Strange, or is it not? |
|
| Comments (11) |
|
Judit in Los Angeles, California 56 months ago |
Weird. I just came from a job interview at a large Production Company. I have already interviewed last week with HR, the person I would report to plus the teams in the different Business units. Today I met with the VP. He was a bad a**. Not only did he make me terribly nervous but he asked me to describe an orange to a blind person. I answered as best as I could (juicy, sweet and somewhat tart). He said he posed the question because people freeze up when asked questions outside of the box. I did hesitate when answering. I hope my answer doesn't mean that I get the job. |
|
her325 in Newport Beach, California 56 months ago |
i like your answer...hope you get the job. good luck, her325 |
|
Marjaana in Helsinki, Finland 55 months ago |
If VP is that awful, do you feel you would like to be his employee? |
|
Jake_EE in Elyria, Ohio 55 months ago |
Imagine what he might ask you (or ask of you) if you work for him. |
|
rjones1963 in east peoria, Illinois 55 months ago |
maybe your boss worked for the social service for the blind,he was just having a flashback |
|
Bob Harcourt in Bloomingdale, Illinois 55 months ago |
Judit in Los Angeles, California said: Weird. I just came from a job interview at a large Production Company. I have already interviewed last week with HR, the person I would report to plus the teams in the different Business units. Today I met with the VP. He was a bad a**. Not only did he make me terribly nervous but he asked me to describe an orange to a blind person. I answered as best as I could (juicy, sweet and somewhat tart). He said he posed the question because people freeze up when asked questions outside of the box. I did hesitate when answering. I hope my answer doesn't mean that I get the job. This was a cheesy attempt by the VP to sound like he knew how to interview. Stress questions are pretty common, but a good interviewer will use behavioral interviewing techniques to probe how you respond to real life stress situations. ("When was the last time your superior asked you to break a rule, and how did you handle it?" "What was the biggest disaster you created and how did you fix it?") Google "behavioral interviewing questions" to find a list of the likely ones. |
|
Bob Harcourt in Denver, Colorado 54 months ago |
Displaced Legal Professional in Denver, Colorado said: Bob Harcourt in Bloomingdale, Illinois: "'When was the last time your superior asked you to break a rule, and how did you handle it?' 'What was the biggest disaster you created and how did you fix it?'" It's a trick question. That answer tells the interviewer that you are either (a) inexperienced or worse (b) a liar. The reality is that those situations occur all the time and how an applicant has handled difficult situations in the past indicates how they will in the future. You don't get hired for caretaking a smooth operation, but for how well you handle the disasters that happen all the time. By admitting that you took care of a problem, you increase your worth as well as taking responsibility. |
|
cleasta turner in Chicago, Illinois 54 months ago |
i went on a interview, and they seem very impressed with me, i took a background check, but they never call me back, i had all the qualification for the job, i dont know what went wrong, i call them back and left message, never a return call, if they choose someone else for the position they could have told me, it just seem so taky, maybe that job just wasnt for me, i know i be bless with another one. |
|
------ in Maine 54 months ago |
To describe an orange to a blind person is the most ridiculous question to ask!!! The guy has no idea how to conduct an interview. He probably read this question on some interviewing website or in a magazine.
If this guy selected all other employees using the same techniques, you will be working with a bunch of people as random as this orange question. |
|
Job Search Dolphin in Tampa, Florida 54 months ago Guide |
When I was in Career Services, I asked students to tell me what they thought qualified someone to be an interviewer.
Truth is that nothing specifically qualifies someone as an interviewer. Thus, most interviewers are really not qualified. And the questions these folks ask can range from the illegal to the downright weird: True story from several years ago...
The "interviewer" did not give more specifics, nor did he allow my student to research anywhere or suggest such. It was fully a "wild guess!" The student guessed 2,000, which wasn't tremendously off (I think the answer was 4,000.) Here's the kicker; the "interviewer" said he wanted to "test" my student's ability to "reason." My feeling, after a decade in placement, is that the "wilder the question is," the more likely there is no reasoning behind it. Or, at least no SOLID reasoning. That should at least tell you something about both the person interviewing you and the company itself. They don't know what they are doing and it really doesn't seem to matter! |
|
Job seeker in Pahrump, Nevada 48 months ago |
I have consistantly found that the emloyers who ask weird questions which have no bearing on the job specs are privately owned by.The "owner" who is usually is in an up stairs office.These "Owners" seem to ask and tell their hiring staff to ask the stupidist questions and make anyone who applies to their company to make the applicants feel like idiots.I walked out of many of these so called "interviews" with "Stupid Owners" and their HR people.Maybe thats why they have to own their own company.
|
Your Reply
change location - create a profile
Subscribe to this discussion as an RSS feed.
