What is the absolutely worst job interview question that you've been asked?
What did you answer? Did you get the job?
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Do you have a brother? Do you love him? I've just thought how in the world is this question relevant to anything? I was offered the job and declined it of course. |
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How the hell I supposed to answer this one? I bumped my head into the wall when I was a toddler? No, seriously, I don't know. |
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"What are you like when you're drunk?" |
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"Will you mind if your colleagues mock your accent?" |
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Once when I'd applied for a job at a University, I had to fill out a long questionaire filled with questions like: "When was a time that you had a difficult job situation, and how were you able to resolve it?" So I put down a fairly stock (but true) answer, and moved on. When I was called in for my interview, the interviewer calls me into his office and has me sit down. He then opens up a folder, pulls out the original questionaire that I filled out WITH MY ANSWERS ON IT, and asks (reading off the questionaire): "When was a time that you had a difficult job situation, and how were you able to resolve it?" What the heck? Can't he read? Does he want me to come up another example? Does he not believe that I wrote the original? Does he think I can't remember? What on earth does this guy want? So I figure, okay...I say something along the lines of "Well, as I stated in the questionaire, blah blah blah...", briefly outlining what I said before, and follow up with, "...but another example might be blah blah blah..." where I went into another example. The guy looks at me like I'm speaking in Swahili. I finish up. He shakes his head slowly and sadly a few times as though alternating between pity and confusion. He asks me three more questions from the questionaire, then thanks me for my time and lets me know that they'll let me know soon. They never bothered getting back to me. To this day, I have no idea what on earth this guy wanted from me. |
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I remember some commenter on The Daily WTF that said that he would randomly throw out an Airplane! quote (e.g. "Do you like movies about gladiators?"), with the comment that "if they didn't get the reference, I would move on, and that would tell me something about their personality." I would love to get turned down for a job because I haven't seen their favorite movie. |
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If you were a cereal, what kind of cereal would you be and why? |
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Not a question, but when interviewers constantly Umm before asking questions. Makes me feel like they didn't even have the decency to prepare properly for the interview. |
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Interviewer: Are you married? Do you have any children? Me: Aren't those questions illegal? Interviewer: Oh, I just want to make sure you're a good fit for our team. ... Same Interviewer: Are you willing to work on a trial basis for 6 weeks before we pay you? I require this of all my engineering hires because I only want to hire engineers who are confident in their abilities. |
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"Where do you see yourself in five years" This is the IT industry, not a lot of folk will be on the same gig five years later. Do you really want me to answer that? |
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Yeas ago I submitted an experience I had interviewing somebody for a programming position to the daily wtf. It follows: "How often do you read tech-related news and blogs online?" I asked "Well, technology isn't really changing," he replied, "the more things change, the more we realize they stay the same." I restated the question. "Okay, but how often do you read tech news to keep up with the latest in security exploits and application compromising?" "Well, applications will always have security holes" he said. It was the long way to say "I don't read tech news," so I moved on and posed a simple question: "If you were presented with a SQL-injection bug that allowed unfettered access to any user's account, how would you go about fixing this problem?" "Well, if you're using Windows," he replied, "these problems will always be around." Perhaps that's the long way of saying "I don't know." I tried another question: "how familiar are you with the .NET Framework?" "Well," he said hesitantly, "to be honest, I didn't want to pay the subscription fee for it so I never was able to download it." "Subscription fee," I questioned, "you know it's a free download, right?" "Oh," he said, a bit confused, "neat! They must have changed that." |
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After being given the company overview and their custom PHP based CMS, the head programmer asked me, "How do you feel about PHP functions?" It seemed like a silly question at the time. I answered by talking about procedural vs. OO paradigms, passing by reference and values, and the pro's and con's of PHP style function overloading. It made sense when later I found out the position was to convert PSD mockups into HTML and then place the template PHP calls in. They just wanted to know if I could call a PHP function. Needless to say, I did not take that job. |
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Interviewer leads me to his office... (insert small talk here)... I look around... he has numerous swords hanging on the wall... he says, "Take a seat." I take a seat. He says, "Are you intimidated?" I respond, "I'll see myself to the door." And I left. |
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At a consultancy, I was asked: "Which servers do you know?" |
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Them: What would you say your fellow employees would say about you if asked? |
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Him : "Are you available tomorrow?, we need someone to represents the developer group in a meeting with a potential client" And It was clear (because of the rest of the interview) that I was supposed to say yes, for free and that I would not be hired after that. |
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Worst question: Does it bothers you to work with girls? It was a serious question, not a joke, I looked at them confused and said of course not!. This was three years ago today I'm still wondering wtf? Luckily I didn't got the job, after that I met some guys in my current job that worked there who told me that it was an awful company. |
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"Tell me three faults of yours." I hate it. I wish I answered: "I kill people. I worship Satan. I'm cannibal." I replied something different, and I didn't get the job. |
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Two questions I've been asked: How many piano tuners are there in Cape Town? How many one hundred rand notes are there at 12pm in a shopping mall? I got the questions "right" (meaning they agreed with my rationale), but I thought those were terrible questions simply because of the number of variables that could affect the answer. Clearly they didn't give the question much thought themselves, because they kept telling me to ignore certain things when I asked about them. They should state all assumptions up front, rather than let the interviewee waste time travelling dead ends to an almost exponential number of answers. |
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The worst (I'm always asked): Where Do You See Yourself in N Years? (where N is variable). I find it as the most annoying question that can be asked. |
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Personally I hate the stupid questions you are expected to lie on such as "Why do you want to leave your current position?" Honestly, if you tell the truth on this one you have little chance of getting the job. What bothers me is that they expect you to lie and therefore they are giving preference to employees who lie well. |
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"Pulp Fiction or Reservoir Dogs?" |
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This was for a high end C# position and I was asked what the "new kind of FOR loop" was in C#. |
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It's not even a question, it's a command: "So, tell me about yourself." It was just the interviewer basically admitting they haven't prepared anything, and I'm going to be doing all the work. |
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"You're re-designing this floor of this building. How do you decide to equip the restrooms?" The problem wasn't the question - as a test of how you a programmer thinks, it's fine. The problem was this guy had a "right" answer in mind for this, and wasn't satisfied with anything else, even if it worked. It turns out I know a lot about this exact problem, having supervised an office building build-out a few years before. In most places in the U.S., that's governed by the local building code. You get info like the square footage and expected occupancy, and look it up. The code gives you how many mens' rooms and how many women's rooms, and how many toilets and urinals and sinks to put in each. You can add more if you want. That is a definitive answer. But he didn't like that. So I started doing the Feynman-esque estimation thing, but every time I came up with an assumption to base the estimate on (X people, Y square feet), or a resource to get valid information from (look at similar buildings), he told me to toss it out. As a programmer with academic and professional backgrounds in theoretical mathematics and chemistry, I tried the entire range of estimation schemes from airy-fairy to eminently-practical, but nothing I came up with made him satisfied. It was a profoundly unsatisfying experience for both of us. There were other problems with other interviewers there, too. After multiple hours of interviews, they never even gave me the courtesy of a call to let me know they didn't want me. A current co-worker I esteem had worked there, and he said, "Bob, you are so lucky you didn't get that gig!" |
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For an IT job I was asked how many knots I could tie, and which was my favorite, and why. |
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After running out of relevant questions within minutes, my (male) boss asked a (female) interviewee, "So, you're married? how many kids? what grades are they in?" and that continued for quite a few minutes... Lucky for me I was already on my way out... Getting to interview your replacement can actually be an interesting experience :D |
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"Which was your favorite project?" I was one of the interviewers on that panel... nearly choked! |
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"Show me how you would write a hash table in C#". It has been a while since I've ever had to roll my own so I asked what was wrong with the existing implementation. "It's too slow". So I asked if they were really worried about speed why use C# at all. I turned the job down. As for "How do you move Mount Fuji" well that's simple, tell it a really heart wrenching story .... |
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What is my favorite TV show? Seriously. |
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