Page 64 - John Kador - 301 Best Questions to Ask on Your Interview, Second Edition-McGraw-Hill (2010)
P. 64

WHEN TO QUESTION

        hiring him,” the recruiter adds. In short, Charles needed a bid-for-
        action question, as described in Chapter 12.




        AT THE END
        This is the typical point at which you’ll be invited to ask any ques-
        tions you may have. The interviewer will lean back and turn the
        interview over to you. It may seem like the interview is coming to an
        end. It’s not. Interviewers are unanimous on this: they really expect
        you to ask intelligent questions.
          Don’t assume you know when the interview is over. The safest bet
        is to apply this rule: the interview is not over until you no longer have
        an interest in the job. Until then, the clock is ticking.




                               From the Field
                 Sometimes It’s Best to Hold the Questions

           One of the lessons of this book is not to wait until the end of
           the interview to ask your questions. By then there may not
           be enough time to get full benefit from the great questions
           you’ve prepared. But sometimes it does make sense to wait.
           Jason Warner, a senior recruiter at Google, recounted this
           experience in the Brazen Careerist blog. Heed the lesson of
           how a seasoned recruiter interviews for a recruiting job. The
           magic here is that Warner waits to ask his questions until
           after an interest in hiring him has been established.
             When I interviewed with Google recently, I recognized
             that the process with each person was going to be short
             (short interview time slots) so I realized that it wouldn’t
             be fruitful to burn time that they could use to evalu-
             ate me as a candidate with what are generally cursory
             questions from me (as the candidate at the beginning of
             the process). Instead, my response was, “I have a lot of
             questions, but I want to respect your process to evalu-
             ate me, and I’m comfortable waiting until a suitable time

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