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-   -   Job Interview Question (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/275972-job-interview-question.html)

930addict 04-07-2006 08:10 PM

gfdsgds
 
.

wcc 04-07-2006 08:20 PM

Tell them that the position you are in isn't challenging enough and you hope that this new position will actually have some job satisfaction by thinking about problem solving and by testing your limits....

EDIT: When it comes to this NEVER tell them the whole truth. I know you want to but bite your tounge. You wouldn't belive some of the stuff I've said at interviews and still got the job....

Eric Coffey 04-07-2006 08:28 PM

How about the "hit the glass ceiling" approach? "I've had a great experience, learned a lot, and gained many different skills at ABC Corp. It just became time for me to explore other options, and seek out a company that could provide me with greater potential for growth and more responsibilty. After careful consideration and research, I believe XYZ Corp. is that company for me. Something along those lines (but more polished obviously).

M.D. Holloway 04-07-2006 08:29 PM

Try this on:

"That is a very good question. The opportunity at you company fits well into my overall career goals. I am comfortable in my exsisting position yet it doesn't provide the opportunity for advancement that this position offers. Your company and this position is a better fit for me for several reasons:
1) This companies management style is progressive
2) Your market position is strong
3) Contribute to the continuing success would be very rewarding

If I'm going to be spending 8 to 12 hours a day I am going to make sure it is worthwhule with a company I respect for a man/woman I admire and to actually make a difference. Its all about fit - what you are looking for is what I have to offer. It is time for me to step it up. My old company was good for me when I joined. It helped me establish a foundation. This company makes more sense allowing me to actually implement the tools I have developed at my old company.

rattlsnak 04-07-2006 08:42 PM

Dont ever say anything like,. 'my boss was a jerk, or i didnt get along with my boss', etc. Remeber this is a potential boss thats hiring you, and will look at it like YOU were the problem, not the boss.

vash 04-07-2006 09:29 PM

damn, lube. my next job interview, i want you on the other end of my earpiece. hell, will you be there when i ask the next chick out?

M.D. Holloway 04-07-2006 09:40 PM

fo sho - I am the best wingman in da biz!

Porsche-O-Phile 04-07-2006 10:06 PM

Just be like "the boss caught me nailing his wife with a 24" monster double-dong-dildo". They'll understand. They've all been there.


Note to self: Stop posting after 7+ beers.

mikester 04-07-2006 11:01 PM

Luby's got excellent job interview advice. He helped me out a great deal this past year and improved my interviewing skills probably 100%.

What he has to say on the subject is nearly gospel.

While I did not get the original job I was after using his advice I got much farther than I would have without it. In the end I did find a job and I really think his advice had a lot to do with it.

LeeH 04-07-2006 11:32 PM

I was determined to land a particular job. Prior to the interview I read everything I could find about the company and I bought, read, and studied this book:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1144477236.jpg
I read every question, took notes, and formulated my answer for every one in the book. Then I studied my answers. When the interview started I had trouble not laughing as virtually every question that I was asked was right out of the book. I got more relaxed as the interview went on because I knew my preparation had paid off in a big way. Yep... I got the job.

A few years later I was on a business trip with the two guys who had interviewed me. They said by the end of the interview that they knew I was going to be the one hired... and I was the second person interviewed - and they interviewed people for three days. Prep pays off.

cool_chick 04-08-2006 03:46 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by LeeH
I was determined to land a particular job. Prior to the interview I read everything I could find about the company and I bought, read, and studied this book:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1144477236.jpg
I read every question, took notes, and formulated my answer for every one in the book. Then I studied my answers. When the interview started I had trouble not laughing as virtually every question that I was asked was right out of the book. I got more relaxed as the interview went on because I knew my preparation had paid off in a big way. Yep... I got the job.

A few years later I was on a business trip with the two guys who had interviewed me. They said by the end of the interview that they knew I was going to be the one hired... and I was the second person interviewed - and they interviewed people for three days. Prep pays off.


Absolutely. I was in the same situation. Market was poor in 2002, was laid off as a result of same, only one position in all of Chicago that was in my particular field, etc., etc. However, I took it a little further and made my mother ask the questions and "interview" me if you will.

I'm still there. Great job, great growth, great company. I'm lucky. Prep pays off.

FTR, to the OP, you can search much of this online too, along with suggestions on how to answer these questions. It may seem so lame, but from the other end, you are a complete stranger.....think about how you are going to convince them that this complete stranger out of a pool of complete strangers is the one for the job. Keep that in mind when preparing for this interview and how to best highlight your assets.

Por_sha911 04-08-2006 09:00 AM

You don't want to tell the truth but you don't have to lie either. How about simply saying that although you enjoy where you are now, you are looking for a company that you will feel more comfortable about having a better long-term growth potential. (You don't have to tell them you'll go postal if you stay where you are).

island911 04-08-2006 09:25 AM

Just like on this board, interviewers will each take what you have to say differently. For example, if Lube gave me those lines, I would conclude "super-shmoozer. . . FOS to get what he wants" (but that's just me .. others, obviously, would say "this is thee guy!" )

So, what I'm saying is, if you want to nail it, be your smartest self at the interview. Try to speak from a position of common goals. After all, you BOTH wan't to "fit" . . if reasonably possible.


. ..oh, Eric's (un polished) lines would have worked for me.

scottmandue 04-08-2006 09:59 AM

They don't call him the Lubemaster for nothing!

NEVER say anything negative about your old job... like Mama said "if you can't say anything nice"

As you said, you will come off sounding like a whiner and who want to hire a whiner.

fintstone 04-08-2006 10:08 AM

Tell them "None of your damn business."

island911 04-08-2006 10:16 AM

"They don't call him the Lubemaster for nothing!"

LOL

"NEVER say anything negative about your old job... like Mama said "if you can't say anything nice"

As you said, you will come off sounding like a whiner and who want to hire a whiner.


I don't agree. Sometimes, Like you get a guy (interviewee) from a competing firm/business . . . the interviewer may think low of that place to start with.

For example, if a guy working for Boeing says, "I really hate that red-tape meant that I spent a year designing a rivet, for the lav group, to secure a toilet to a nomex honeycome floor . . . i need a faster paced environment." --points in my book.

cool_chick 04-08-2006 10:21 AM

To me, any negative comments about a former employer make me suspect. Is it a personnel issue with this person? Is this person going to maybe "not get his way" over something, and is (s)he going to do the same this company? Employers are also looking for a good representative for the company.

To me, negative comments about a previous employer are marks againt the person.

scottmandue 04-08-2006 10:22 AM

Island, ya bra...

But he is making a lateral move in guberment...

Suck up baby!

fintstone 04-08-2006 10:32 AM

Tell them "none of your damn business." Never present yourself as a whiney suck-up in a job interview. It is just like women who flirt in an interview and then are shocked that the boss expects to sleep with them after they start work. Don't sabotage yourself for later. If they hire you based on the whiney, suck-up act....that is what they want from an employee and will expect from you....If you bend over in the interview....expect to carry a jar of vaseline in your briefcase.

Good advice about not badmouthing your current boss. Could be a brother-in-law or best friend. There is sort of a network...particularly in govt work...where it will get back to your boss. If you don't get the new job...you are really screwed. The prospective employer will also have a mental image of you saying the same things about him later.

island911 04-08-2006 10:40 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by scottmandue
Island, ya bra...

But he is making a lateral move in guberment...

Suck up baby!

Wha-ha-hoe! I didn't know that!

Yeah, suck-Up<sup>3</sup> :D

Actually, in that situation (generally) I think you just need to be as non-threatening to the interview as possible. But again, every interviewer is different. Fint is right, too; "If they hire you based on the whiney, suck-up act (or what ever)....that is what they want from an employee and will expect from you."


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