How To Answer Job Interview Questions
Every job seeker would want to know how to answer job interview questions. Fortunately or unfortunately, there is no such thing as the perfect answer. Yes there are some tips and tricks to help you along. Just be cool. Sometimes the interviewer may be just as nervous.
It seems like a no brainer to go through a preliminary job application process, fill out the requisite forms, graciously accept a job interview invitation, dress appropriately, and answer job interview questions…and voila! Get the gig. But one part of that process, the step where you answer job interview questions, that is, requires a bit more attention and thought, or practice, even…before actually going through with the act.
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Depending on the type of job and type of interview (including the number of panel members interviewing you, what props you need or get to bring, and the interview format), you will be expected to do one, some, or all of the following—or, you will do well to use strategies or good interviewing habits that help you answer job interview questions in the following manner:
Answer the question in the language of the question. When an interviewer asks a question using key terminology, or even when he or she frames a question in any manner, repeat a part of the question in your declarative response. This is good mirroring behavior that shows respect, affinity, and even like ness. For example, if a potential employer asks, “What makes you the best candidate for this position?” You might respond with, “What makes me the best candidate for this position is….”
Use bullets or a 1 2 3 format when you answer job interview questions. One of my former supervisors always responded to a question by giving three examples, by actually saying each number out loud to the listeners, to guide them in their listening but also to guide him in his speaking (and remembering): he would say, for example, how there are three ways to reinvent the wheel, “#1, study the existing wheel; #2, plan well for the new prototype; and #3, use troubleshooting maneuvers to create a new model than surpasses the problems of the old model….”
Editor note: This is a very good method. It shows that you understand the question very well and you are giving the interviewer your answers systematically. It helps the interviewer to follow through your thoughts because they may be tired after some long interviewing process.
Answer all parts of the question. In academic milieus, where I occasionally interviewed for full time, tenured positions, the panel would as two or three part questions. When you answer job interview question such as this, say, such as “What do you think the program needs and how would you proceed in satisfying those needs?” remember to respond to the first, theoretical/observational part and the second, hypothetical/role playing part. Some people (many people, actually) bring a note pad to the interview and check off their responses as they go. These questions are often just as much a test of your content (answers) as they are a check to see that you can follow through or that you are paying attention, etc.
Many more ideas and tricks are important when you answer job interview questions. For instance, eye contact is imperative; remembering names is good; and sitting in a forward leaning but reserved, casual, hands folded way may also be good practice in the process. Again, it depends on the job, the people hiring, and the organization or institution or business environment. Do as you would if you already worked there: dress, speak, and gesture as the others do…?
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Editor note: Speak like how they speak and mirror them. Studies show that people like being mirrored and people who are like themselves. There is a whole topic based on this called Neuro Linguistic Program. Learn some of the tips and you will be able to answer job interview questions easier.
How To Answer Job Interview Questions
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