#interviewing

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#hiring
fromFortune
1 week ago
Careers

These 3 'sudden death' job interview answers could cost you the job-and never mention work-life balance, warns Suzy Welch | Fortune

Certain interview answers signal early exit risk, low urgency, or defensive framing that can instantly disqualify otherwise strong candidates.
fromBusiness Insider
3 weeks ago
Business

From hedge funds to banks: 3 execs reveal their go-to hiring question

Top Wall Street interviewers use unconventional, revealing questions to evaluate communication, pressure management, and problem-solving rather than relying on predictable stock interview questions.
fromFortune
1 week ago
Careers

These 3 'sudden death' job interview answers could cost you the job-and never mention work-life balance, warns Suzy Welch | Fortune

fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

When it's down to 2 candidates, here's what could tip the scales

Practice humility. Let the hiring manager see your true personality. "Being open and humble in responses is something I value in most candidates," says Jenny Amalfi, president of the Americas at Airswift, a Houston-based full-service employment agency. "While being technically great is always important, the personal side of a candidate often outweighs their technical ability in the interview process." She notes that companies seek hires who are strong collaborators-keep that front in mind, even as you navigate late-stage interviews.
Careers
fromFortune
3 weeks ago

Twilio CEO interviews candidates for 45 minutes over dinner-he's listening for one word in particular, and you're not hired if you say it too much | Fortune

For all of them, in the last 15-to-20 minutes, I give them an opportunity to ask questions-and if they don't have any, I think that's a pretty significant mark against them being curious about what they're interviewing, the company, the way we might work together, chemistry, culture, all of those things. That's a pretty big red flag.
Careers
Miscellaneous
fromIndependent
1 month ago

Kieran Cuddihy and the catfish: 'Spreadeagled... the whole smorgasbord of nudity, actually. At first I thought it was just spam...'

Kieran Cuddihy sees fear in interviewees through physical signs like shaking hands and responds with empathy while recounting a bizarre online RTÉ encounter.
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