The most often used interview questions and putting
a new spin on their interpretations. These questions have stood the test of
time, and we should consequently recognize their value in the candidate assessment
process. Their inherent weakness, of course, lies in their overuse. Most of us
can remember being asked these very same questions= during our own past
interviews. And job-finding books and career magazines abound with suggested
responses to help candidates ‘‘steer
clear of the interview questioning snare’’
vis-a`-vis these popular queries waiting to trip them up.
Q1. Tell me about your greatest strength. What’s the greatest asset you’ll bring to our company?
Our tracked in these posts
isn’t to employ
questions just because they’ve
been around for a long time. And it’s
certainly not to offer candidates an opportunity to practice their well-rehearsed
lines! We will, instead, offer new interpretations in reading candidate
responses.
Q1. Tell me about your greatest strength. What’s the greatest asset you’ll bring to our company?
Why Ask This Question?
The ‘‘greatest
strength’’ question works well
as an icebreaker because most people are fairly comfortable talking about what
makes them special and what they like. Every job candidate is ready for this
one because it gets so much attention in the career press. Job candidates are
also aware that this query is used as a lead-in to a natural follow-up question
(which is much tougher to answer): ‘‘what’s your greatest
weakness?’’
Still, the greatest strength
question isn’t a
throwaway because it can reveal a lot about an individual’s self-perception. So
let’s open it up for a
moment.
Analyzing the Response
There are two issues to watch out for in
measuring a candidate’s
responses:
- First, candidates often give lofty answers with lists of adjectives that they think you want to hear and that actually add very little value to your meeting.
- Second, a candidate’s strengths may fail to match your unit’s needs, and as such could weigh as a negative swing factor in the selection process.
Watch out for people who
give long inventories of ‘‘fluff
adjectives’’ regarding
their nobler traits, such as hardworking,
intelligent, loyal, and
committed. Adjectives are nothing
but unproven claims. They waste time and delay getting to what you really want
to get out of this meeting, which is concrete proof of how the individual will
fit in and contribute to the team. Consequently, you’ll have to keep the candidate on track by
following up on these adjective lists with requests for practical applications.
For example, when a candidate says that she’s
proudest of the fact that she’s
a hard worker, you might respond:
‘‘ Hard workers are always good to find. Give me an example of
how hard you work relative to your peers.’’
OR
‘‘ Hard work usually results in above-average results. How has
your hard work paid off in terms of the quantity of your output or the quality
of your work product?’’
OR
‘‘ Hard work in our company boils down to working late hours fairly often
and occasionally coming in on Saturdays. How does your present company define
hard work?’’
OR
‘‘ How has your boss recognized your hard work? How would she
say that you could have worked smarter, not harder?’’
The idea here is to qualify
this person’s
generic response. The second red flag issue occurs when a candidate’s strengths fail to match your
organizational needs. For example, a candidate may respond, ‘‘I guess I would say that I’m proudest of my progression through the
ranks with my last company.
I was promoted four times in as many years, and
I feel that a company’s
ultimate reward to its people can be found in the recognition it gives via
promotions and ongoing training.’’
That’s an excellent
response. The position you’re
filling, however, may offer very few vertical growth opportunities because you
need someone who would be satisfied with very repetitive work. This is a
classic case of ‘‘Right
person—wrong opportunity,’’ and the greatest
strength query will have done its job of identifying a candidate’s motives and
expectations. Consequently, you might opt to disqualify the candidate for this
particular position.
The variations are limitless. Candidates have no way of preparing canned responses to your interview questions, and therein lies the true beauty of the behavioral query.
Q2. What’s your greatest weakness?
Why Ask This
Question?
Other variations on this theme include:
- ‘‘What would you consider to be your occasional fault or ‘over strength’?’’
- ‘‘Of your past supervisors, who would give you the weakest reference and why?’
- ‘‘What one area do you really need to work on in your career
to become more effective on a day-to-day basis?’’
You would think that most job candidates have
preplanned responses to these often-asked queries. That’s not, however,
always the case. There are still a surprising number of people out there who
give very little advance thought to this common self-evaluation query. You
could use that element of surprise to your advantage.
Analyzing the
Response
The ‘‘greatest
weakness’’ question is somewhat
unnerving because it causes discomfort. After all, no one wants to discuss
shortcomings. Although the purpose of the question is certainly not to make
anyone uncomfortable, many unsuspecting individuals will use this entree as an
invitation to ‘‘come
clean’’ and bare their souls
to you. That’s
when you’ll learn that they
sometimes run late getting to work, feel intimidated in any kind of public's peaking forum, or tend to be too overbearing with coworkers.
Note as well that it’s a poor answer for
candidates to respond that they have no weaknesses. After all, interviewing, to
a large extent, is a game to see how deftly a person lands on her feet. By
admitting no weaknesses, the person refuses to ‘‘play
the game,’’ so
to speak.
Note as well that it’s a poor answer for
candidates to respond that they have no weaknesses. After all, interviewing, to
a large extent, is a game to see how deftly a person lands on her feet. By
admitting no weaknesses, the person refuses to ‘‘play
the game,’’ so
to speak.
Good Answers. In contrast, what are acceptable responses that place a candidate in a favorable light? Look for replies that center on the person’s impatience with her own performance, inclination toward being a perfectionist (which could slow the individual down but guarantees quality results), or tendency to avoid delegating work to others for fear that it won’t get done to the candidate’s high expectations. In short, the wisest ‘‘weaknesses’’ are strengths taken to a fault. After all, people who are impatient with their own performance typically have very high expectations of themselves. Beatniks can’t bear the possibility of sending out letters that contain errors. And those who have difficulty delegating are results-oriented, focused individuals who generally don’t watch the clock.
How to Get More
Mileage out of the Question. Once again, the key
to adding a broader dimension to the candidate’s
response lies in employing a behavioral interviewing format. Try looking for contrary evidence that focuses on the
negative impact of the person’s
actions. For example, typical comebacks you could use to the reply ‘‘I have problems
delegating work to other people because I find that the end result doesn’t meet my
expectations’’
might include:
- Tell me about the last time you didn’t delegate work to a subordinate and you were left handling a disproportionate amount of the workload. How did you feel about that? How did you handle that situation differently the next time?
- Give me an example of a time when your not having delegated work to a direct report left that person feeling that his career development needs weren’t being met.
- Share with me a circumstance in which you were frustrated by your boss’s inability to delegate work to you. How did you eventually gain that person’s trust?
The variations are limitless. Candidates have no way of preparing canned responses to your interview questions, and therein lies the true beauty of the behavioral query.
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