The Art of Interviewing
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14/06/2022
When you are interviewing a candidate, you may get a gut feeling about the person you are interviewing straight away, and while you may figure out within a few minutes they are the right fit, you need to ask the right questions to ensure they will also do a great job. You can do this by asking the right questions. See below for some questions to ask to gauge your candidate’s full promise.
The interview questions employers need to ask
You have a pool of great candidates to interview, now how do you make sure you are choosing the one with the experience you need?
Gut feeling can get you only so far, but how do you know for sure that the person sitting across from you will be the right person for the job?
The problem is anyone can say how they would like to act in a hypothetical situation. However, a great candidate will have had the experience previously and be able to tell you how they overcame issues and solve the problems you need to make your business thrive.
Behavioural interview techniques are a tried and tested, industry-standard method interviewers use to test applicants’ actual industry experience.
What are behavioural interview questions?
Behavioural interview questions are designed to assess actions and reactions in a professional situation. This helps employers determine skills and qualities, such as problem-solving, customer service, critical thinking and communication.
So rather than ask what you might do in a situation, interviewers ask for actual examples from an interviewee’s professional history.
Behavioural interview question examples
Instead of saying “how do you act under pressure” ask, “tell me about a time that you were in a high-pressure situation and how you were able to handle it”?
Or
Instead of “How do you deal with conflict at work?” ask “tell me about a time when you disagreed with a team member. How did you resolve the problem?”
This way they will have to share their actual experiences, giving you an indication of how they will act in the future.
What are the responses you need to hear?
What you need to hear from your candidates are concrete examples of their experiences that clearly answer the question.
Experienced interviewers will use the STAR technique, this is a framework that describes examples of the Situation, Task, Action and Result.
Which frame the answers as below:
Describe the Situation in which they were involved?
What was the Task to be completed?
Explaining the actions taken?
Defining the results achieved?
What if they keep saying “we” not “I”?
If they were part of a team effort, ask them what their specific role was in the situation. It is important you establish a person’s responses, not a shared result.
Some useful behavioural question examples
Here is a list of some of the top questions to ask that will work for a wide range of industries.
Tell me about a time when you disagreed with someone who was your supervisor. How did you overcome this?
What is the most difficult/ challenging situation you’ve ever had to resolve in the workplace?
Give me an example of when you had to assume leadership for a team.
Tell me about a time you made a mistake, how did you react?
Tell me about a time when you took on some work outside your usual responsibilities. What motivated you to take on these extra duties?
When have you seen a colleague acting inappropriately or unethically? How did you deal with this?
Tell me about a time when you received constructive feedback from others? How did you feel and what did you do as a result of this?
Tell me about a time when you were on a team, and one of the members wasn’t doing their share.
It is clear that interviewing is a complex skill set to master. Finding the balance between maintaining the flow of an interview and allowing people time to respond to a well-articulated question is a challenge that many of us grapple with. Always come prepared with some neutral words that feel natural to you and leave pre-judgements at the door!