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本帖最后由 chuju 于 2010-7-26 13:38 编辑
4. ANTICIPATING THE QUESTIONS
The interviewer is likely to have two types of questions to ask you. One type is the set of questions she uses for everyone, such as, “Why do you want to attend school X?” The other type is a response to your résumé or file. If you have claimed to have had some marvelous successes, she may wish to probe to make sure that you have not exaggerated the results. Or she may wish to probe for gaps or weaknesses in your career to date. For example, one of the standard things to seek in a résumé is a period of unaccounted-for time. If such a time gap exists in your application, expect to be asked what you were doing then.
MOST LIKELY QUESTIONS
Tell me about yourself.
What are your career goals?
Why do you want an MBA?
Why do want to attend this school?
Why should we accept you?
What would you add to the program?
What are your greatest achievements?
What questions do you have?
The easiest question to prepare for is, “Do you have any questions?” Most interviewers will give you the opportunity to ask a few questions. You should be ready with three to five questions that reflect your concerns about the school. Keep these in your head rather than on paper, because having to look at your notes will slow the interview down and make it look as though you cannot remember even a few questions.
Another set of questions to expect is anything from the list of essay questions (which were analyzed exhaustively in a prior chapter). Prior to interviewing, review not only the questions you had to answer for this school—and, of course, your answers, since the interviewer may have read your essay answers shortly before interviewing you—but also those you answered for other schools and even those you did not have to answer for any program you applied to. Consider how you would have answered those too.
THE INTERVIEW QUESTIONS
The Chicago interview evaluation form reprinted above suggests some of the questions you can expect. In general, two types of approaches are common. In the first, you are asked more or less directly about the trait or competence the interviewer is interested in. For example, when trying to get a handle on your degree of independence, the direct interviewer might ask simply,” How much supervision and direction do you prefer?” The second approach tries o elicit information that will also allow the interviewer to determine whether, for example, you “strive for leadership positions.”_but it does so much less directly. In this case, the interviewer is likely to focus on various aspects of your past and current experience—in terms of your education, career, and personal life—to see how much supervision and direction you have had in various projects and whether that amount suited you. The questions that generate this information are likely to be more general, along the lines of, “Regarding that cost analysis project, what sort of relationship did you have with your boss? What did you like and dislike about this relationship?”
These more open-ended questions, where the focus is not made so obvious, are by now standard interviewing procedure. The more experienced the interviewer, and the more time she has available, the more likely she is to use the indirect approach.
You can prepare for both approaches by examining the following list, which covers the most common questions asked on each major topic—education, career, management orientation, goals, and personal life. Of course other questions are possible, but if you are prepared to respond coherently and consistently to each of the following, you will be ready for just about anything else you will encounter as well. Preparing for the following will force you to think through the main issues that are of interest to business schools.
UNIVERSITY EDUCATION (REPEAT FOR GRADUATE PROGRAMS AS APPROPRIATE)
Which school did you attend?
Why did you choose that one?
(Regarding a lesser quality school) Don’t you worry that you will be overwhelmed by the quality of students attending our program?
Which factors most influenced your choice?
What was your major? Why?
In hindsight, are you glad you chose that school? What would you change now if you could? Why?
In hindsight, are you glad you chose that major? What would you choose instead if you could do it over again?
How many hours each week did you study?
Which courses did you do best in? Why?
Which courses did you do worst in? Why?
Do your grades reflect your abilities? If not, why did you not do better?
In what ways did your education prepare you, or fail to prepare you, for your career to date?
What did you most enjoy about college?
What did you least enjoy about college?
What extracurricular activities did you participate in? What was your role and contribution for each?
How did you pay for your education?
How would you describe yourself as a college student? Is this still true about you?
GENERAL TIPS REGARDING UNIVERSITY EDUCATION
1. Avoid portraying your university days as a social experience rather than an intellectual one if at all possible.
2. If your record is poor, show that you have since gotten serious.
3. Show that you were committed to learning, whether for its own sake or for the sake of your career.
4. If you have changed your goals or interests several times, show that you have been serious about at least one of them while pursuing it.
5. Portray both your academic interests and your extracurricular activities in terms of their contribution to your current (or then current) career interests.
6. Discuss your leadership experiences.
7. As to changes you might make if given the opportunity to do it all over again, a safe answer is one that would better prepare you for your eventual career, such as by providing further grounding in econometrics or multidimensional scaling if you are currently a marketing researcher.
8. If you are interviewing for admission to a part-time program, do not try to excuse a mediocre undergraduate performance by explaining that you were unable to focus well due to the need to work part-time as well as study. This combination of work and study will be your fate once again in the part- time program.
WORK EXPERIENCE (TO BE REPEATED AS APPROPRIATE FOR DIFFERENT COMPANIES AND JOBS HELD)
Why did you choose this profession?
Why did you choose this firm?
What is your job title? To whom do you report?
What are your key responsibilities?
What and whom do you manage directly?
Describe the financial aspects of your job: budget, revenues, costs, return on assets employed.
What are the key technical challenges of your job? Managerial challenges?
What do you do best/worst in your job? Why?
How could you improve your performance? What actions have you taken to make these improvements?
What have your major successes been? What financial or other impact have these had?
Did you achieve these on your own? Who else was involved? How? What have you done that best shows your willingness to work hard/take initiative/innovate/exceed expectations?
How many hours per week do you work?
What do you like most/least about your position? Why?
What are the biggest challenges your unit faces? What are you doing to meet these challenges?
Where is your industry headed in the next five years?
Describe your relationship with your boss. What is good and bad about it? (Repeat for prior bosses)
How well are you rated by your boss? What does he or she most/least like about your performance?
Describe a failure on the job.
What are you doing to address your failings?
What would you change about your job?
How does your performance compare with that of others at similar levels in the company?
Describe your salary progression to date. How does this compare with that of others at similar levels in the company?
GENERAL TIPS REGARDING WORK EXPERIENCE
1. When discussing your boss, your description of what was good and bad about him will probably make it clear what you need, and also what you cannot tolerate, in a boss. This also says a lot about your own strengths and weaknesses.
2. Even when describing the characteristics you do not like in your boss, try to be reasonably sympathetic; otherwise you risk sounding like a malcontent.
3. Any job change should have been motivated by a desire for more challenges, more responsibility, the chance to grow, and so on. In other words, emphasize the positive, forward-looking reasons for making the change. Avoid the negative, backward-looking reasons for the change, such as being unappreciated, underpaid, or disliked by your boss.
4. If you were fired, confess to this fact if necessary, but be sure to note what you learned from the experience.
5. Working less than eek may suggest that you are insufficiently motivated. A good answer will establish that you work as hard as necessary to achieve your objective
6. Portray yourself as one who tries to meet or exceed the objective with as little time and effort as possible. You consider different approaches and look to improve whatever systems are in place if such a change will make it possible to achieve such results with less effort in the future.
MANAGERIAL ORIENTATION
What is your management philosophy?
What is your managerial style? What aspects of it do you wish to change?
What have you done to develop those under you?
How much do you control those under you? How much freedom do you give them? How do you motivate them?
What do you do best/worst as a manager?
Are you a better leader or follower?
What would your subordinates say about you as a manager? Why?
GENERAL TIPS REGARDING MANAGERIAL ORIENTATION
1. Any response that chooses one managerial style over another is a mistake. Respond that this is situation-dependent.
2. When you are the person in a group who is most knowledgeable about a given situation, you take the lead, but you defer to others when appropriate.
3. You are very much output-oriented and not overly fussy about the rile you play in a team, although you generally end up taking on a great deal of responsibility since you seem to welcome it and its challenges more than most do.
GOALS
What do you want to be doing in five years’ time? Ten years? Twenty-five years?
What do you want to accomplish in life?
How have your goals changed in recent years?
Why do you want an MBA? What do you expect to get from it?
Which other schools are you applying to? Why? Why so many/few?
How did you choose these schools?
Which school is your first choice? Why?
What if you are not accepted at a top school?
GENERAL TIPS REGARDING GOALS
1. You want to show that you are committed to career success.
2. Showing that you have thought long and hard about your future career demonstrates your seriousness of purpose.
3. Regarding your long term goals, do not say that you want to lie on a beach somewhere. Saying this would show you to be overly stressed already, hardly an ideal attribute for someone trying to get into a challenging MBA program. Discuss instead how you arrived at your chosen goal in light of a consideration of your relative strengths and weakness, what you most enjoy, your background and desires, etc.
PERSONAL
Tell me about yourself.
What publications do you regularly read? Why?
What books have you read recently? What impressed you about that one? What have you done to keep yourself current, or to develop your skills, in your field?
How do you feel about:
— China’s advent upon the world stage?
— African internecine warfare?
— (Anything else on the front pages, especially if it relates to your home region or that of the school?)
How do you spend your time outside of work?
Is your current balance among career, family, friends, and interests the right one for you over the long term?
What activity do you enjoy the most? Why?
Who most influenced you when you were growing up? How?
Who are your heroes? Why?
What competitive sports have you participated in? Did you enjoy them? Are you competitive by nature?
GENERAL TIPS REGARDING PERSONAL QUESTIONS
1. When describing yourself, or what your long term goals are, be sure that a large part of your response focuses upon your career.
2. Take every opportunity to show that you are highly achievement oriented and do what you can to develop both personally and professionally.
3. At the same time, show yourself to be a sensible and well-balanced person with compelling outside interests, including but not limited to family and friends.
4. When talking about your interests, it does not much matter whether you read science fiction, monographs about the Napoleonic wars, or locked room mysteries, as long as you show that you are knowledgeable and enthusiastic regarding whatever you pursue.
5. These questions provide a natural opportunity to subtly strengthen your chosen positioning.
OTHER
Is there anything else you would like us to know about you?
GENERAL TIP REGARDING OTHER QUESTIONS
1. Remember your pre-interview objectives. If you intended to put across several major points, ask yourself whether you have succeeded in doing so. If you have, do not feel compelled to add anything. On the other hand, if you have not, mention briefly but persuasively the points you wished to make along with the supporting examples or illustrations you intended to use.
PREPARING TO DESCRIBE KEY EVENTS
You should be ready to discuss major and minor milestones in your personal, educational, and professional life. Some interviewers prefer to ask very general, open-ended questions to learn how well you can develop an organized, intelligent response. Questions of this nature often revolve around major events interviewers glean from your résumé or application. Prepare yourself by reviewing the relevant aspects of each event you expect to discuss. In the case of a successful business project, for example, you would want to recall:
The project’s initial objective
Who originated it
Who was in charge
The resources available
The timetable
The activities undertaken
Your role
— What you did well and poorly, and why
— What skills you used
— What you would do differently in retrospect
Other people’s roles
The results
What went right and what did not, and why
Any conclusions this suggests about the department or company, whether of a strategic, operational, or organizational nature
It is a useful exercise to write down the half dozen (or dozen) most important incidents you expect to discuss on an index card, using this sort of approach for each. Carry these cards with you for reading when you are waiting or have a spare moment. Learn them well enough that you can produce a well-organized, apparently spontaneous summary of each of them at the drop of a hat, but do not memorize the stories by rote. Be prepared to be interrupted by the interviewer, and be ready to carry on with the story smoothly once you have answered his question.
WHAT DETERMINES THE LIKELIHOOD OF A GIVEN QUESTION BEING ASKED?
Questions are not generally asked without a reason. Some interviewers believe that certain questions should be asked of anyone, no matter what the person’s circumstances. In interviewing for MBA programs, the most likely questions concern why you want to get an MBA, why at this school, what other schools you are considering, what you think you will contribute while at school X, and what you intend to do professionally in the near and long terms.
The other determinant of questions is, of course, you. Your background invites questions that rnay be quite different from those that would be asked of someone else. If you are in a nonbusiness field that seldom produces MBA candidates, you can expect questions concerning why you want an MBA. If you have a history of career success, but just got fired from your job, you can expect questions about what happened. If one of your credentials is relatively weak, you can expect questions about it. If you are an anglophone trying to get into a bilingual program, you can expect to have your second language probed.
A good interviewer, and often even a bad interviewer, will try to use the interview to learn as much relevant information as possible about you. Given that most interviewers will not have read your application, you can expect them to ask many of the same basic questions that appear on the various applications. One way to influence the course of an interview with someone who knows little about you is to take a résumé along. Most interviewers will use it as the basis for their questions, so they will ask about the items you choose to list on your résumé. They will also probe for internal inconsistencies (“Why were you paid so little if you were really in charge of the internal audit function?”) as well as checking things that sound inherently unlikely (“How is it that you were in charge of conducting an audit of the internal controls in operation in the whole Swedish subsidiary when you had never done anything even vaguely related to such a field?”).
The other items an interviewer will probe are things you and she have in common, or about which she is simply curious. (“What is the cheapest luxury trip down the Nile currently available?”) The more that an interviewer takes this approach, the easier the interview is likely to be. Discussing interests you share is likely to provide an opportunity to share enthusiasms, which is generally easier to handle than responding to probing questions about why you left a good job after just fifteen months. Be sure, however, to keep to your own objectives. You can still make the impression you want by being articulate and well organized even when just discussing trips on the Nile.
PRACTICE
There are two ways that you can practice your interviewing skills and responses. The first is by doing mock interviews with others who are applying, or someone else who appreciates what is involved. This is a good first step to understanding what an interview will be like. The quality of the experience will depend in large part upon how prepared your interviewing partner is. If you can find someone who is willing to read your application carefully, and perhaps even read this chapter, then you are ready to get a good interview. The ideal person to team up with would be someone who is applying to the same schools, but has a very different background from yours, and who is willing to be tough when necessary in the interview. It can be difficult to find the right person, of course. (It is partly for this reason that Education U.S.A. regularly does mock interviews with clients, if necessary by phone, to give them a realistic view of what to expect.) It is not only fair, but also good for you, to switch roles with your partner. If you have to read her essays and data sheets with an eye to seeing what her strengths and weaknesses are, what she will contribute to the program, and the like, you will more readily understand how someone else will do this with you.
Your interview partner can tell you which responses were convincing and which were not (and why). Be persistent and force your interview partner to be specific in noting what worked and what did not. After all, the point is not what you say but what your interviewer hears that determines the success of your interview In fact, simply saying things out loud will often cause you to hear what is not right. Speaking out loud often makes it clear that you are wandering instead of being focused, trying too hard to excuse some prior mistake, or pleading rather than convincing. Tape recording your practice sessions will make this apparent.
If you can videotape your practice interviews, by all means do so. Seeing yourself in action will help you to eliminate extreme gestures and repetitive phrasings. Particularly annoying is the idiotic-sounding, inappropriate use of “like” and “you know.” Wear your interview outfit to make sure that it too passes muster.
The second means of practicing is to be sure that you interview first with the schools that matter least to you. If you are applying to three “likely” choices, make sure that your first two interviews are with schools in this category rather than the “possibles” or “stretches.” This allows you to develop and refine your pitch and get rid of your first interview nerves without too much at stake.
It is a good idea to use both of these approaches if you can. Maximize the potential benefits by debriefing your partner, or yourself when you interviewed with a school, to be sure that you understand what worked and what needed more thought, and why. |
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