Page 53 - John Kador - 301 Best Questions to Ask on Your Interview, Second Edition-McGraw-Hill (2010)
P. 53

THE RULES OF THE GAME

          So what kinds of self-deprecating joking can pass the humor
        test? Dialect is too risky. Leave it at home. Sarcasm may be misin-
        terpreted. Personal anecdotes can sometimes work. But make them
        personal, short, and to the point. One candidate reports that the fol-
        lowing line, delivered tongue in cheek with a broad smile, sometimes
        led to a laugh and real feedback:

        How do you like me so far?
        A line like this can work, concedes Nancy Levine, VP of client ser-

        vices at San Francisco–based Pacific Firm, but the risks are very
        high because it is so obviously a line. “If I happen to feel that the
        candidate and I have created a close rapport, that our senses of
        humor are on the same wavelength, then it’s great. But there is noth-
        ing more irritating to me than someone trying to be funny whom

        I don’t find funny. Proceed with caution if you want to use humor.
        And then, use it sparingly, just to add spice, like pepper on the fi nest
        fi let mignon.”
          Another candidate got some mileage out of a similar expression,
        by fi nding just the right time in the interview to say, in a dead-on
        New York City accent:

        As Ed Koch used to say, “How’m I doing?”
        (Ed Koch is a former mayor of New York who managed by walking
        around the city and offering that phrase in order to get feedback
        from citizens.)
          How about jokes? Is it ever useful to tell a joke in a job interview?
          Jokes are probably too risky, but it may pay to memorize a couple
        just in case. I know one HR director who is known to ask candidates
        to tell him a joke as a test of how nimble the candidate’s mind is.
        Every once in a while—perhaps if the interview is at a more informal
        setting such as a restaurant—it may make sense to offer a joke. The
        quasi-social nature of the event might allow for more fl exibility. But
        even here I urge caution.
          Some interviewers will tell you a joke, either to break the ice or to
        illustrate a point. Occasionally, unprepared or unprofessional inter-




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