Three Tricky Interview Styles - And How To Ace Them

Posted by in Career Advice


In this day and age, as job competition has increased, interviewing techniques have also gotten tougher. Larger corporations often adopt multi-layered interview techniques from initial screening until the job offer stage. Interview Styles and How to Handle Them Confidently The need for different interview styles has evolved with the increasing complexities of jobs and work environments, as a scientific means to testing candidates. Behavioral Interview This style of interview uses the premise that past behavioral and performance history reveals enough indicators for a prediction of future performance. This type of interview can begin with concealed questions, such as asking you to narrate a tricky situation you have handled in the past. For example, "Please let us know your best accomplishment and how you were able to accomplish it." However, the questions will not necessarily be limited to your past. Look at this one: "If you had to purchase accounting software, how would you choose it?" This question aims at bringing out your software knowledge, as well as the decision making process that you may use. Case Study A slightly refined technique within the behavioral interview is the case study style. Expect to encounter a real-life situation here. Something like "evaluate different accounting software as a precursor to purchase and implementation" should not surprise you. If you take this question with an open mind, you will be able to produce the best answer without getting flustered. You will recollect different variants of software that you are acquainted with through years of usage. From your current knowledge, you will make the right choice by analyzing various aspects like robustness, customizability, user-friendliness and cost effectiveness. You may even brainstorm with your team of users. But what does all this signify to the interviewer? Simple - it speaks of your: • Experience • Confidence • Willingness to engage people • Team spirit • Composed and robust decision making style • Problem solving ability • Perseverance Stress Test You will probably face questions like "why are there so many job changes in your career?" or "why weren't you promoted in your last job despite being there long-term?" These are clever questions, designed to make your squirm in your seat. They will make unprepared candidates go speechless. But the interviewer is watching you closely and observing changes in your face, behavior and body language. Quite naturally, these are hard questions that require time to remember exact scenarios and find ways to simplify and shorten your answers. Give precise answers, including specifics about the question. Since there are no wrong answers in the stress interview, what they are really looking for is how you respond to unexpected stressors. These are three prevalent types of interview styles. However, in actual practice, you may come across a blend of one or all three. Use the information above to be successful, and you will be able to give the interviewer exactly what they are looking for.
Comment

Become a member to take advantage of more features, like commenting and voting.

  • Javier Almanza
    Javier Almanza
    Site, scenarios, questions, and comments are all good to take in, digest, and use what is applicable. I've experienced each of these, plus one where the interviewer used a software program where the followup questions were being  "generated" based on the answers I'd given to the previous question....talk about "at the spur of the moment" interviewing...QRGCW
  • Melanye
    Melanye
    Disarm, repair/mend:  Anticipate unpleasant subjects about work history, introducethe counter angle within questions to the interviewer about company policy/practice specifically pertaining to similar situationed job candidates?  Relevance is key.  You practically can't accept a job with the interviewing company while productively at work for former employers the goings on of which is outdated and conditionally hidden in a no-win inquiry.  Preempt qualify and put the interviewer on You and Your SIDE.
  • Bernadette Bailey
    Bernadette Bailey
    I have encountered all these styles, and I suggest this. "Every difficult situation presents an opportunity to shine...to find a way to get along and satisfy the other person, without giving up, but rather gaining personal power". In my job as a surgical nurse, if my surgeon becomes angry I may say to him, "sir, you have a right to be upset.Why don't you tell me what you would like me to do now to correct the situation"? This is disarming and at the same time, attempts to fix it and continue on with the task at hand.
  • JoAnn
    JoAnn
    I have moved serveral times and each time I move its been about a year difference. I moved a lot do to marriage and family problems. How do I explain why i moved so much and the reasons behind them?
  • Dave
    Dave
    The most important thing to remember is relax. Think of the interviewers as friends. Don't let the situation lock you up. Let the information flow. The interviewers will be impressed with your demenor if you keep your cool!
  • Cathy
    Cathy
    This was an informative article.  Many individuals are not familar with the behavioral interview technique style and miss out on opportunities because of not being prepared.  Here are a few suggestions to tackle this type of interview.  Behavioral Interview Questions suggestion:Write down scenerios that you dealt with at work.  Develop a question pertaining to the situation.  Practice answering in the STAR response format (Situation, Task, Action, Result).Example:  The situation I found myself facing was...The task or action that I took....As a result of my action...Question #3:  I was not promoted because of a lack of growth opportunities within the company.
  • Jack
    Jack
    How do employers look these days when you have a long gap between employments ?? - I have had several contract positions, tried developing a web business which failed due to lack of marketing funds, and mostly due to the job market limits in my field for the past 3 years. Interviews have been few and far between. Some say you should list your contract positions but my last reg employment was Jan. 04 - that is 3 years and it looks bad. How do you handle this?
  • Abdus
    Abdus
    A very good article with real time approach.
  • Mary Jo
    Mary Jo
    I agree with the two that say it would be nice to get a clue as to how to answer these questions. I believe that even though you are using e-mail on a blog you should still use correct spelling. If a person uses slang or abbreviations while on-line, chances are that person will forget and use that terminology when conducting business and that will get you nowhere. Be as professional as possible at all times. You never know who is reading your messages.
  • brenda d steed
    brenda d steed
    hello:i was expecting a different scenerio.  There is the hostile negative interview which i experienced with my last employer.  I received questions like,  What reason or reasons would you give for not applying for this job.  That was the first question.  Also another question was, "what would you do if you someone you worked with just couldnt get along with you.there's the friendly interview.  
  • j
    j
    The article was informative but it fell short by not provding the "do's" to responding to the questions.Thanks!
  • genefosa
    genefosa
    Because of the work I do, many people are asking me how to deal with similar situations at interviews. Sometimes the best thing you can do is to set up a mock interview with a friend. Let him put you on the hot seat with all those uncomfortable questions that we do get asked at job interviews.Sometimes going through the situation, and writing it out as a scenario, "OK, I see you worked for three months at your last job, and for only three months at the one before it. You look unstable to me." How to answer such a question requires some serious thought, and we must remember that an interviewer may pick your history apart, much the way a prosecution lawyer would. Better still would be to sit down with a friend and go over all those points in your resume and work history, which are less than ideal, and brainstorm good ways you could answer them. The interviewer does not need to know about your messy divorce, or the catastrophic illnesses members of your family may have suffered, or any and all those things that caused your work history to look less than wonderful.However, sometimes it is better to explain the extenuating circumstances. We cannot always be on the job fifty or more hours a week. Sometimes family needs do take precidence, and it would be better to explain, unemotionally, 'yes that is so, but these things were happening, and I had to spend X amount of time taking care of them.'
  • velsor
    velsor
    the second sample question hit me right through!! and i have to say that ur site is helping alot in terms of finding the right job and doing it right from the start, from interview to the job offering stage! more power!!
  • Norm Toler
    Norm Toler
    I agree with DAQUAN. It would be really beneficial if there were some ways to answer/manage these types of questions. Especially questions like number 3.
  • doris
    doris
    I worked at my last job for three years, I quit due to the constant pressure of always being the one to do my job while others slacked. I also had four other jobs in four years which lasted from five months to one year. The reason I quit was due to family problems, and relocations. How do I answer these question without getting caught up. Meaning, freezing up or tongued tied.  Thanks
  • DAQUAN
    DAQUAN
    This article was pretty good.  While it will allude to some of the different techniques that employers are using today during interviews, it would have been even nicer to hear how some of those questions should be answered.

Jobs to Watch