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Casual Articles - Simple Interviewing That Works
Some Economic Background on South Western CO when the interviewer combined a hypothetical question with an attempt at pop psychology -- and got more than he bargained for!We were impressed with South Western Colorado as a good place to hang your hat and a pretty good place to run a business. Great labor supply, good transportation and excellent tourist flows. The town is growing in Cortez and up the hill in Durango as well. Their nearest trading partners Montrose and Farmington NM also helped with money flows to the area. We like the area and thought it was completely economically viable and an excellent choice especially for manufacturing.About the only drawback is the drug issue in the region, but that is with any US Ci "If I were to ask you," he said, "What would you say was the most vivid memory you retain from childhood?" The candidate paused, then said: 'Sitting naked in the bath with my sister." The interviewer nearly fell off his chair. "What did you learn?" I asked him afterwards. "Heaven knows!" he said. I'd learned the candidate was cleverer than the interviewer and had a wicked sense of humor. 8. Never ask leading (or rhetorical) questions Leading questions assume an answer. Rhetorical questions are state Dancing Deer Baking Company Rises to Meet Plight of Homeless: A Conversation with President and CEO Powerful questions to get below the surfaceDancing Deer was incorporated in 1994. How soon after its founding did a focus on philanthropy develop? From the beginning we had environmental objectives and were also focused on worker participation in ownership. It was an underlying theme in our business philosophy.Philanthropy became more important in 2000 when I bought out my partners and assumed the roles of CEO and majority stockholder. That’s when I pushed my thinking harder about what I wanted to accomplish with the company beyond economic survival and wealth creation. It had always been 1. Ask for specific "stories" of complete situations "We all meet situations where people disagree on the correct way to proceed. Can you give me an instance from your own experience where it was up to you to deal with this kind of disagreement? Perhaps a time when you had to lead a team to find an answer everyone could rally behind?" 2. Build on answers with specific questions on "how?" and "why?" a) "What exactly convinced you to chose this career path?" b) When the candidate has answered:"Exactly why were you convinced?" c) Finally: "Why has this proved to be the right path?" If you must ask multiple questions, make sure each part builds extends the previous one in a single direction. It's better to stick to simple questions if you can. In interviewing, less is more. 3. Stick with actual happenings General, non-specific answers let people talk about what they wished they had done, not what actually happened. a) "Please tell me about a specific situation where you were able to show your ability to cope with a tough deadline. How did you handle it?" b) "What did it teach you?" Abstractions are easy to handle...and fake. Talk is cheap. Stick to verifiable actions, not intentions. 4. Put an unexpected "spin" on a question a) "Has it become easier or harder to plan a marketing campaign over the time you've been doing that kind of work?" b) "Why is this?" Look for evidence of how the person reasons and learns from experience. How long he or she has worked in a specific field can be learned from their file. What matters is what those years have taught them. That's what they'll carry into their next job. 5. Ask for comparisons "How does leading your present team compare with the first group you ever had to lead?" Comparisons bring out how someone thinks and uses past experience. 6. Mix statements with questions "I find it tough to convince people to change when they're comfortable with the status quo. It puzzles me how to do this well." Make an interesting statement, pause and wait for a comment. We do this all the time in informal conversations. It's a natural invitation to the other person to add their ideas. Too many questions, one after another, sound like an interrogation. 7. Avoid hypothetical questions "If you were promoted, what would be your first action?" Hypothetical questions invite hypothetical answers. They're worthless. I once sat in on an interview when the interviewer combined a hypothetical question with an attempt at pop psychology -- and got more than he bargained for! "If I were to ask you," he said, "What would you say was the most vivid memory you retain from childhood?" The candidate paused, then said: 'Sitting naked in the bath with my sister." The interviewer nearly fell off his chair. "What did you learn?" I asked him afterwards. "Heaven knows!" he said. I'd learned the candidate was cleverer than the interviewer and had a wicked sense of humor. 8. Never ask leading (or rhetorical) questions Leading questions assume an answer. Rhetorical questions are statem Direct Mail = Your Money, From Printer to Mailbox to Trash! d to be the right path?"I did a quick, very unscientific survey of 25 of my friends. I asked them to put the mail that they do not open or read in a specific trash bag. At the end of one week they gave it to me to be weighed. Guess how much the bag weighed? Remember, most mail is a fraction of an ounce. 63.4.....not ounces....lbs! Something is wrong with this picture! That's like 2 1/2 pounds per person per week! Holy Cow! Also this was a March survey, what if it had been done in November?Let's get a grip on this absolute waste of paper, ink, money and time! There are some co If you must ask multiple questions, make sure each part builds extends the previous one in a single direction. It's better to stick to simple questions if you can. In interviewing, less is more. 3. Stick with actual happenings General, non-specific answers let people talk about what they wished they had done, not what actually happened. a) "Please tell me about a specific situation where you were able to show your ability to cope with a tough deadline. How did you handle it?" b) "What did it teach you?" Abstractions are easy to handle...and fake. Talk is cheap. Stick to verifiable actions, not intentions. 4. Put an unexpected "spin" on a question a) "Has it become easier or harder to plan a marketing campaign over the time you've been doing that kind of work?" b) "Why is this?" Look for evidence of how the person reasons and learns from experience. How long he or she has worked in a specific field can be learned from their file. What matters is what those years have taught them. That's what they'll carry into their next job. 5. Ask for comparisons "How does leading your present team compare with the first group you ever had to lead?" Comparisons bring out how someone thinks and uses past experience. 6. Mix statements with questions "I find it tough to convince people to change when they're comfortable with the status quo. It puzzles me how to do this well." Make an interesting statement, pause and wait for a comment. We do this all the time in informal conversations. It's a natural invitation to the other person to add their ideas. Too many questions, one after another, sound like an interrogation. 7. Avoid hypothetical questions "If you were promoted, what would be your first action?" Hypothetical questions invite hypothetical answers. They're worthless. I once sat in on an interview when the interviewer combined a hypothetical question with an attempt at pop psychology -- and got more than he bargained for! "If I were to ask you," he said, "What would you say was the most vivid memory you retain from childhood?" The candidate paused, then said: 'Sitting naked in the bath with my sister." The interviewer nearly fell off his chair. "What did you learn?" I asked him afterwards. "Heaven knows!" he said. I'd learned the candidate was cleverer than the interviewer and had a wicked sense of humor. 8. Never ask leading (or rhetorical) questions Leading questions assume an answer. Rhetorical questions are state Invention Idea: Why A Small Business Can Be A Huge Advantage For Your Creations actions, not intentions.Recent developments in the business world have suddenly produced huge unprecedented advantages for small business. The World Wide Web for instance has opened up the commercial market place in unprecedented ways for small business.For the first time, there is a level playing field where small business can compete alongside big business and even win.In other words the rules have changed dramatically. The result now is that what really matters for a small business now is how creative those behind the business are. This means that useful and unique in 4. Put an unexpected "spin" on a question a) "Has it become easier or harder to plan a marketing campaign over the time you've been doing that kind of work?" b) "Why is this?" Look for evidence of how the person reasons and learns from experience. How long he or she has worked in a specific field can be learned from their file. What matters is what those years have taught them. That's what they'll carry into their next job. 5. Ask for comparisons "How does leading your present team compare with the first group you ever had to lead?" Comparisons bring out how someone thinks and uses past experience. 6. Mix statements with questions "I find it tough to convince people to change when they're comfortable with the status quo. It puzzles me how to do this well." Make an interesting statement, pause and wait for a comment. We do this all the time in informal conversations. It's a natural invitation to the other person to add their ideas. Too many questions, one after another, sound like an interrogation. 7. Avoid hypothetical questions "If you were promoted, what would be your first action?" Hypothetical questions invite hypothetical answers. They're worthless. I once sat in on an interview when the interviewer combined a hypothetical question with an attempt at pop psychology -- and got more than he bargained for! "If I were to ask you," he said, "What would you say was the most vivid memory you retain from childhood?" The candidate paused, then said: 'Sitting naked in the bath with my sister." The interviewer nearly fell off his chair. "What did you learn?" I asked him afterwards. "Heaven knows!" he said. I'd learned the candidate was cleverer than the interviewer and had a wicked sense of humor. 8. Never ask leading (or rhetorical) questions Leading questions assume an answer. Rhetorical questions are state Do You Really Believe You'll Be A Success? ses past experience.I was recently invited as a guest on a 4-day cruise boarding a ”True” Luxury Liner. Every room was a suite. I knew via their website we had a bathroom bigger than the one in my home, a sitting room, bedroom, mini-bar and balcony. I knew I needed a break and kept saying I did. It came just before I was due for foot surgery. In my heart I know when we continue to say what we want and believe, it comes to us bigger than what we expect.I had also wanted to fly home and see my mother who is in an assisted living home. I knew I wouldn’t be seeing her for s 6. Mix statements with questions "I find it tough to convince people to change when they're comfortable with the status quo. It puzzles me how to do this well." Make an interesting statement, pause and wait for a comment. We do this all the time in informal conversations. It's a natural invitation to the other person to add their ideas. Too many questions, one after another, sound like an interrogation. 7. Avoid hypothetical questions "If you were promoted, what would be your first action?" Hypothetical questions invite hypothetical answers. They're worthless. I once sat in on an interview when the interviewer combined a hypothetical question with an attempt at pop psychology -- and got more than he bargained for! "If I were to ask you," he said, "What would you say was the most vivid memory you retain from childhood?" The candidate paused, then said: 'Sitting naked in the bath with my sister." The interviewer nearly fell off his chair. "What did you learn?" I asked him afterwards. "Heaven knows!" he said. I'd learned the candidate was cleverer than the interviewer and had a wicked sense of humor. 8. Never ask leading (or rhetorical) questions Leading questions assume an answer. Rhetorical questions are state Handling Redundancy when the interviewer combined a hypothetical question with an attempt at pop psychology -- and got more than he bargained for!Why did you leave your last job?It’s a question that, following redundancy, many job applicants stumble around hopelessly with as they attempt to convince the interviewer that they wanted to leave when in fact they know that redundancy is more complicated than that.It’s true that many people in this situation are ready to leave at the time that redundancy hits them but the discomfort derives from knowing that given the choice they would probably not be sitting in that room at that time. Even if true, many candidates sti "If I were to ask you," he said, "What would you say was the most vivid memory you retain from childhood?" The candidate paused, then said: 'Sitting naked in the bath with my sister." The interviewer nearly fell off his chair. "What did you learn?" I asked him afterwards. "Heaven knows!" he said. I'd learned the candidate was cleverer than the interviewer and had a wicked sense of humor. 8. Never ask leading (or rhetorical) questions Leading questions assume an answer. Rhetorical questions are statements dressed up as questions. "When did you stop abusing your spouse?" is the classic example of a leading question. Try to answer it and you agree with the assumption that you're abusive. Translated into working life, you get questions like: "When did you first discover you need help with creating budgets?" An example of a rhetorical question is: "Of course, I'm sure you'll agree that labor relations are best handled with firmness, wouldn't you?" 9. Take your time Complex question need to be split into natural parts and asked in a logical sequence. Lead the candidate where you want him or her to go. Don't overwhelm the person with a mass of questions asked all together. 10. Avoid questions that invite simple answers "How much do you want this job?" ("Very much.") "Do you have experience in financial controls?" ("Yes.") That kind of closed question stops progress and leads nowhere. Follow these simple steps and your interviews will be more productive and easier on you and the candidate.
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