Posted on Jul 23, 2014
Capt Richard Desmond
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This could be military board questions or civilian job interview questions. My last job in the Air Force was in recruiting and I conducted interviews for those who wanted to attend Officer Training School, mostly civilians or people who were prior service, and believe it or not the question most people got wrong was what was the Air Force mission and core values. Do your research people! My hardest question was for a volunteer position working with Adult convicts. It was what would you do if a convict brought up religion? I remember my answer being that I would acknowledge that fact but state that it really isn't a topic to discuss or a factor on how I can help them gain employment after their sentence is completed.
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Responses: 6
LT Robert Belcher
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The hardest question I have experienced, and I subsequently use, is "Describe a time to me you failed. How did you deal with failure, and what did you learn?" This type of experience based question catches people off guard, causes them to provide an objective response, and then quickly turn that into a selling point. It is very easy to detect the sincere responses from the marketing.
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LCDR Head Of Human Resources
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Great answer Rob! 97!
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SPC Thomas Hobbs
SPC Thomas Hobbs
7 y
No, it isn't a great answer. A great answer would answer the entire question. The question that he was asked, and his interpretation of the reasoning for the quest are great, but he did not answer the full question here. He completely negated the second half of the question: "...and what was your answer?"
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LCDR Head Of Human Resources
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As an HR leader, I find that behavioral questions in interviewing are usually the best indicator of future performance. Rob Belcher is right on with his comments. Questions that start with "Tell me about a time" or "Describe a situation" are great ways to lead off on questions. It's important to be able to drill down to get specifics of the situation if you are conducting the interview.

Questions that talk about "What would you do" or "How would you handle" tend to interview for thought process. Most candidates can game the interview with these and give the interviewer what they are ideally looking for in the question.

I highly recommend the book "Your Not the Person I Hired!" by Barry Deutsch as a guide to recruiting. It's a must-read.

As for the toughest question I have ever been asked, I will need to set this up. I was in an interview for the Naval Academy at a State Senator's office in New Jersey. The person conducting the interview essentially asked me if I was spoiled after a long diatribe. My response wasn't the best, and I almost walked out. I didn't get the Nomination from the Senator, but I did get one from a Congressman. I am still proud of the fact that I stood up for what I believed in. Moral of the story, don't change who you are. Be proud. Just don't be offensive.
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SPC Thomas Hobbs
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Edited 7 y ago
This is a very good question. And, though I'm going to decline to answer (because I can't remember any, my memory sucks), I would like to point out that ONLY enlisted actually answered the quest and didn't try to sell something. Other than the man posing the question, every officer tried to derail without giving a full answer (typical), and one officer pointed to a book to answer the question for him! THIS is why enlisted personnel constantly complain about the CoC failing them, very few officers have enough respect for anyone else to actually give THEIR OWN COMPLETE answer to the questions asked. They expect everyone else do respect them enough to do it, but will not do it themselves.
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