a loaded minefield, so be aware! Keep in mind that the interviewer doesn't want  to learn about your former supervisors; he or she does want to learn about the way you speak about them. Though the interviewer may  bait you to make a negative statement about your former employer, doing so can create a host of problems. Even if your claim is completely true and justified, the recruiter may conclude either that you don't get along with other people or that you shift blame to others.  The best way around this dilemma is to choose and example that's not too negative, touch upon it briefly, then focus the rest of your  answer on what you learned from the experience. 

"Well I've been pretty fortunate as far as managers go, and I didn't have any problems with my professors. In my first job out of college I  worked with a manager who was pretty inaccessible. If you walked into his office to ask a question, you got the sense that you were  bothering him, so we just learned to get help from each other instead. I wouldn't say he was my least-favorite manager, because he was a  good manager in a lot of ways, but I would have preferred that he'd made himself more available to us and given us more direction."


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