The Interview Question You
Should Always Expect
Whether you are a new middle
manager or
a new President-elect, the common wisdom is that you have three months to make an
impact in your new role. And yet when preparing
for job interviews, candidates make the mistake of believing that most questions
will be about their past experience, not what they plan to do once hired.
New hires have to impress
their bosses, peers, and employees in less time than it takes some of us to
arrange a meeting. So if you’re interviewing for a job, plan to be asked the
question:
“What do you hope to achieve in your first three months?”
“What do you hope to achieve in your first three months?”
First, approach this question
— and indeed, every interview question — as an audition.
Imagine your interviewers running a movie in their heads where you are sitting
working with their team, presenting to their boss, talking to customers or
shareholders.
Second, beware
of extremes. The savvy candidate knows to take some care before
jumping in with proposed improvements, but this often leads to bland
over-caution: “I wouldn’t make any changes until I had learned a lot more about
the organisation and consulted with my colleagues.” That answer is not only
predictable, but a little too safe for most jobs.
At the other end of the
spectrum is the candidate who tells the organisation every mistake it’s making
and offers to give things a pretty big shake-up — usually enough to put the
interviewers’ backs up. Other candidates clearly promise more than they can
deliver, or reveal a naive view of what is possible.
The best answers take
a middle ground, effectively saying, “Yes, I will learn and listen, but I will
also get on with things.” It’s unwise to be deeply critical of the organisation
— the system you are trashing could be the brainchild of one of the people in
the room. Better approaches use phrasing such as, “This is the approach I would
take…” or “Here’s something I have tried elsewhere which I believe could help
you.” Try presenting changes as suggestions open to interrogation — the
beginnings of a strategy rather than the whole deal. Throw in some quick wins —
short-term results that can be obtained at minimal cost without treading on
anyone’s toes.
Finally, think about your presentation.
Long-term success will often be based on your visibility within that initial
three-month window, and your interviewer wants to know what you will look like
in the role and what impact you might make.
Too many candidates
concentrate on content — far too much of it — forgetting that a panel is really
trying to find out whether you fit the part. Address this larger question by
following a simple 3-part structure:
1.
Analysis. Say
briefly what you see and understand. The more this sounds like a “helicopter
view” the better.
2.
Make connections.
Draw on perspectives from outside the organisation, and your own experience.
3.
Suggested actions.
Clear recommendations, offered with some caution because you would of course
need more detail before implementing any of them.
Whether it’s explicit or not,
most questions are all variations on the 90 day question — do you ‘get’ the
needs underlying the role, can you fit in, and can you deliver?
(Initially published by Harvard Business Review)
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