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Subject:Re: Interview questions From:Sabahat Ashraf <sabahat_ashraf -at- MENTORG -dot- COM> Date:Wed, 19 Feb 1997 14:32:43 EST
I am not trying to be cheeky -- honest.
On Feb 19, 11:10am, Susan W. Gallagher wrote:
> I don't ask it all the time, but when I do, it's usually to try
> to draw some sense of movement out of the interviewee. The answer
> that I want reflects the interviewee's perception of where the
> (in my case, software) industry is going, where current information-
> delivery technology is going, and how the interviewee plans to keep
> up with trends/changes. I want to see some ambition, some goals, some
> incentive to improve skills.
Why not ask these questions outright? What with us TW's telling everyone, each
other, and ourselves, ad nauseaum [did I get that right?] to say what we mean
and all ... This is a serious question. My response to a question like that is
usually "In what regard? Financially, Socially, professionally ... what?"
Translation: What do you really want to ask me, <insert indulgent age-specific
epithet of choice>?
> So, when I ask the question, answer with:
>
> "I expect to be more familiar with OO concepts"
> "I expect to be delivering more and more information online and
> less on paper"
> "I expect to become more involved with user interface design"
> "I'd like to be doing more multi-media information delivery"
Sorry, what you are going to get from me is another question.
I will leave the hook/bait/opening for a discussion here.
Sabahat.
PS My sister-in-law's favourite response to the question in question is one I
have not heard on this list yet [I think]: "On the other side of the table."
"If I know your sect, I anticipate your argument"
Ralph Waldo Emerson
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