Professional Illustration Essay

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Vocabulary development

Highlight these words as you read the illustration essay.

dovetailed: matched

swimmingly: smoothly; well

perfunctory: quick

studiously: thoroughly; carefully

woefully: seriously; regrettably

tracheotomy: a cut made into the throat to open a blocked airway

grueling: difficult; tiring

Maserati: a fast Italian sports car

Bentley: a British luxury car known more for elegance than speed

Susan Adams

The Weirdest Job Interview Questions and How to Handle Them

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Susan Adams is a senior editor at Forbes, a major publisher of business news. Since joining Forbes in 1995, Adams has written about a wide variety of subjects, including the art and auction market. Previously, she was a reporter for the MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. Adams holds a B.A. from Brown University and a J.D. from Yale University Law School.

Every week, Adams writes an advice column for Forbes.com, and the following is one of those columns. In it, she gives examples of some of the stranger questions that come up in job interviews.

PREDICT Think of one weird question that might be asked in a job interview.

1 I once interviewed for a job with a documentary producer who made boring if well-meaning films for public TV. By way of preparation, I studied up on the producer’s projects and gave a lot of thought to how my interests and experience dovetailed with his. Our chat went swimmingly until he asked me a question that caught me completely off guard: “Who is your favorite comedian?”

2 Wait a second, I thought. Comedy is the opposite of what this guy does. My mind did back flips while I desperately searched for a comedian who might be a favorite of a tweedy, bearded liberal Democrat. After maybe 30 seconds too long, I blurted out my personal favorite: David Alan Grier, an African-American funnyman on the weekly Fox TV show In Living Color. My potential boss looked at me blankly as I babbled about how much I liked Grier’s characters, especially Antoine Merriweather, one of the two gay reviewers in the brilliantly hilarious sketch “Men on Film.”

3 Wrong answer. I had derailed the interview. My potential employer asked me a few more perfunctory questions and then saw me to the door.

4 We all prepare studiously for job interviews, doing our homework about our potential employers and compiling short but detailed stories to illustrate our accomplishments, but how in the world do we prep for an off-the-wall interview question?

5 Glassdoor.com, a three-year-old Sausalito, California, Web site that bills itself as “the TripAdvisor for careers,” has compiled a list of “top oddball interview questions” for two years running. Glassdoor gets its information directly from employees who work at 120,000 companies.

REFLECT Pick one of the questions in this paragraph. How would you answer it?

6 Crazy as it sounds, an interviewer at Schlumberger, the giant Houston oilfield services provider, once asked some poor job applicant, “What was your best MacGyver moment?,” referring to a 1980s action-adventure TV show. At Goldman Sachs, the question was, “If you were shrunk to the size of a pencil and put in a blender, how would you get out?” At Deloitte, “How many ridges [are there] around a quarter?” At AT&T, “If you were a superhero, which superhero would you be?” And at Boston Consulting: “How many hair salons are there in Japan?”

7 No matter where you apply for work, there is a chance you could get a question from left field. According to Rusty Rueff—a consultant at Glassdoor who is the author of Talent Force: A New Manifesto for the Human Side of Business and former head of human resources at PepsiCo and Electronic Arts—most job applicants are woefully unprepared for off-the-wall questions. “Ninety percent of people don’t know how to deal with them,” he says. Like me, they freeze and their minds go blank.

8 To deal with that, Rueff advises, first you have to realize that the interviewer isn’t trying to make you look stupid, as stupid as the question may seem. For instance, the MacGyver question is meant as an invitation to talk about how you got out of a tough jam. “They’re not looking for you to tell about the time you took out your ballpoint and did a tracheotomy,” Rueff notes. Rather, you can probably extract an answer from one of the achievement stories you prepared in advance.

9 With a question like “How many hair salons are there in Japan,” the interviewer is giving you an opportunity to demonstrate your thought processes. Rueff says you should think out loud, like the contestants on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? You might start by saying, We’d have to know the population of Japan, and then we’d have to figure out what percentage of them get their hair done and how often. Rueff says it’s fine to pull out a pen and paper and start doing some calculations right there in the interview.

10 Connie Thanasoulis-Cerrachio, a career services consultant at Vault.com, agrees with Rueff. “These are called case interview questions,” she says. Another example, which may seem equally impossible to answer: Why are manhole covers round?

11 In fact the manhole cover question, and “How would you move Mt. Fuji?,” were brought to light in a 2003 book, How Would You Move Mount Fuji? Microsoft’s Cult of the Puzzle: How the World’s Smartest Company Selects the Most Creative Thinkers. Microsoft’s grueling interview process often includes such problem-solving and logic questions. Just start thinking through the question, out loud, Thanasoulis-Cerrachio advises. “I would say, a round manhole cover could keep the framework of the tunnel stronger, because a round frame is much stronger than a square frame,” she suggests. In fact, there are several reasons, including the fact that a round lid can’t fall into the hole the way a square one can and the fact that it can be rolled.

12 Business schools teach students how to deal with case interview questions, and Vault has even put out a book on the subject, Vault Guide to the Case Interview.

EVALUATE Based on Adams’s observations, do you think weird interview questions are a good idea or a bad idea?

13 Other weird-seeming questions, like “If you were a brick in a wall, which brick would you be and why,” or “If you could be any animal, what would you be and why,” are really just invitations to show a side of your personality. Thanasoulis-Cerrachio says a friend who is chief executive of a market research company used to ask applicants what kind of car they would be. “She wanted someone fast, who thought quickly,” Thanasoulis-Cerrachio says. “She wanted someone who wanted to be a Maserati, not a Bentley.” For the brick question, Thanasoulis-Cerrachio advises saying something like, “I would want to be a foundational brick because I’m a solid person. You can build on my experience and I will never let you down.”

14 According to Rueff and Thanasoulis-Cerrachio, my comedian question was also a behavioral question, a test of my personality. “You gave a fine answer,” says Rueff. Maybe. But I didn’t get the job.

TIP For reading advice, see Chapter 1.

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