Want this question answered?
When employers hire experienced employees, they not are going to have to spend a lot of time of training them. You also know that the employees have some type of understanding of what the job entails.
The best answer to this question is the truth. If you lie, you will not get the job offer or you will lose your job if they hire you first. Many employers will verify education.
They are impotant for the employer or the company to be able to know if the employee or the applicant is suitable for the part or the job. It is a means of evaluating the new employee and testing the waters if he or she is the right hire.
I think and you should know that this is my own opinion. Well to an interview, you should dress conservatively. But you can always investigate what other employers wear.
A guided interview is when u know the questions that is going to be answered and a unguided interview is when u dont know whats expected or whats going ti be asked.
Yes, you should try to answer all questions in a job interview. There are some exceptions, though, about race, gender, disability, etc. But-- most employers want to know, If I hire you, can you be at work on time, will you be reliable, are you dependable and trustworthy, will you stick around. So try to answer questions. If you really don't know how to answer, if you are really stumped, it is also okay to say "I don't know." Just don't overuse that answer.
Companies want to know the answer to this question because they want to know if you are just wanting any job. Employers do like to hire people that want a career and not just a job.
Many interviewers ask about family background, number of people in the family, their occupation, education, your education, areas of interest, hobbies, short term goals, long term goals of career, why you have applied for this position and why do you think we should hire you are some of the basic questions asked by the employers in the interview.
The employer wants to know why you are applying for the job. It is always best to be truthful with future employers.
Key competencies that would convince the company to hire you will be job specific. Know the details and skills the job requires before you apply, then sell these at your interview.
Make sure you and your fiance know each other well before going for the interview.
You should only interview for a job and agree to be hired if you can reasonably expect to work at least 1 year (or for the duration of a season if seasonal work). Employers expend a lot of time and money to interview, hire, train, and supervise new hires. Their expenditures can only be re-couped if the employee remains hired for the longest period of time. It is best to be honest during an interview about your availability. If you are being hired in June but know that every August you go on a month-long vacation, it is unwise to even interview for the job. If a female is in early pregnancy, she should tell the interviewer when she will be unable to work. If you are in school or have other future committments on your calendar, it may be best to look for part-time or seasonal work. Many employers need and want part-timers so you will have plenty of jobs to chose from.