With books and classes
devoted to it, interviewing has become a sort of science. Although the actual
interview may still be nerve-racking, job candidates are able prepare
themselves by studying the most common interview questions. While planning
ahead is beneficial to the interviewee, this preparedness poses problems to the
employer. Rather than being able to judge the candidates’ actual intelligence and
quick-thinking like they wanted, employers are only getting a sense of what the
interviewee’s prepared.
Google,
however, is looking to change that. By moving away from traditional interview
questions that allow for preparation, the Internet giant is beginning to ask
questions that rely on intelligence and problem-solving abilities, like those found
on I.Q. tests. For example, a potential employee may be told to solve this
problem: “There are eight balls, seven of them weight the same, but one is
heavier. Using a balance scale, how do you find the heaviest ball in just two
weighings?” Google hopes that questions like this will give employers a better
grasp on the interviewees’ abilities before any of them are actually hired.
Although
many of the traditional interview questions will always be a necessary part of
the hiring process, it is likely that Google is starting a new trend. Do not be
caught off guard at your next interview if a potential employer asks you to
solve a math problem or answer a general knowledge question. In fact, to see if
Gustavus students would be ready for these new types of questions, the Center
for Servant Leadership is offering a prize to the first person who brings in
the correct answer to the question asked above.
By E.W. 3/8/2012
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