Les comparto un artículo que apareció hace rato en INC.com sobre la pregunta que más importa en la entrevista.
Para mí, la pregunta más importante esta disfrazada en varias, pero es toda aquella que conteste ¿Por qué cree que puede hacer en el trabajo que le vamos a encomendar?
La pregunta del artículo “¿Qué proyecto o tarea consideraría la más significativa de su carrera hasta la fecha?”
Hay dos formas de contestar esta pregunta: La tradicional, donde me dice algo muy importante de su vida… O la estratégica, donde piensa en el evento más importante de su vida que tenga relación con las tareas que tiene el empleo al que está aplicando.
La diferencia es significativa. Recuerde, siempre en la entrevista debemos tener empatía. El articulo esta en inglés (gracias a Dios hay traductor de google).
Last week, LinkedIn announced to the world that I’ve been in the recruiting industry for 36 years. During that time, I’ve written a number of books about talent challenges and opportunities, but one thing continues to surprise me: More than 90 percent of hiring managers think they’re good interviewers, yet rarely do they reach unanimous hiring decisions with other 90 percenters in the same room evaluating the same candidate.
This realization led me on a quest to find the one interview question that would yield universal agreement from hiring managers. It took 10 years of trial and error, but I eventually found it. Here’s it is:
What single project or task would you consider your most significant accomplishment in your career to date?
To see why this simple question is so powerful, imagine you’re the candidate and I’ve just asked you this question. What accomplishment would you select?
Then imagine that over the course of the next 15-20 minutes I asked you the following follow-up questions. How would you respond?
Can you give me a detailed overview of the accomplishment?
Tell me about the company, your title, your position, your role, and the team involved.
What were the actual results achieved?
When did it take place and how long did the project take?
Why were you chosen?
What were the 3-4 biggest challenges you faced and how did you deal with them?
Where did you go the extra mile or take the initiative?
Walk me through the plan, how you managed it, and its measured success.
Describe the environment and resources.
Explain your manager’s style and whether you liked it.
What were the technical skills needed to accomplish the objective and how were they used?
What were some of the biggest mistakes you made?
What aspects of the project did you truly enjoy?
What aspects did you not especially care about and how did you handle them?
Give examples of how you managed and influenced others.
How did you change and grow as a person?
What you would do differently if you could do it again?
What type of formal recognition did your receive?
With an accomplishment big enough, and answers detailed enough to fill 20 minutes, this one line of questioning can tell an interviewer everything he or she needs to know about a candidate. The insight gained is remarkable. But the real secret ingredient is not the question; that’s just a setup. The most important elements are the details underlying the accomplishment. This is what real interviewing is about — delving into the details.
Don’t spend time asking clever interview questions; instead, spend time learning to get the answer to just this one question. Then ask it again and begin to connect the dots. After you hire a few people this way, you’ll also call it the most important interview question of all time.
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