However you choose to answer the question, put a positive spin on it. Something like, "Well, I'm under constant deadline pressure in my current position, but I feel it more as a challenge than a problem because it keeps the environment charged and I put my best work out there the first time." It sounds lame, but an interview is a sales job and you're the only salesperson in the room.
One of the things that may present a challenge is having to deal with tasks you have no experience in handling. Dealing with new people and deadlines are also among some of the pressures one may have to deal with. Proper time management and office etiquette are a great way to handle these pressures.
Experiencing is the present participle of experience.
Experiencing is the present participle of experience.
I/you/we/they experience. He/she/it experiences. The present participle is experiencing.
Just be myself
The partial pressures of each of the gasses, as present in the blood and in the alveoli.
Yes this is legal if you are already and employee of the company or person they can deny your application for interview.
Yes, but so does internal pressures. (Which wouldn't exist if gravity wasn't present.)
elvis
You should try to make up your mind as to how to present yourself first in an Interview and then ask the question How do I present myself in a broadcast as the two aren't the same. You might want to mention your Gender as the same advice doesn't always pretain to men as it would to a woman.
No, it is not. Currently is the adverb form of the adjective current (occurring now, in the present time).
The present tense allows you to refer to things that are currently happening.