A common type of job interview in the modern workplace is the behavioral interview or behavioral event interview.
This type of interview is based on the notion that a job candidate's previous behaviors are the best indicators of future performance. In behavioral interviews, the interviewer asks candidates to recall specific instances where they were faced with a set of circumstances, and how they reacted.
Typical behavioral interview questions:
"Tell me about a project you worked on where the requirements changed midstream. What did you do?"
"Tell me about a time when you took the lead on a project.
What did you do?"
"Describe the worst project you worked on."
"Describe a time you had to work with someone you didn't like."
"Tell me about a time when you had to stick by a decision you had made, even though it made you very unpopular."
"Give us an example of something particularly innovative that you have done that made a difference in the workplace."
"What happened the last time you were late with a project?"
A bad hiring decision nowadays can be immensely expensive for an organization – cost of the hire, training costs, severance pay, loss of productivity, impact on morale, cost of re-hiring, etc. (Gallup international places the cost of a bad hire as being 3.2 times the individual's salary).
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