job interview questionseBook

 
How To Answer The 64 Toughest Interview Questions
 
 
 
 
 


On confidential matters...

 


On confidential matters...


TRAPS: When an interviewer presses you to reveal confidential information about a present or former employer, you may feel it's a no-win situation. If you cooperate, you could be judged untrustworthy. If you don't, you may irritate the interviewer and seem obstinate, uncooperative or overly suspicious.


BEST ANSWER: Your interviewer may press you for this information for two reasons. First, many companies use interviews to research the competition. It's a perfect set-up. Here in their own lair, is an insider from the enemy camp who can reveal prized information on the competition's plans, research, financial condition, etc.


Second, the company may be testing your integrity to see if you can be cajoled or bullied into revealing confidential data.


What to do? The answer here is easy. Never reveal anything truly confidential about a present or former employer. By all means, explain your reticence diplomatically. For example, "I certainly want to be as open as I can about that. But I also wish to respect the rights of those who have trusted me with their most sensitive information, just as you would hope to be able to trust any of your key people when talking with a competitor..." And certainly you can allude to your finest achievements in specific ways that don't reveal the combination to the company safe.


But be guided by the golden rule. If you were the owner of your present company, would you feel it ethically wrong for the information to be given to your competitors? If so, steadfastly refuse to reveal it.


Remember that this question pits your desire to be cooperative against your integrity. Faced with any such choice, always choose integrity. It is a far more valuable commodity than whatever information the company may pry from you. Moreover, once you surrender the information, your stock goes down. They will surely lose respect for you.


One President we know always presses candidates unmercifully for confidential information. If he doesn't get it, he grows visibly annoyed, relentlessly inquisitive, It's all an act. He couldn't care less about the information. This is his way of testing the candidate's moral fiber. Only those who hold fast are hired.


Would you lie for the company?


TRAPS: This another question that pits two values against one another, in this case loyalty against integrity.


BEST ANSWER: Try to avoid choosing between two values, giving a positive statement which covers all bases instead.


Example: "I would never do anything to hurt the company.." If aggressively pressed to choose between two competing values, always choose personal integrity. It is the most prized of all values.


Looking back, what would you do differently in your life?


TRAPS: This question is usually asked to uncover any life-influencing mistakes, regrets, disappointments or problems that may continue to affect your personality and performance.


You do not want to give the interviewer anything negative to remember you by, such as some great personal or career disappointment, even long ago, that you wish could have been avoided.


Nor do you wish to give any answer which may hint that your whole heart and soul will not be in your work.


BEST ANSWER: Indicate that you are a happy, fulfilled, optimistic person and that, in general, you wouldn't change a thing.


Example: "It's been a good life, rich in learning and experience, and the best it yet to come. Every experience in life is a lesson it its own way. I wouldn't change a thing."


Could you have done better in your last job?


TRAPS: This is no time for true confessions of major or even minor problems.


BEST ANSWER: Again never be negative.


Example: "I suppose with the benefit of hindsight you can always find things to do better, of course, but off the top of my head, I can't think of anything of major consequence."


(If more explanation seems necessary)
Describer a situation that didn't suffer because of you but from external conditions beyond your control.


For example, describe the disappointment you felt with a test campaign, new product launch, merger, etc., which looked promising at first, but led to underwhelming results. "I wish we could have known at the start what we later found out (about the economy turning, the marketplace changing, etc.), but since we couldn't, we just had to go for it. And we did learn from it..."





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