A couple of years ago, I read an article in Entrepreneur Magazine about "wacky" interview questions. I was
concerned this article was written to provide questions for JOB
INTERVIEWS. In it, the reporter states she is conveying some of the off-hand questions one might receive in an interview. You know the one's; "if you were an animal in the jungle what animal would you be. The appropriate response is a lion. No stipulation as to whether this was before or after the Wizard handed you the Badge of Courage. It's nothing new, these questions have been around for decades, but it just strikes me as unprofessional.
Recently, a
friend of mine who had been out of work for several months while his
wife was very ill, and a daughter about to be wed, for which he was to pay, was contacted by a company several states away for a new position.
They flew him in, put him in a hotel, and gave him a per diem for food.
At the interview, he was asked "if you were a fish, what kind of fish
would it be"? Really? After all the expense and frustration, this is the type of
questioning they come up with?
Several years ago, my wife went
to an interview where she was asked "what's your favorite color", and of course, the "jungle" question? She
thought the interviewer a moron, but some how, got the job anyway. As it turned out,
the entire company was run by morons, and she had to ultimately seek employment
elsewhere, which did work out in the end. It was a colossal waste of time, money, and even emotion. Why put people
through such turmoil?
The article states, this is a way to
uncover critical thinking skills. If someone asked me "what color crayon
I was" the only critical thinking I would contemplate would be whether
the interviewer got the idiot gene from one parent or both. Why not pose
a typical scenario, and just ask them how they would handle it. Uncover programs they
implemented at their old job. This is called the behavioral interview technique. It's also been around for decades and is more certainly a better indicator of employee skills.
However, in the words of George Carlin, "What if... there were no such things as hypothetical question"? I am convinced many interviewer and staffers in HR simply don't know what to ask. A large part of that could stem from the fact that department heads and Personnel aren't talking to each other in terms of what qualities to look for in a potential employee. Ask an interviewee what their goals would be in a new job. How might they make a particular process more efficient? Those
would be professional questions and a good use of time. If all else fails; "What was the dumbest question you were ever asked at a
job interview"?
Read the entire Entrepreneur Magazine article here; https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/230931
http://speakingforeffect.com/
BlaineSpeak@gmail.com
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