EPP InterviewQuestions Tips
EPP InterviewQuestions Tips
Interview Tips
Frequently Asked Questions in Interviews
Below are 16 commonly asked questions in interviews. After each question, jot down
ideas of answers you could use in an interview situation. This will help you prepare for
such questions so that youll be more likely to give effective, persuasive answers, and be
more relaxed and feel more prepared during an actual interview.
After you write down your answers, look at the tips that are given for each question.
That may help you to prepare more specific answers.
1.
2.
What makes you think youre qualified to work for this company? Or, Im
interviewing 120 people for two jobs. Why should I hire you?
Tip: This question may feel like an attack. Use it as an opportunity to state your
strong points: your qualifications for the job, the things that separate you from
other applicants.
3.
What two or three accomplishments have given you the greatest satisfaction?
Tip: Pick accomplishments that youre proud of, that create the image you want to
project, and that enable you to share one of the things you want the interviewer to
know about you. Focus not just on the end result, but on the problem-solving and
thinking skills that made the achievement possible.
4.
Why do you want to work for us? What is your ideal job?
Tip: Even if youre interviewing just for practice, make sure you have a good
answer preferably two or three reasons youd like to work for that company. If
you dont seem to be taking the interview seriously, the interviewer wont take
you seriously, and you wont even get good practice.
If your ideal job is very different from the ones the company has available, the
interviewer may simply say there isnt a good match and end the interview. If
youre interested in this company, do some research so that what you ask for is in
the general ballpark of the kind of work the company offers.
Jayapragas Gnaniah
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5.
What college subjects did you like best and least? Why?
Tip: This question may be an icebreaker; it may be designed to discover the kind
of applicant theyre looking for. If your favorite class was something outside
your major, prepare an answer that shows that you have qualities that can help
you in the job youre applying for: My favorite class was a seminar in the
American novel. We got a chance to think on our own, rather than just
regurgitate facts; we made presentations to the class every week. I found I really
like sharing my ideas with other people and presenting reasons for my
conclusions about something.
6.
What is your class rank? Your grade point? Why are your grades so low?
Tip: If your grades arent great, be ready with a nondefensive explanation. If
possible, show the cause of low grades now has been solved or isnt relevant to
the job youre applying for: My father almost died last year, and my schoolwork
really suffered. When I started, I didnt have any firm goals. Once I discovered
the field that was right for me, my grades have all been Bs or better. Im not
good at multiple-choice tests. But you need someone who can work with people,
not someone who can take tests.
7.
What have you read recently? What movies have you seen recently?
Tip: These questions may be icebreakers; they may be designed to probe your
intellectual depth. The term youre interviewing, read at least one book or
magazine (regularly) and see at least one movie you could discuss at an interview.
8.
9.
10.
What are your interests outside work? What campus or community activities
have you been involved in?
Tip: While its desirable to be well-rounded, naming 10 interests is a mistake:
The interviewer may wonder when youll have time to work.
If you mention your fianc, spouse, or children in response to this question
(Well, my fianc and I like to go sailing), it is perfectly legal for the interviewer
to ask follow-up questions (What would you do if your spouse got a job offer in
another town?), even though the same question would be illegal if the
interviewer brought up the subject first.
11.
12.
13.
14.
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b)
c)
15.
Discuss a weakness that is not related to the job youre being considered
for and will not be needed even when youre promoted. End your answer
with a positive that is related to the job.
Discuss a weakness that you are working to improve.
Discuss a work-related weakness.
16.
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Illegal Questions
Are you a U.S. citizen?
Where were your parents born?
What is your native language?
Age
Family Status
Activities
Physical
Disabilities
Record
Military Service
Race/color
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