Practice Modifying Your Planned Responses to Different Questions

Task 1: You’ve now prepared responses to a number of common interview questions. The link below includes an article with 10 questions that are mostly similar to the questions you’ve already prepared for, with a few new ones. Write out how you can adapt your already-prepared answers (check attached file) to the following questions, and how you’ll respond to the new ones.

Top 10 Competency Based Interview Questions and Sample Answers

Task 2: At the end of most interviews, you’ll have an opportunity to ask questions of the interviewer. Chapter 9 includes some important suggestions about what to ask and why .(Check attached file to get idea about chapter 9)

Submit a list of the three questions you would ask and describe the following about each one: Why you’re asking this question? What does this question tell the interviewer about you? What will the answer tell you about the job/position or the company?

1
Personal Experiences at the Workplace
Student’s Name
Institutional Affiliation
Course
Date
2
Personal Experiences at the Workplace
Handling a Difficult Customer
The situation involved a customer who wanted to defy the company’s exchange policy at
Macy’s. In the company, the exchange policy required that after purchasing the apparel, one
could return the clothes within fourteen days if unsatisfied. The customer had purchased apparel,
used it for almost three months, and decided to have it exchanged to pick another item from the
store. As the store manager, I declined to make the exchange, which was against the company’s
policy. Eventually, I convinced the customer about the company’s rules and regulations, and she
made more purchases from the store.
The Use of Skills and Knowledge to Help the Team
The situation occurred when working for Macy’s. The company had decided to host a
fashion show to showcase the summer outfits. Initially, before getting employed at Macy’s, I
worked for a fashion event company. Through these skills, I helped organize the various
elements that constituted this fashion event. The result of this contribution was that the summer
fashion event went on successfully, and there was a tremendous increase in the sales of summer
outfits.
A Time Where I Worked Hard to Achieve Good Results
It happened when Macy’s company opened a new branch in Blossom Street, Iowa, and
the management transferred me there as the store manager. While opening a new store, numerous
aspects must be taken care of, including market analysis, sales forecast, store design, employing
new workers, legal requirements, and advertising the store. As the store manager, I ensured all
these aspects were well handled. After establishing the store, it became one of Macy’s leading
stores in making good sales.
3
A Time I Made a Mistake and the Lessons Learnt
The mistake I made was during the COVID-19 pandemic. During this period, Macy’s had
moved most of its operations online. The customers would make their purchases online, and then
the store managers would organize the deliveries. The mistake happened when a customer made
their online purchases, and there was a mix-up in the goods delivered to them. After receiving
the goods, the customer was upset due to the mix-up. I communicated with the customer,
apologized for the mistake, and sent them the right apparel they ordered online. Through this
mistake, I learned that mistakes are prone to happen, and when they happen, one should know
how to correct them and make peace with the person they have wronged.
A Time Where I Had Many Challenging Projects
This was during the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. During this period, Macy’s was
transferring most of its operations online. As a store manager, I was supposed to ensure that all
the products were on the online platforms and that the customers could make the entire
purchasing process on the online store. I also had to ensure that I could oversee the employees
who were working from home and ensure that the deliveries to the warehouse and the customers
were made on time. Since the work was overwhelming, especially at the beginning of the
pandemic, I delegated the employees to the human resources department, which could oversee
their operations, which allowed me enough time to focus on the other functions.
Application of Strong Analytical Skills at Work
The assignment occurred before Macy’s opened its Blossom Street, Iowa branch. Before
then, the company had to select between three locations: Blossom Street in Iowa, Rose Harbour
in Alaska, and Cedar Cove in Texas. I was tasked with researching the ideal location to establish
the new store. I planned and organized the work and visited each of these three locations for
4
about a week, where I conducted market research. Based on the company’s products and target
audience, I decided on the information I would need. Eventually, after completing an intense
market analysis, we settled for Blossom Street, Iowa, and ever since it was established, it has
remained successful.
Competency-Based
Interviews
Master the Tough
New Interview Style
and Give Them the
Answers That Will
Win You the Job
By
Robin Kessler
Franklin Lakes, NJ
Copyright © 2006 by Robin Kessler
All rights reserved under the Pan-American and International
Copyright Conventions. This book may not be reproduced, in
whole or in part, in any form or by any means electronic or
mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any
information storage and retrieval system now known or hereafter
invented, without written permission from the publisher, The
Career Press.
COMPETENCY-BASED INTERVIEWS
EDITED BY JODI BRANDON
TYPESET BY ASTRID DERIDDER
Cover design by DesignConcept
Printed in the U.S.A. by Book-mart Press
Cartoons found on pages 72, 84, 98, 114, 144, 176,
198, and 212 by Steven Lait, 2006.
To order this title, please call toll-free 1-800-CAREER-1 (NJ and
Canada: 201-848-0310) to order using VISA or MasterCard, or
for further information on books from Career Press.
The Career Press, Inc., 3 Tice Road, PO Box 687,
Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417
www.careerpress.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
available upon request.
Dedication
This is for my mother, with love and thanks.
This page intentionally left blank
Acknowledgments
As always, a huge thank you to everyone who helped
with this book. I would, however, like to give a few people
some special recognition.
To Paula Hanson, thank you for doing the initial editing
and providing advice when I came up against problems.
Any kind of problems. And for hanging in as a good friend
for a very long time.
To Steven Lait, editorial cartoonist for the Oakland
Tribune and ANG Group, who drew the cartoons for this
book, thank you for doing great work for CompetencyBased Interviews, and being the best editorial cartoonist
on the planet and one of my favorite cousins.
To the consultants, Cara Capretta Raymond, Michael
Friedman, Dr. Kay Lillig Cotter, and Ken Abosch, thank
you for sharing your expertise, time, opinions, and personal
competencies. Having the opportunity to talk with each of
you has helped me make this book considerably stronger.
To David Heath, Dessie Nash, Blake Nolingberg, Mindy
Wertheimer, Erica Graham, Chip Smith, Kalen Phillips,
Stephen Sye, Diane Schad Dayhoff, Mary Alice Eureste,
and Bill Baumgardt, thank you for being subject matter
experts in your professional areas and answering all my
questions.
To Dr. Jon Wiener and Martha Williams, thank you for
sharing some of your favorite quotations with me.
To Ron Fry, Michael Pye, Kristen Parkes, Linda
Rienecker, Laurie Kelly-Pye, Jodi Brandon, Astrid deRidder,
and the rest of the staff at Career Press, thank you for
doing a great job of making my words look good, the book
look better, and being great to work with.
To my other friends and relatives, thank you for putting
up with my leaving early, not calling as often, and not being
as available to go out to dinner, the movies, or anything
else. Since this book is now finished, call me.
—Robin Kessler
Contents
Introduction
9
Chapter 1
Understand Competency-Based
Interview Systems
21
Chapter 2
Identify Key Competencies
33
Chapter 3
Know What Interviewers Are
Trained to Look For
49
Expect Competency-Based
Behavioral Questions
61
Prove Competencies
With Examples
73
Chapter 6
Look Like a Strong Candidate
85
Chapter 7
Consider Other Important
Interview Tips
99
Check to Make Sure You Are
Ready for the Interview
115
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Look at Case Studies for Ideas
to Make Your Interviewing
Stronger
127
Chapter 10 Understand How a Typical
Competency-Based
Interview Flows
145
Chapter 11 Learn From Other Interviewees 155
Chapter 12 Send a Thank-You Note,
Follow Up, Get the Offer,
and Negotiate
177
Chapter 13 Actively Manage Your Career
in Competency-Based
Organizations
189
Chapter 14 Use Competency-Based
Resumes to Get Your Next
Interview
199
Chapter 15 Think Long-Term and Make
Change Work for You
213
Appendix A: List of Core Competencies
219
Appendix B: Competencies for Case Studies 237
Appendix C: Examples of Illegal
Pre-employment Questions
245
Notes
247
Bibliography
249
Index
251
About the Author
255
Introduction
What can you do today to be a star at interviewing and
improve your career? How can you get that specific offer
you want from the organization you want to work for? How
can you move forward in your career?
Think strategically.
What makes Lance Armstrong keep winning the Tour
de France? It takes more than luck to win a major sports
event seven times. He’s been so successful that, as of 2005,
he’s chosen to retire.
Why do publishers choose certain book proposals and
not others? Why do certain products do especially well and
others don’t?
How did Oprah become a star, and what does she do
to make sure she stays a star? How can she be so good at
interviewing others on her show, acting, and developing
and publishing her magazine? When Oprah decides to
promote a book through her book club or by having the
author on her show, book sales increase dramatically.
Why did you—or someone you know—get into a
prestigious college? Why do certain people get selected
for the best assignments and the best jobs? What causes
other qualified candidates to be rejected?
9
10
Competency-Based Interviews
The answers to these questions are complex, but if we really
think about it, there are three basic steps we all need to take to
improve our ability to get what we want.
What It Takes to Win
1.
2.
3.
Learning what it takes to win is the first step.
Doing the things that it takes to win is the
second step.
Recognizing that what it takes to win changes—
sometimes rapidly—is the third step.
The faster we identify the changes and adjust our own approach,
the faster we will be successful. Realistically, we need to expect
these changes. New tools, new approaches, and new strategies
can cause decision-makers to make different decisions. If we adapt
to these changes earlier than others, we increase our probability of
winning.
That’s it. Lance and Oprah may have extra-strong athletic or
artistic abilities, and they are obviously smarter than average. But
both have also overcome major life challenges, namely cancer and
child abuse. Clearly, both celebrities figured out what it took to get
ahead in their fields, and they have mastered staying ahead of the
game as their competition became more savvy.
One of the key characteristics that will significantly help you
manage your own career as effectively as possible is learning how
to interview more effectively and convince the interviewer that you
are the best candidate for the job. Interviewing well is critical if you
want to be successful.
So how can we take the three steps that it takes to win and
apply them to interviewing? This book will show you how to be
more successful by:
Introduction
11
l
Teaching you how to recognize the changes in interviewing
at the most sophisticated organizations.
l
Explaining what today’s interviewers are looking for.
l
Helping you adjust your own way of interviewing to
emphasize how your competencies match the employer’s
needs.
l
Developing a plan to ensure you perform well in every
critical interview.
When systems change and grow, we need to be smarter than
our competitors and recognize those changes as early as possible,
the way Lance and Oprah have always done. If we aren’t aware,
our own careers may be affected in a negative way. We need time
to develop and adjust our strategy, because employers do periodically
change the systems they use to select employees.
If we don’t change our own approach, we will eventually
become less valuable to our employer. We all need to take
responsibility for actively managing our careers, and that includes
changing our strategy to respond to the changes introduced by
employers. As we become even more astute, we may be able to
anticipate some of these changes and prepare for them.
This book will give you a new—and better—strategy you can
use to help you interview more effectively and improve your ability
to get the job you want in the best organizations. If you use this
approach, you will increase your chances of:
l
Being selected for the most competitive positions.
l
Winning the best job at a new organization.
l
Getting a great first job or internship.
l
Being chosen for that critical promotion in your current
organization.
12
Competency-Based Interviews
l
Taking control of your career path.
l
Increasing your salary.
l
Getting more satisfying assignments and more challenging
work.
What’s Different?
Understanding the way human resources managers, line
managers, and professionals approach selecting employees has
always given candidates an advantage in the interview process. If
you know what the interviewer is looking for—and you are savvy
enough to know how to use this information—you will have an
edge in the interview.
I’ve been told that at least half of the Fortune 500 and other
major organizations in the United States, in Europe, and
internationally are now using competency-based systems to help
select and manage their human resources.1 Here are just a few
examples: American Express, Johnson & Johnson, Coca-Cola,
Toyota, Bank of America, BP, Wells Fargo, General Motors, HP,
Radio Shack, HCA, Carlson Companies, BHP, IBM, General
Electric, PDVSA, Anheuser-Busch, Girl Scouts USA, the U.S.
Federal Reserve System, and the province of British Columbia in
Canada.
Some of these organizations have worked with competencybased systems for more than 15 years, and they are becoming
increasingly sophisticated with the applications they are using. Other
companies, government agencies, and nonprofit organizations have
adopted competencies more recently, or are looking at the possibility
of using them in the near future. Competency-based applications
help organizations manage their human resources—from selecting
employees to evaluating, training, paying, and promoting them.
Competency-based selection processes and competencybased appraisals are the two most common ways companies are
Introduction
13
using competencies to help improve the caliber of their employees.
More and more companies are including a list of competencies
they need in their own Website ads and Internet advertisements on
Websites such as www.monster.com and www.careerbuilder.com.
Since January 2003, when I saw the need for the book CompetencyBased Resumes, the number of jobsite advertisements that
specifically list the competencies the employer is looking for
continues to significantly increase every time I check.
On November 23, 2005, Monster.com ran advertisements
asking for competencies from organizations of all sizes.
Companies with competency-based job advertisements
that day included:
l
l
l
l
l
l
l
Kaiser Permanente
Ernst & Young
Marsh & McLennan
International Paper
Hitachi Consulting
Heidrick & Struggles
Royal Caribbean Cruises
l
l
l
l
l
l
Deloitte
Shell Oil
Ingersoll Rand
St. Paul Travelers
MetLife
Honeywell
That same day, CareerBuilder.com ran an advertisement
for a Competency Modeling Manager for Wal-Mart.
Rockwell Automation advertised for an Engineering
Competency Leader, and Excellus BlueCross BlueShield in
Rochester, New York, was looking for a Manager, Project
Manager Competency Center. McGraw-Hill advertised for
a Director, Talent Management who would “conduct a
needs analysis to create an executive competency model
and ‘future’ leader profile.” Other organizations running
ads on CareerBuilder.com specifically mentioned
competencies on November 23, 2005, included:
l
l
l
l Cingular Wireless
Sears
Administrative Office of the United States Courts
PriceWaterhouseCoopers
14
Competency-Based Interviews
Employees at the best competency-based employers have the
ability to look up information about critical competencies on their
employer’s Website or in employee handbooks or manuals. The
competencies for their current positions are almost always covered
as part of their appraisal.
What Are Competencies?
Paul Green, in his book Building Robust Competencies (JosseyBass, 1999), defines an individual competency as “a written
description of measurable work habits and personal skills used to
achieve a work objective.” Some organizations use a slightly
different definition for competencies: underlying characteristics,
behavior, knowledge, and skills required to differentiate performance.
They define what superior performers do more often, in more
situations, and with better results.
Put simply, competencies are the key characteristics that the
most successful performers have that help them be so successful.
Organizations benefit from working with competencies because it
gives them a better, more sophisticated way to manage, measure,
and improve the quality of their employees.
The use of competencies is continuing to grow. According to
Signe Spencer, a senior consultant with the Hay Group in Boston
and the coauthor of Competence at Work (John Wiley & Sons,
1993), “In the last ten years, we have seen an explosion of interest
in competency work at all levels worldwide.”
The relevant competencies that have been identified for all
positions organization-wide are called core competencies. But
competencies used in interviewing (and other applications) may be
identified at the department or functional level, or even at the
individual level. It takes different competencies to be successful as
an accountant than to be successful as a sales professional. In
Chapter 2, I will spend more time explaining competencies and
giving you the information you need to successfully identify the
relevant competencies for the position you want, before the interview.
Introduction
15
Many organizations choose not to use the term competencies.
They call the key characteristics that it takes to be successful
by other terms: success factors, attributes, values, dimensions, and
so on. There are subtle differences in what each of these terms
mean, and decision-makers have good reasons for choosing them.
For candidates, though, it simply makes sense to look at all of these
categories for information describing what the employer is really
looking for—those key characteristics or competencies.
Competencies are not just a trend, and the competency-based
systems designed by consultants and corporations can be complex.
This book will help you understand competency-based selection
systems and give you the tools you need, as a candidate, to navigate
your way through them.
What Are Competency-Based Interviews?
Today, more interviewers at the best employers are using
behavioral interviewing techniques to help determine how competent
candidates are in the key areas most critical for success. Behavioral
interviewing has been used for more than 20 years in most
sophisticated organizations, but many of these organizations have
only been using behavioral interview questions targeting relevant
competencies in the last five or 10 years. Other organizations began
working with competency-based interviewing even before that
timeframe.
Interviewers at many of the best organizations are being trained
to use competency-based systems and evaluate candidates in a
much more complex way than in the past. They are taught to:
l
Evaluate the candidate’s fit for the position based on their
perceived competency level.
l
Assess the candidate’s nonverbal and verbal communication
in a more sophisticated way.
Organizations may use different names, including targeted
selection interviewing and evidence-based interviewing, to describe
16
Competency-Based Interviews
what is essentially competency-based interviewing. Some
competency-based interviewing is based on the approach of asking
primary questions targeting each key competency. Another
approach asks interviewers to identify evidence of competencies
by listening closely to the answers to questions, follow-up questions
(also called probes), and more follow-up questions. In Chapter 1,
we’ll be looking at these approaches in more detail.
Most career counselors and candidates haven’t changed their
approach to interviewing, resumes, and other job search techniques
to consider the competencies more of the best employers are now
looking for. Instead, they are marketing candidate strengths and
accomplishments the same way they always have. It is time to
accept that the job market has changed and become more
sophisticated. It simply makes sense to change your own approach.
Competencies are the way the majority of the most respected
organizations measure whether to interview and hire candidates.
For candidates or employees trying to turn their interview into a job
offer, it’s time to change and be more strategic. It’s time to understand
how to use your own competencies to convince employers you are
the best candidate for them—because you can prove to them you
have the critical competencies they need.
As the saying goes, you don’t want to be
fighting today’s war using equipment, strategy,
and tactics from the last century.
It’s up to you to learn how to interview the current, competencybased way. To do this, you need to:
1.
Understand competency-based interview systems.
2.
Identify the key competencies for the position.
Introduction
17
3.
Know what interviewers are trained to look for.
4.
Expect competency-based behavioral questions.
5.
Prove your competencies with examples.
6.
Look like a strong candidate.
7.
8.
9.
11.
Consider other important interview tips.
Check to make sure you are ready for the interview.
Look at case studies for ideas to make your interviewing
stronger.
Understand how a typical competency-based interview
flows.
Learn from other interviewees.
12.
Send a thank-you note, follow up, get the offer, and negotiate.
10.
Once you have started your new position, you may also need to
learn to conduct competency-based interviews. And you will be
more successful in your new position if you take the time to follow
the suggestions we give in Chapter 13 on managing your career in
a competency-based organization and in the final chapter on how
to think long-term and make change work for you.
By following the suggestions in the book, you will perform better
in any interview and increase the probability of an offer. Learning
to master the competency-based interview will give you skills that
will help you interact better with other professionals in meetings,
one-on-one interactions, and other types of interviews.
Organizations also benefit from their candidates learning how
to be interviewed more effectively. If more people give good,
thoughtful answers that illustrate their experience with competencies,
managers will have better, more complete information to use when
they make their decision about which candidate is the most competent
for the job.
Many strong, highly competent candidates may benefit from
interview coaching or training to help them think about their best
accomplishments in each competency area before the interview.
18
Competency-Based Interviews
Most managers know that the best employees aren’t always the
best interviewees.
Are you ready to start sharpening your interviewing skills so
the interviewer will realize you are the most competent candidate?
Let’s start now.
At the end of every chapter, a question and answer summary is
included for your review. These summaries will give you the
opportunity to reread the most important points and ensure you
understand them. Take the time you need to grasp the concepts
and ideas before moving on to the next chapter.
Key Points for the Introduction
“An individual competency is a written description of
measurable work habits and personal skills used to
achieve a work objective.”
–Paul Green
Key Questions
Answers
What does it take to win in
today’s organizations?
1. Learning what it takes to win.
2. Doing the things that it takes
to win.
3. Recognizing that what it takes
to win changes—sometimes
rapidly.
What are competencies?
The key characteristics that the most
successful employees have that help
them be so successful.
What are core competencies?
Core competencies are skills used
organization-wide to help achieve
organization objectives or goals.
Introduction
Key Questions
Answers
How can you increase your
ability to get the position you
want?
Competency-based organizations
rely on a different system for looking at what it takes to be successful in jobs, particularly when
selecting, promoting, and training
their employees. Understanding
how competency-based systems
work is vital to success in today’s
organizations.
19
Surprise! The most important thing
to remember is that these systems
always change. You need to adjust
your own approach to match the
employer’s changes.
In addition to the core
competencies, what are the
other levels of competencies?
l
Department or functional
l
Individual
What are the two most
common competency-based
applications?
l
Competency-based appraisals
Competency-based screening and
interviewing to select candidates.
What are behavioral interview
questions?
Behavioral interviewing is based on
the theory that past behavior is the
best predictor of future behavior. In
other words, past success predicts
future success.
l
20
Competency-Based Interviews
Key Questions
Answers
What can you do to excel in
interviews for very competitive positions?
To master the tough interview style,
your answers to interview questions
must be focused (focused on the
competencies desired), powerful
(use powerful words to describe
your competency), and concise
(make a point, make it clear, and use
precise wording).
How can you keep promoting
your competencies?
It is important to keep marketing
your competencies even after
getting the position. Other strategic
marketing tools are: competencybased resumes, cover letters,
networking, and interview skills.
Remember to focus on the
competencies required by your
prospective employer—or your
current employer, if you want to
be considered for promotion or
other opportunities.
How are companies using competencies to strengthen their
workforce?
They are using competencies to:
l Advertise for candidates
l Screen candidate resumes
l Interview using behavioral
techniques
l Select employees
l Evaluate employees
l Train employees
l Promote employees
l Reward employees
l Determine assignments
Chapter 1
Understand
Competency-Based
Interview Systems
When we were students, most of us realized the
importance of understanding what the teacher or professor
was looking for—which assignments were required and
which were optional. And if we are playing sports, we need
to understand the strengths, vulnerabilities, and game plan of
our opponent, even if we are the #1 seed in the tournament.
When we give a business presentation, we need to identify
our goals and understand the needs and interests of the
audience before we start developing the speech.
Figuring out what other people are looking for is critical
to being successful in most things throughout life. Assuming
we have the basics, we simply have to provide the evidence
and, in an interview, convince them that we fit.
Before we start preparing for an interview, it is important
to understand the method of interviewing that will be used
by the interviewer. Some organizations are still traditional in
their approaches to interviewing. Many managers still ask
questions that help them make decisions about candidates
based simply on whether or not they like them. In addition,
they may focus on whether the candidate meets their basic
requirement on credentials, such as grades and class
standing. Most law firms and many of the more traditional
companies are still interviewing candidates this way.
21
22
Competency-Based Interviews
Some managers use hypothetical questions based on giving the
candidate a scenario and asking what he or she would do. People
who like this interview style believe it gives them a chance to see
how candidates think on their feet, but many others believe that it is
not as effective as finding out how individuals have performed in
the past.
Most of the managers at organizations with strong, positive
reputations have realized that the old-style interviews don’t seem
to be that effective in helping them choose employees. They’ve
changed to the competency-based interview style.
What’s Changed?
Recognizing how the labor market has changed—and learning
how to make those changes work for you—can make the difference
between success and failure.
The most sophisticated employers are primarily using
competency-based interview systems to select candidates. If you
haven’t interviewed recently or if you come from a different culture,
you probably know you need some help to do well in the interview.
Some candidates think they know what to expect in the interview,
and it may take a few bad experiences before they decide their old
approach is not working as well as it used to.
But even if you are articulate, think well on your feet, have the
best credentials, and are confident you are a great candidate,
preparing for the interview is important. Remember that how well
you perform on the interview gives the interviewers an idea of the
quality of work they can expect from you in the future.
Whether you are writing a resume, preparing for an interview,
or getting ready for a performance evaluation, becoming more aware
of what competencies the employer is looking for is the first step to
help make you more successful. The next step? Learn what you
need to know to prove to the employer that you are strong in these
critical competency areas.
Understand Competency-Based Interview Systems
23
How Does a Competency-Based Interview Work?
Very simply, a competency-based interview uses behavioral
questions to help the interviewer assess the candidate based on
critical competencies that have been identified by the employer.
The interview is highly structured, with key questions provided for
the interviewers to help them determine how strong candidates are
in specific competency areas.
Key Definition
Competency-based interviews are structured and use
behavioral questions to help the interviewer assess
candidates based on critical competencies identified for
the position.
Whether you are a candidate who wants to work for an
organization using competency-based systems or an employee
currently working in a competency-based company, it is important
to recognize that it may be time to change your own approach to
the process. Retool and retrain. Adjust the sails. Add a warm-up
period before running. Accept the fact: In today’s most sophisticated
organizations, almost all are using competency-based interviews.
The most commonly used competency-based interviewing style
is based upon asking candidates primary questions targeted to the
critical competencies for the position. Almost every major consulting
firm working to help organizations identify competencies, including
Lominger, Personnel Decisions, Inc., Hay Group, and Hewitt
Associates, encourages its clients to use structured, competencybased interviewing processes that they have developed.
One well-known example of this approach is Targeted Selection
Interviewing, which was developed by the consulting firm
Development Dimensions Inc. On its Website, the firm markets
Targeted Selection by saying it uses behavioral interviewing and
helps organizations:
24
Competency-Based Interviews
l
Identify the competencies needed for all key positions.
l
Build interviewing skills and confidence for more accurate
selection decisions.
l
Increase the efficiency and effectiveness of the employee
selection process.
Another interviewing approach related to competency-based
interviews starts with the manager asking a question about a major
accomplishment and then asking follow-up questions to probe for
additional information about competencies, strengths, and
weaknesses. An example of this approach is Lou Adler’s The One
Question Interview.
Both styles are covered in more detail later in this chapter.
Although the style may be a little different, managers are taught
to ask candidates behavioral questions, based on the theory that
past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior. In other words,
past success is the best predictor of future success. The managers
are then asked to assess how competent the candidate is in several
critical areas.
Key Definition
Behavioral questions are based on the theory that
past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior.
To gain the understanding we really need to perform well in a
competency-based interview, we need to first understand the
answers to this question: What are the two basic interview styles
that consider competencies?
Understand Competency-Based Interview Systems
25
Interview Style #1:
Competency-Based Interviews (Most Typical
Approach) Example: Johnson & Johnson
Johnson & Johnson, ranked #1 on the 2005 Corporate Reputation
Survey 1, has worked with competency-based interviewing for more
than 10 years. They have developed interview guides for their senior
leaders (executives), people and individual leaders (professionals
and managers), and for campus interviewing.
Susan Millard, Vice President for Strategic Talent Management
at Johnson & Johnson, said, “Predicting future success on the job
and the competencies that matter the most to performance, and
operating with the highest ethical standards are critical to assure
we have the talent needed to power our growth and culture at
J&J.” She also talked about how successful their 2005 recruiting
event with 700 MBAs and managers was because they used their
updated competency-based Global Leadership Profile Interview
Guides and were able to identify some particularly strong candidates.
Their interview guides review how the interviewer should
prepare before the interview, suggest ways to open the interview,
encourage the interviewer to review the candidate’s background
and ask questions, and provide several behavioral questions for each
critical competency for the position that interviewers can choose
from during the interview. The interviewer is asked to rate the
candidate on the competency and his or her communication skills.
Though every example in J&J’s guide is strong, I chose to show
you the “Results and Performance Driven” example, because it
represents one of the most frequently used competencies—by every
organization. Other organizations often use synonyms to describe
the same competency. This one competency can be called:
l
Achieves Results
l
Drive for Results
l
Performance Bias
l
Achieves Goals
Flawless execution—Holds self, direct reports, and others
accountable for seamless and compliant execution of tasks and
projects.
Customer centric thinking—Makes the customer the center for
all decisions to build value; imposes customer focus on others and
challenges them to exceed customer expectations.
Planned Behavioral Questions
1. Describe an instance when you were particularly effective at achieving end results. What steps did you take
to achieve these results?
2. Think of an example when you consistently exceeded internal or external customer expectations. How did
you do this? What approach did you use?
3. Provide an example of a project or team you managed in which there were many obstacles to overcome. What
did you do to address those obstacles?
4. Tell me about an example of what you have done to obtain information to better understand a customer.
What did you do? How did this information improve your customer service?
5. It is not always easy to achieve required work goals or objectives. Describe a stretch goal or objective that
you were able to achieve. Why was this a stretch goal? What was the result?
Competency-Based Interviews
Accepts stretch goals—Eagerly embraces stretch goals; measures
achievements through metrics.
26
Goal oriented; remains persistent
when obstacles are encountered;
encourages others to be
accountable for their actions;
relentlessly focused and
committed to customer service;
thinks creatively.
Key Examples
(For explanations of the ratings for the following chart, see Chapter 3.)
Results and Performance Driven
Situation/Task
Action
Result
Understand Competency-Based Interview Systems
Communication ___________________________________
Results and Performance
Driven Rating
27
Reprinted with permission of Johnson & Johnson Strategic Talent Management
28
Competency-Based Interviews
Interview Style #2:
The 1-Question Interview
Another current approach to interviewing starts with one
question and asks the candidate a series of follow-up questions to
probe for additional information. This interview technique provides
an interesting and different way to assess a candidate by listening
for evidence of the candidate’s competency (and critical
competencies) in his answers to the questions.
The basic technique is shown in this excerpt from an article
by consultant Lou Adler, whose firm, Adler Concepts, teaches
interviewing skills classes to some major clients. He encourages
the interviewer to first ask the candidate to think about his or her
most significant accomplishment, and then to tell the interviewer
about it. Then he teaches the interviewers to probe and get the
following information about the accomplishment from the candidate
in 15 to 20 minutes:
l
A complete description of the accomplishment.
l
The company you worked for and what it did.
l
The actual results achieved: numbers, facts, changes made,
details, amounts.
l
When it took place.
l
How long it took.
l
The importance of this accomplishment to the company.
l
Your title and role.
l
Why you were chosen.
l
The three to four biggest challenges you faced and how
you dealt with them.
Understand Competency-Based Interview Systems
29
l
A few examples of leadership and initiative.
l
Some of the major decisions made.
l
The environment and resources available.
l
How you made more resources available.
l
The technical skills needed to accomplish the objective.
l
The technical skills learned and how long it took to learn
them.
l
The actual role you played.
l
The team involved and all of the reporting relationships.
l
Some of the biggest mistakes you made.
l
How you changed and grew as a person.
l
What you would do differently if you could do it again.
l
Aspects of the project you truly enjoyed.
l
Aspects you didn’t especially care about.
l
The budget available and your role in preparing it and
managing it.
l
How you did on the project vs. the plan.
l
How you developed the plan.
l
How you motivated and influenced others, with specific
examples to prove your claims.
l
How you dealt with conflict with specific examples.
l
Anything else you felt was important to the success of the
project.
30
Competency-Based Interviews
Adler encourages interviewers to conduct this type of interview
because he believes “the insight gained from this type of question
would be remarkable. Just about everything you need to know about
a person’s competency can be extracted from this type of question.2”
Comparing the 2 Types of Interviews
That Consider Competencies
From your perspective, as an interviewee, what’s the difference
between the two types of interviews we’ve been talking about in
this chapter?
Each type of interview gives the interviewers good, substantive
information about candidates. Both ask the interviewers to listen to
the candidate’s answers and determine how strong they are in critical
competency areas important to be successful in the position.
The most common type of competency-based interview looks
at several of the most critical competencies and asks the candidate
to answer behavioral questions targeting the competencies. The
second type goes in depth on one or two accomplishments and asks
the candidate to look at these accomplishments from different
perspectives—including competencies.
So why does this matter? It is not as if the interviewer gives
you a choice. And basically, you don’t need to spend time worrying
about the type of interview the interviewer is going to use.
But if you do recognize the type of interview, it may help you
think ahead and give the interviewer slightly better answers.
By following the advice in this book, you’ll be prepared for both
types of interviews we’ve mentioned—and any variation of a
competency-based interview that someone develops in the future.
You need to start thinking about how to prepare for these types of
interviews. This book, though, is going to emphasize helping you to
prepare for the first type, because it is so much more common.
When you develop accomplishments proving you are strong in
each relevant competency, you can expect follow-up questions to
Understand Competency-Based Interview Systems
31
probe how much you know or simply to clarify something that is
unclear to the interviewer. Start becoming aware of how each
accomplishment can provide evidence in more than one competency
area. As you think about each accomplishment, consider the followup questions you could be asked to get information about your
competence in several key areas. If you do that, you will be ready
for either type of interview.
Be smart, be savvy, and figure out what you can expect.
Key Points for Chapter 1
Competency-based interviews are currently
being used by many of the most sophisticated
organizations throughout the world.
Key Questions
Answers
Is every organization using
competency-based interviewing
methods?
Most of the more sophisticated
organizations worldwide are using
competency-based interviewing.
But some of the more traditional
companies and law firms are still
interviewing and making important
decisions based upon the candidate’s
credentials and if the interviewer
likes the candidate.
How can you tell that you are
being given a competency-based
interview?
Competency-based interviews are
highly structured and use behavioral
questions to help the interviewer get
good answers from the candidate.
These answers help interviewers
assess candidates more effectively
based on the critical competencies
identified for the position.
32
Competency-Based Interviews
Key Questions
Answers
What is behavioral interviewing?
Interviewing based on the theory
that past behavior is the best
predictor of future behavior.
How are competency-based
interviews highly structured?
Typically, most organizations have
identified three to five primary
questions targeting each critical
competency area that interviewers
may use to get the information from
the candidate needed to assess their
level of competence.
What is the difference between
the two styles of interviewing
mentioned in this chapter?
The first style is the most widely
used type of competency-based
interview. Interviewers will ask
candidates behavioral questions
targeting each competency area
identified as being important to being
successful in the position. Candidates
have the opportunity to talk about a
number of accomplishments. The
second style asks the candidate to
look at an accomplishment and then
probe for additional information—
including looking at accomplishments
from the perspective of different
competencies.
Chapter 2
Identify Key
Competencies
I not only use all the brains that I have,
but all that I can borrow.
—Woodrow Wilson
Like former U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, many of
us believe in trying to be as smart as we can before the
actual interview. Taking the time to learn what the
organization is looking for before the interview is critical if
you plan to convince the interviewer that you are the best
candidate for the job. If you need to borrow the information
from other people or by doing online research, take the hint
from Nike’s advertisement: Just do it. Nike, by the way, is
another company that works with competencies.
Countries sharing the same language can have different
priorities for competencies, and within each country you
can expect to have organizations with different needs—
and different competencies. Organizations develop their
own lists of competencies and may work closely with
consultants to benefit from their expertise in competencies
and competency modeling.
More conservative companies would probably
emphasize different competencies than more progressive
organizations, such as Ben and Jerry’s or Starbucks. Think
of the difference between United Airlines and Southwest,
33
34
Competency-Based Interviews
for example. Or IBM and Dell. In every case, the competencies need
to be consistent with the corporate culture the senior managers are
trying to create.
What is the best way to figure out what the hiring manager is
going to be looking for in the interview? Competencies are a great
place to start.
Some organizations have identified competencies for their
positions, and they are listed as part of their online advertisements.
The key competencies (or similar words such as success factors,
dimensions, or values) may also be part of a job description that a
recruiter can provide. Other organizations may not have directly
listed their competencies for the position, but in reality, they are all
looking for competent people for their positions—whether or not
they have formally identified competencies.
For example, Coca-Cola listed an opportunity on
Monster.com in December 2005 for a Human Resources
Director in Atlanta, Georgia. In the advertisement, “General Competencies” were listed as:
Building Value-Based Relationships: Generating alliances
internally and externally by continuously identifying and
acting on those things that will create success for the Company and its customers, bottlers, suppliers, communities, and governments.
Contributing to Team Success: Actively participating as a
committed member of a team and working with other team
members to help complete goals and deliverables.
Customer Focus: Making customers (external and internal) and their needs a primary focus of one’s actions; developing and sustaining productive customer
relationships; creating and executing plans and solutions
in collaboration with the customer.
Identify Key Competencies
35
Providing Feedback: Objectively observing, analyzing, and
sharing your perception of other people’s performance to
reinforce or redirect behavior to improve performance and
business results. Providing feedback that is timely, specific,
behavioral, balanced, and constructive.
Work Standards: Setting high standards of performance
for self; assuming responsibility and accountability for
successfully completing assignments or tasks; selfimposing standards of excellence rather than having
standards imposed.
Consulting: Providing timely, specific information,
guidance, and recommendations to help groups, managers,
and others make informed committed decisions that will
lead to sustainable impact.
Establishing Collaborative Working Relationships:
Developing and using collaborative relationships for the
purpose of accomplishing work objectives; developing
relationships with other individuals by listening, sharing
ideas, and appreciating others’ efforts.
When the competencies are not directly identified, you need to
do several things to begin to identify the competencies for the position
on your own—before the interview. The four major steps to identify
the competencies are:
1. Think about the obvious competencies for the position.
2. Look at advertisements and postings from competitors.
3. Compile a list of competencies from other sources, including
employment Websites, advertisements in newspapers,
magazines and journals, professional associations, and the
organization’s Website.
36
Competency-Based Interviews
4. Select 10 to 15 competencies that would be the most critical
for the position you are interested in from Appendix A.
If you already work for an organization and need to interview
for a promotion or a new position, you may be able to find the
relevant list of competencies for the position:
l
On the company Website.
l
On performance appraisals for employees currently in the
position.
l
In employee handbooks or other company manuals.
l
By asking a colleague or friend working in the relevant
department in the organization.
One of the main ways you can show how strong a candidate
you are is to prepare—to do your homework. Take the initiative to
be resourceful and make every effort to find this list. Even if the
organization hasn’t defined this list, you can make a smart and
educated guess about the most critical competencies.
When the competencies aren’t directly
identified, look further.
Step 1: Think About the Obvious Competencies
for the Position
In sales, it is critical to focus on results. It doesn’t matter how
much the managers like you if you don’t close the sale.
Identify Key Competencies
37
When you don’t see the word competencies as a heading in an
online job posting or advertisement, read further. You may see
phrases and words that look like core, departmental, and individual
competencies under headings such as “Required Qualifications,”
“Job Requirements,” or “Required Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities.”
Step 2: Look at Jobs Posted on the Websites of
Organizations That Directly Compete With the
Employer
Also check to see if any of the competitors have the equivalent
position posted on Monster, CareerBuilder, or one of the other job
sites on the Internet.
Then, try to decide if the same competencies fit the position
you are interested in, or if they need to be reworked for any other
reason. (In other words, consider the culture of the organization.)
For example, it would be reasonable to assume that the corporate
culture at Celestial Seasonings differs from the culture at Lipton
Tea enough to cause the competencies that it takes to be successful
to also be different—even for the equivalent position.
Step 3: Start to Compile a Complete, Thorough
List of Competencies for Your Position
There are several ways to develop a broader list of competencies
for a particular position. For example, if you are interested in being
considered for an IT project manager’s position at a company that
has not listed competencies in its advertisement, go to:
l
An employment Website, such as Monster.com or
Dice.com, and type in “competencies IT project manager.”
Look through several of the ads to see if the competencies
identified for these positions match what you know about
the position at the particular organization you want to work
for. (Remember that you do not have to limit this search to
your geographic area!)
38
Integrity and Credo-based Actions—lives Credo values; builds trust; tells the truth; initiates
transparency into problems; demonstrates genuine caring for people
n
Strategic Thinking—driven to envision a better future; takes any role or job and makes it better;
has relentless dissatisfaction with status quo; motivated to leave things better than they were;
a change agent
n
Big Picture Orientation with Attention to Detail—able to cooperate in two “worlds”
simultaneously e.g., growth and cost control, enterprise and operating company success; sees
the why as well as the what; can zoom in or out as needed
n
Organization and Talent Development—motivates and empowers others to achieve a desired
action; enjoys developing a diverse group of people; champions diversity; instills confidence;
attracts good people; demonstrates a track record of people development; brings out the best
in others; net exporter of successful talent; invests time to be personally “connected” with the
organization
Competency-Based Interviews
n
Intellectual Curiosity—sees the possibilities; willing to experiment; cultivates new ideas;
comfortable with ambiguity and uncertainty
n
Collaboration and Teaming—puts interest of enterprise about own; works well across functions
and groups; builds teams effectively; inspires fellowship; instills a global mindset; champions
best practices
n
Sense of Urgency—proactively senses and responds to problems and opportunities; works to
reduce “cycle” time; takes action when needed
n
Prudent Risk-taking—inner confidence to take risks and learn from experience; courage to grab
opportunities or shed non-viable businesses; willing to make tough calls
n
Self-awareness and Adaptability—resilient; has personal modesty and humility; willing to learn
from others; patient, optimistic, flexible, and adaptable
n
Results and Performance Driven—assumes personal ownership and accountability for business
results and solutions; consistently delivers results that meet or exceed expectations; makes the
customer central to all thinking; keeps the focus on driving customer value
Identify Key Competencies
n
v2. 02/08/06
© Johnson & Johnson Services, Inc.
39
Reprinted with the permission of Johnson & Johnson Strategic Talent Management
40
Competency-Based Interviews
l
The Websites for the companies competing with the
organization that has the position you want. Go to the
“Careers” section of their Websites, and look at
competencies listed in each of their IT project manager
positions.
l
Employment advertisements for similar positions in
newspapers and association publications to see if they have
listed competencies.
l
Your professional association Website. (For project
management, you would want to go to www.pmi.org if you
live in the United States, to www.apm.org.uk in Great
Britain, or to an equivalent site for your own country. For
human resources, go to www.shrm.org.) Look at job
opportunities listed to see if the organization has identified
competencies for the position. Also, check out the research
capabilities of the association. Information about key
professional competencies may be available online or by
calling a research professional on the organization’s staff.
l
The Website of the organization itself. See if you can find
information about the corporate culture to help you identify
which competencies seem to be valued. One area that can
give you insight into the culture is if they have information
about the organization mission, vision, or values posted online
or available in other organization publications. Read annual
reports—particularly focusing on letters from the chairman
and CEO. See if you can determine what the organization
values or where the organization is having problems (or
feeling pain). Learn more about the organization from other
sources. Look for clues indicating the competencies the
organization needs now and will need in the future to be
successful.
Identify Key Competencies
41
Key Point
Notice that the approach used in this book is different
from the traditional approaches to getting ready for an
interview. The competency-based interview approach, like
the competency-based resume approach, always looks at
the employer’s needs first. Then you are encouraged to
think about how you fit what the employer is looking for—
the critical competencies the employer needs—to be
successful now and in the future.
Analyze online or traditional advertisements and job postings,
and focus on words that might be on an organization’s list of
competencies organization-wide or for a particular position.
Remember that most of the competencies can be stated several
ways—most words have synonyms.
Take the time to identify the most relevant competencies for
the specific position by starting with core, department or functional,
and individual competencies that have been identified for your
professional area. Most organizations typically identify between eight
and 12 of the most critical competencies for most positions to make
it easier for managers and employees to track and evaluate the
information.
One way to help yourself think about this is
to simply ask the question, “What competencies
would I look for if I was the hiring manager?”
Also spend a few minutes thinking about the level of expertise
in each competency needed to be successful in the position, and
what kind of experience you can mention to prove you have that
competency at the right level. Many of the more sophisticated
organizations evaluate your level when they are listening to your
42
Competency-Based Interviews
answers to interview questions and watching your nonverbal
communication.
According to Signe Spencer from the Hay Group, the
10 most standard competencies being used by
organizations are:
1.
Achievement/Results Orientation
2.
Initiative
3.
Impact and Influence
4.
Customer Service Orientation
5.
Interpersonal Understanding
6.
Organizational Awareness
7.
Analytical Thinking
8.
Conceptual Thinking
9.
Information Seeking
10.
Integrity
These competencies are not listed by rank order. They
are simply the 10 most common.
Adapted from Competency-Based Resumes, page 28
When an organization’s needs change, the competencies needed
may also change. Consider how radically different the Federal
Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) needs were one week
before, and one week after, Hurricane Katrina hit Louisiana and
the Mississippi Gulf Coast in late August 2005. Dealing with a major
crisis on a larger scale than we are used to can cause what it takes
to be successful to change. Most of us watching the response
saw that government agencies at the federal, state, and local levels
Identify Key Competencies
43
did not respond well. They were not successful in how they handled
the crisis.
In other examples, a new CEO may decide to change the
strategy of the company—from being the lowest-cost producer to
the highest-quality producer. The technical and business
competencies needed by the company may need to change to make
the new strategy successful.
A consulting firm or a law firm may get a major new client that
insists on better customer service than the firm is used to providing.
Suddenly, the entire firm must learn the latest customer service
information, and evidence of strong customer service may help
certain employees have a faster track to partnership.
Even considering these reasons for an organization to review
its list of competencies and consider prioritizing them differently, it
is still reasonable to expect that the majority of the 10 standard
competencies would be listed as competencies for most organizations.
When we look at each competency, though, it is important to
remember that different levels of knowledge, skills, and abilities are
needed to be successful depending on the level of the position in the
organization. For example, we would expect a senior vice president
of human resources at a major company to be much stronger in
organizational awareness (political savvy) than a recent college
graduate just starting to work in human resources.
Organizations typically identify three to five competency levels
and can use different terms to describe them. At Penn State
University, for example, the levels are baseline, intermediate,
proficient, advanced, and mastery.1 Many senior-level managers in
an organization may be rated the equivalent of the advanced level
on some competencies, intermediate or proficient in others, and
receive the mastery rating in only one area, if at all.
Some organizations choose to recognize the differences expected
based on level within the organization by weighting the competencies
one way for a junior level professional and another way for managers
in the same functional area. The example in the box shows you the
way one competency—planning and organizing—can be explained
differently for a supervisor, middle manager, and senior manager.
44
Competency-Based Interviews
Competency Levels: Planning and Organizing
Competency definition: The ability to visualize a sequence
of actions needed to achieve a goal and to estimate the
resources required. A preference for acting in a structured,
thorough manner.
Individual Contributors to Supervisors
l
Manage own time and personal activities.
l
Break complex activities into manageable tasks.
l
Identify possible obstacles to planned achievement.
Middle Managers
l
Produce contingency plans for possible future
occurrences.
l
Estimate in advance the resources and time scales
needed to meet objectives.
l
Coordinate team activities to make the best use
of individual skills and specialties.
Senior Managers
l
Identify longer-term operational implications of
business plans.
l
Effectively plan utilization of all resources.2
Identify Key Competencies
45
Because organizations may identify different competencies,
and functions and departments within organizations may have
different needs, a more complete list of competencies is included
in Appendix A.
Step 4: Select the Most Critical
Competencies for the Position
Read through the competencies included in Appendix A very
carefully. Mark the competencies that are the most significant for
the position you are interested in. Then go back and edit the list to
choose the competencies that you think the hiring manager would
select. Identify the 10 to 20 most important.
At this point, you’ve selected the competencies that would be
the most critical for the position. Decide if there are some functional/
departmental or individual position competencies that you think the
hiring manager might put on the list. For example, if you are
interested in a sales professional role, is there a possibility that in
addition to achieving results, territory management might be critical
for success? Do you think the engineering manager hiring a chemical
engineer for a plant might be interested in your knowledge of
statistical process control?
Because most organizations identify between eight and 12
competencies for each position, my suggestion is to identify 10 to
15 competencies. This will improve the chance that your list includes
the competencies the organization selected. Look through the list
and think about how important the competency is toward being
successful in the position. Because many organizations weight the
competencies based upon importance, it is worth spending some
time to consider which competencies deserve the most emphasis.
While recognizing that organizations may define different levels
of expertise for each competency, I believe that the best way to
write a competency-based resume or to prepare for a competencybased interview is to:
46
Competency-Based Interviews
l
Identify the most critical competencies for the position.
l
Think about how to explain your accomplishments to prove
that you have a high level of experience in the key
competency areas.
So at this point, you’ve put together a good list of competencies
for the particular position you want. Keep trying to improve the
list—through research or by asking your networking contacts.
Great work! You’ve completed the first major part of getting
ready for a competency-based interview. Now we are ready to
begin working on the next step to help you succeed in a competencybased interview.
Key Points for Chapter 2
“The competency-based approach always looks
at the employer’s needs first.”
Key Questions
Answers
What are the first steps towards
identifying the right competencies
to help you prepare for a
competency-based interview?
Think first about the obvious
competencies for the position.
What other resources can
help employees identify
competencies for interviews
within their organization?
The organization’s Website.
Then look at the advertisement,
posting, or job description from the
organization. More organizations
than ever before are being direct
and listing the competencies they
need—especially in their online ads.
Performance appraisals for the
position.
Employee handbooks and other
internal organization manuals.
Colleagues working in the relevent
department or in the position itself.
Identify Key Competencies
47
Key Questions
Answers
If the organization didn’t provide
a list of the competencies they
are looking for:
l
Think about what competencies
would be obvious for the
position.
l
Look at advertisements and
postings from competitors for
equivalent positions to see if
they have directly listed the
competencies they’ve identified
for the positions. Then try to
determine if the same competencies work for the position
you are interested in.
l
Visit employment Websites
such as Monster.com or
CareerBuilder.com and look at
equivalent jobs for competency
lists.
l
Look at the Websites for companies that are competitors to the
organization that has the position you want.
l
Read through your professional
association Website thoroughly.
l
Find employment advertisements
in newspapers, association
publications, and other sources to
see if you can glean what are
typical competencies for the
professional area.
l
Go to the Website from the
organization you are interested
in and read through their
publications to find information
giving you clues about their
culture and values.
How do you get started compiling your own list of key competencies? Where do you find some
clues as to what these competencies could be?
48
Competency-Based Interviews
Key Questions
Answers
What are some of the most
typical competencies used by
organizations?
Here’s a list of the most standard
competencies used by organizations:
1. Achievement/Results
Orientation
2. Initiative
3. Impact and Influence
4. Customer Service Orientation
5. Interpersonal Understanding
6. Organizational Awareness
7. Analytical Thinking
8. Conceptual Thinking
9. Informational Seeking
10. Integrity
Remember these are the most standard and are by no means the only
competencies that may be desired
by your target organization.
Each organization develops its own
list of competencies, and the list
can be dramatically different based
upon the culture and goals of the
organization.
“Never ascribe to malice that which can be
adequately explained by incompetence.”
—Napoleon Bonaparte
Chapter 3
Know What
Interviewers Are
Trained to Look For
You got to be careful if you don’t know where
you’re going, because you might not get there.
—Yogi Berra
To add a new interpretation to Yogi Berra’s point, when
you don’t know what to expect in your job search, you are
unlikely to do as well in your interview and get the offer.
This chapter will give you some ideas about what
interviewers in the best companies are trained to look for
today.
Knowing what interviewers want can give you a
significant edge when you are preparing for an interview
as long as you are smart enough to use the information the
right way. Always consider the organization’s needs first,
then how you match those needs. Before the interview,
you need to think about how you can provide evidence to
the interviewer that you are competent in the areas the
organization needs to be successful.
We’ll first cover some of the basics included in
interviewer training. What does any interviewer look for
with any candidate? What are the types of questions that
organizations don’t want interviewers to ask—because they
might lead to lawsuits or discrimination charges? Then we’ll
talk about how competency-based interviewing builds on
these basics to provide interviewers with more structure
49
50
Competency-Based Interviews
and a new and better way to evaluate candidates. The goal is to
help the interviewer recognize when the candidate has the key
characteristics—or competencies—that it takes to be successful in
a particular job or in an organization.
Remember this quote from Aristotle Onassis: “The secret to
success is to know something nobody else knows.” Once you have
succeeded in your interview, you may choose to share some of the
secrets of interviewing well with others. I hope you do. Or even
buy them a copy of this book. But that is your decision.
What Have Interviewers
Always Been Looking For?
The answer is simple: the best candidate for the job. That has
not changed. Interviewers are expected to identify strong candidates
through the interview process, offer them a position, and then
encourage the candidates to accept the offer. It may help you, as a
candidate, to realize that interviewers only look good when they
find someone good enough to get the offer.
Good interviewers want you to do well in your
interview—their whole job is to get someone hired.
They don’t look good to their organization when
they eliminate all candidates.
Traditionally, most interviewers look for three things:
1.
Can you do the job?
Do you have the right experience and education to do the
work? Many interviewers focus their questions in this area. They
don’t realize that most employees who eventually leave organizations
actually do have the right background, but may not have the discipline,
determination, communication skills, or interpersonal skills to be
successful.
Know What Interviewers Are Trained to Look For
2.
51
Will you do the job?
You may have a great educational background and the best
technical experience, but you may be lazy. Being disciplined, hardworking, and determined still counts for quite a bit with most
interviewers.
3. How well do you fit with their people, department,
organization, and culture?
This is the category that covers your social skills and
communication style. You may have the best education and
experience. You might be someone who takes work seriously and
works very hard. Or you may be an absolute jerk who can’t work
well with other employees. You may think you are smarter or better
than other employees. You may just have poor communication skills
that get you in trouble at work. Or you may simply have a different
personality than most of the other, more arrogant employees. These
things matter to managers because most of them have spent more
time than they wanted dealing with conflicts between employees.
Interviewers will usually make decisions about how well you fit
the organization unconsciously. This is the category where your
nonverbal communication counts. In any interview, you need to
recognize that interviewers are going to be trying to determine:
l
Do you have good social skills?
l
Are you articulate?
l
Do you use good grammar?
l
Are you dressed appropriately?
l
Do they like you?
l
Do you have the same sense of humor as the rest of the
group?
l
Do you seem to know how to handle yourself appropriately?
l
How will your personality fit with the people you will need
to work with?
52
Competency-Based Interviews
More information about the importance of nonverbal communication in the interview process is included in Chapter 6.
What Are Interviewers Taught
to Avoid Legal Problems?
Almost all of the better, more sophisticated organizations train
their managers, supervisors, and college recruiters to avoid asking
questions and behaving in ways that can cause a candidate or an
employee to file a discrimination charge or a lawsuit. Most countries,
states, and provinces have employment laws in place to protect
their citizens and residents against discrimination. When federal
and state laws conflict, most good human resources managers
encourage their organizations to comply with the stricter law.
In the United States, federal laws (and many state laws) protect
against discrimination based on race, sex, age, religion, disability,
veteran status, color, and ethnicity/national origin. So questions about
your marital status, sexual orientation, religious life, illnesses or
injuries, where your family is from, or any other protected type of
question should not be asked in the interview. For some examples
of illegal questions, please review Appendix C.
Interviewers in the United States are trained to focus the
interview on what it takes to be successful on the job and away
from the candidate’s personal life. Good training programs teach
interviewers not to ask questions about these “protected” areas
unless there is a bona fide occupational reason to do so. An example
of a legitimate bona fide occupational qualification? Interviewers
selecting a new minister or rabbi. In that case and only that kind of
case, they would be allowed to ask questions about the candidate’s
religion or religious views.
Interviewers at government contractors and subcontractors are
also trained to give a preference to someone who comes from one
of the protected classes when candidates are equally qualified.
In Europe and many other parts of the world, interviewers are
more likely to ask questions about the personal life of a candidate
as a way to get to know him or her. And it still is not that uncommon
Know What Interviewers Are Trained to Look For
53
for candidates in the United States to tell stories about being asked
illegal or inappropriate questions.
Why does this still happen? Interviewers may not have been
trained on EEO and diversity, or basic interview skills. Or they may
simply think that the laws don’t matter and they don’t have to follow
them. Or they may not be very sophisticated.
As a candidate, you may be asked an illegal or inappropriate
question. If you are, put the question in context. Don’t
take it personally, and don’t get angry. Then think about
any business need that might be the real reason for the
question, and see if you can respond to that underlying
need in your answer. Always show respect for the
interviewer.
I can remember during an on-campus interview being asked
by a vice president of human resources at a major utility
company in the Midwest whether I thought I’d ever get
married. I knew the question was illegal. I first put the
question in context: He had just told me his daughter was
in a similar MBA program. I thought that he probably cared
a lot more whether his daughter ever married than whether
I did.
Then I thought about the underlying business need his
question represented: Would he put energy, effort, and
financial resources into training me and just have me leave
a few years later?
Here is the response I gave him:
I don’t know if I’ll ever get married. I do know how hard
I’ve worked to get a good education and my MBA. I know
how important it is to me to have a good career, and I
know that will always be important to me.
Although I didn’t go to work for his organization, I did get
asked back for a second interview.
54
Competency-Based Interviews
If you consider the 79,432 discrimination charges filed in 20041
in the United States, you can begin to understand why more
organizations are moving toward more structured interviews. Giving
interviewers a list of questions to choose from that have already
been approved by good human resources and legal departments
can significantly reduce the chance that rogue interviewers will ask
illegal questions that lead to discrimination charges or lawsuits.
Competency-based interviews are highly structured and provide
interviewers with a list of three to five primary questions in each
competency area. One significant benefit? Competency-based
interviews reduce the probability of an interviewer asking a candidate
illegal and even inappropriate questions. Most employers would
probably say, though, that the main benefit of competency-based
interviews is their focus on the competencies the organization or
department really needs to be successful.
Joe Gorczyca, Senior Director–Human Resources at HP, is
responsible for human resources for the company’s worldwide sales
and global supply chain organizations. At HP, he says, “In addition
to focusing on competencies required for job performance, we try
to focus on competencies that reinforce the corporate culture.”
If you think about the benefits to an organization, it is easy to
understand why competency-based interviews have become the
standard.
How Are Interviewers Trained Differently
for Competency-Based Interviews?
In addition to spending time talking about interviewing basics
and EEO and affirmative action concerns, training to conduct
competency-based interviews:
l
Focuses on the key competencies for a particular position
and core competencies for the organization.
l
Helps the interviewer know what to listen for and observe
to be able to assess the candidate more accurately.
Know What Interviewers Are Trained to Look For
55
One of the most important core competencies at Johnson &
Johnson is Integrity and Credo-based Actions. According to
Uneeda Brewer-Frazier, Director of Management Education and
Development at the company, “Because of the strong credo-based
culture at Johnson & Johnson, we work hard to select people who
treat other employees and customers with respect, don’t cut corners,
and demonstrate integrity through their work and actions. It is so
important within Johnson & Johnson that it really impacts every
aspect of how we do business and how we treat people.”
Johnson & Johnson trains interviewers about their competencies
and provides them with an interview guide that includes a list of
planned behavioral questions for each competency. Interviewers
are encouraged to ask follow-up questions to probe for additional
information when an explanation isn’t complete or the response is
unusual or unclear.
So the interviewer, after going through the introductions and
clarifying some things in the candidate’s background, begins the
main part of the interview with a competency-based question. In
addition to the example included in this chapter on Integrity and
Credo-based Actions, you might want to review the example in
Chapter 1 on the competency Results and Performance Driven.
The interviewer is asked on the following Johnson & Johnson
form to write about the candidate’s answers. Specifically, the
interviewer is asked to look at the three main parts of any answer
to a behavioral question: Situation/Task, Action, and Result (STAR).
Because these three parts are looked at carefully by most
interviewers from organizations using behavioral interviewing, it is
important to understand what the interviewers need to identify.
1. Situation/Task. What is the basic situation, task, or
problem that you are giving to answer the behavioral question?
Expect to give the details. (Note: Some organizations use the word
Problem instead of Situation or Task.)
2. Action. What action did you take to make the situation
better? What decisions did you make to handle the task or resolve
the problem?
Transparency—Does not hold back on what needs to be said.
Shares information in a truthful manner.
Trustworthy—Easily gains the trust of others through appropriate
ethical behaviors. Behaves consistently in similar situations.
Builds trust—Treats others with dignity and respect. Models the
Credo values and holds others responsible for their actions.
Planned Behavioral Questions
1. Tell me about a time at work when you objectively considered others’ ideas, even when they conflicted with
yours.
2. We do not always work with people who are ethical or honest. Was there ever a time when you observed
another employee or direct report do something that you thought was inappropriate?
3. Often there are people in an organization who deserve more credit than they receive. Tell me about a time
when you were involved in a situation such as this. How did you handle the situation?
4. Often it is easy to blur the distinction between confidential information and public knowledge. Can you give
me an example of a time when you were faced with this dilemma? What did you do?
5. Describe a time when you were asked to do something at work that you did not think was appropriate. How
did you respond?
Competency-Based Interviews
Lives and champions our Credovalues; displays command of one’s
self and responsibilities; strong
personal integrity; creates and
maintains an environment of
trust.
56
Integrity and Credo-Based Actions Key Examples
Situation/Task
Action
Result
Know What Interviewers Are Trained to Look For
Communication ___________________________________
Integrity and Credo-based
Actions Rating
57
Reprinted with permission of Johnson & Johnson Strategic Talent Management
58
Competency-Based Interviews
3. Result. What was the result of the action? How did it
benefit the organization or your department? What did you learn
that will help you be even stronger in the future? Any major “lessons
learned” for you or your organization? Did you make money for the
organization? Did you save time?
Chapter 4 will go into more detail to help you learn how to
respond more effectively to behavioral questions using these three
areas. (Johnson & Johnson calls it STAR. Many career counselors
know this approach under the acronym PAR, or Problem—Action—
Result. Others refer to it as Situation—Action—Result, but I’m not
aware of any calling it SAR. When an organization wants to look at
the result first, be aware that STAR can easily become RATS.)
In a competency-based interview at Johnson & Johnson, the
interviewer is asked to look at the candidate’s answers in each
competency area and rank them according to the following scale:
5 Much more than acceptable (Significantly exceeds
criteria for successful job performance)
4
More than acceptable (Exceeds criteria for successful
job performance)
3 Acceptable (Meets criteria for successful job
performance)
2 Less than acceptable (Generally does not meet criteria
for successful job performance)
1
Much less than acceptable (Significantly below
criteria for successful job performance)
So the more you can find out about the position and what it
takes to be successful in it before the interview, the more likely you
are to be able to give the interviewer strong answers that help
prove that you would be competent in the position.
The interviewer is also asked to assess the candidate’s
communication skills as shown in the following:
Know What Interviewers Are Trained to Look For
59
Communication—Clearly conveying information and ideas
through a variety of media to individuals or groups in a manner that
engages the audience and helps them understand and retain the
message.
+
0

q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
q
Organizes the communication
Maintains audience attention
Adjusts to the audience
Ensures understanding
Adheres to accepted conventions
Comprehends communication from others
Communication Rating
Key Points for Chapter 3
“If you know what the interviewer is looking for, you will
have an advantage your competitors don’t.”
Answers
Key Questions
Why is it important to know
what the interviewer is going to
be looking for before you are
interviewed?
It can give you a significant edge over
other candidates in the interview.
Try to identify the employer ’s
needs first, then start thinking about
how you can prove to the employer
that you have experience and skills
in these critical competency areas.
What do interviewers always
look for?
The best candidate for the job.
What three main points cover
what interviewers are looking
for?
1. Can you do the job?
2. Will you do the job?
3. How well do you fit with their
people, department, organization,
and culture?
60
Competency-Based Interviews
Key Questions
Answers
What are the protected classes
under United States employment
laws?
l
l
l
l
l
As a candidate, what is the best
way to handle an illegal question?
l
l
l
l Sex
Race
l Religion
Age
Disability l Color
Veteran status
Disability/National Origin
Put the question in context.
Don’t take it personally, and
don’t get angry.
Identify the business need
underlying the question, and
respond to that business need in
your answer.
Why have more organizations
moved to structured,
competency-based interviews?
1. To reduce the chance that bad
interviewers will ask illegal
questions during the interview.
2. To help interviewers focus on
selecting candidates based on the
competencies the organization
needs to be successful.
3. To help organizations reinforce
and strengthen their corporate
culture.
What is included in competencybased interview training?
l
What are the three main parts a
good interviewer will listen for
in a candidate’s answer to a
behavioral question?
What are the acronyms used by
interviewers to describe the three
main parts of a good answer to a
behavioral interview question?
Interviewing basics.
EEO and affirmative action/legal
and illegal questions.
l Key competencies for the position.
l Verbal/nonverbal communication.
l Assessing candidates on competencies (including communication
skills).
l
Situation/Task/Problem
Action
l Result
l
l
STAR—Situation/Task, Action,
Result
l PAR—Problem, Action, Result
l
Chapter 4
Expect CompetencyBased Behavioral
Questions
Plans are only good intentions unless they
immediately degenerate into hard work.
—Peter Drucker
To take a small amount of license with Peter Drucker’s
quote, you need to, as a candidate, plan to work hard to
succeed in a good competency-based interview. Learning
to give your best, high-quality answers to the questions isn’t
easy. Even if you know you are good verbally, you could be
better if you anticipate what will happen in the interview,
and practice. You need to actively prepare.
Actors rehearse their lines and movements for weeks
before a play or being filmed in a movie.
Medical students and doctors practice surgical techniques
on human cadavers. Before a particularly difficult surgery
using a different, new technique, surgeons spend hours
strategizing and planning.
The best litigators work with mock juries and even go
through mock trials before a major trial to help them
anticipate the real jury’s concerns and issues. The best
coaches and players spend hours training, physically and
mentally. They identify the other team’s strengths and
weaknesses, review films of their games, and then adjust
their own plays to improve their chance of winning.
61
62
Competency-Based Interviews
Like the best actors, doctors, lawyers, coaches, and players,
the best interviewees plan for their interviews and prepare. If they
want to work at the most sophisticated companies and organizations,
they know they need to anticipate competency-based behavioral
questions. If they already work for a competency-based organization,
they should be savvy and recognize the need to prepare for their
interviews thinking about the competencies needed for the new
position—whether it is a promotion or a transfer.
The best interviewees today expect behavioral interview
questions targeting the competencies needed to be successful in
the position. They focus on the most important competencies the
employer is looking for, and then start thinking about how they can
prove they are strong in each of these key competency areas.
What Are Competency-Based
Behavioral Questions?
Competency-based behavioral questions are questions asking
for examples from your past behavior and experience to help the
interviewer assess how strong you are in key competency areas.
Remember that the theory behind behavioral questions is that
past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior. If the
interviewer wants to predict whether you are going to be successful
at something in the future, he needs to find out how successful
you’ve been in the past.
Competencies basically provide the interviewer with a target
for behavioral interview questions. As an interviewee, you need to
be focused on the same target: competencies. If you work this
process the right way, the competencies you’ve focused on are the
same competencies the interviewer is targeting.
Expect Competency-Based Behavioral Questions
63
What Must Be Included When Responding to
Competency-Based Interview Questions?
There are three parts to any good answer to a behavioral
question:
1. Situation or Task or Problem
2. Action
3. Result
Good interviewers are trained to listen for the three parts of the
answer. At Johnson & Johnson, for example, the interviewers are
even asked to take notes and provide the candidate’s answers by
these three areas on their interview evaluation form. See pages 38
and 39.
The best order to talk about the three parts, though, depends on
which part of the answer is the most important to the interviewer.
If you are interviewing with someone who is very results-oriented,
start with the result. If the most critical piece to the interviewer is
an understanding of the process, start with the situation or the action.
Spend some time, then, thinking about whether the result or the
process will make your point most effectively to the decisionmaker—the interviewer. As with any good sale, you need to think
about the customer’s wants and needs, and make sure that you talk
about what is the most important to the interviewer first.
What Is the Best Way to Prepare for
Competency-Based Interview Questions?
Take the time to be strategic. Work through this list:
1. Look at the key competencies you’ve identified for the
position you plan to interview for.
2. Think about your strongest accomplishments that prove your
competence—in each key competency area. Make sure
to include at least a few accomplishments that are not
already on your resume.
64
Competency-Based Interviews
3. Pick examples to talk about that show as high a level of
competence as possible, unless you are interested in
interviewing for a position that you are overqualified for.
4. Then think about how you can explain the accomplishment
to the interviewer, using conversational words—whether
in English, Spanish, Mandarin Chinese, Japanese, Russian,
or another language.
5. Be reasonably concise but also complete with your answers.
6. Remember to be positive and to make sure your nonverbal
communication supports what you are saying. Don’t give
the interviewer a mixed message. Read Chapter 6 for more
details about nonverbal communication.
How Does This Work?
Here are a few examples to show you how to begin proving
your own competence. I’ve chosen examples from different
professional levels, from entry-level to executive. In most cases,
the examples the candidates chose to talk about also show they are
strong in more than one competency area. See if any of these
examples describe something you’ve done yourself. Pay attention
to the way the candidate gives the answer by picking the key points
that are the most important to telling the story. Notice that:
l
These examples use conversational language.
l
The candidates stay focused, without going off on any kind
of tangent.
Let’s look first at the competency Initiative. Other competencies with specific examples are included in Chapter 5.
Expect Competency-Based Behavioral Questions
Initiative
Chief Financial Officer, Healthcare Company, interview with
large hospital system.
Question: Give me an example of a time that you were
able to take the lead in changing financial policy or
practice for your organization.
Situation/Problem: When I became the Chief Investment
Officer, the senior managers and board were used to taking
very little risk with the investment portfolio. The problem
at the time was that by playing it so conservative, the
returns were lower than I thought they should be.
Action: I spent six months educating key senior managers
and board members about the potential benefit of taking at
least 15 percent of the portfolio and using hedge funds
and other nontraditional investment strategies. I met with
them one-on-one and presented my recommendations at
the end of the year board meeting.
Result: With support from the Chief Financial Officer and
the CEO, I persuaded the board to change the company’s
investment policy to allow up to 25 percent of the
investment portfolio to be invested in hedge funds and
other, more esoteric investments.
What competencies are demonstrated in this answer?
In addition to showing initiative, the candidate clearly
showed he performed at a high level in these major
competencies:
l
l
l
l
l
l
Achieves Results
Organizational Awareness/Political Savvy
Impact and Influence
Analytical Skills
Interpersonal Skills
Conceptual Skills/Strategic Agility
65
66
Competency-Based Interviews
Administrative Assistant, interview for executive secretary
position.
Question: Have you seen the opportunity to do something
in your position that would really help the department you
supported run more effectively? Tell me about it.
Problem: When I started working in the sales department,
most of the sales representatives kept their own records, and each
of the eight territory managers tracked the information in their own
spreadsheets. The managers provided the information to me every
week, and I was responsible for consolidating the data on a single
spreadsheet. I could see that my manager would have much better,
more current information if we standardized the spreadsheet
department-wide and linked it directly to information the sales
representatives entered into the system.
Action: I talked to my manager about why our department
should update the way we collected sales information. I suggested
how to set this up and volunteered to help him update the system.
Result: I worked with two of the territory managers to design
a system that would work using Excel and Access, and had the
new system in place in one month. They now have real-time
information on the status of any sales prospect, which helps the
managers make better decisions.
Other competencies shown in the candidate’s answer include:
l Achievement/Results Orientation
l Influencing Skills
l Information Seeking
l Interpersonal Skills
l Analytical Skills
l Organizing
Expect Competency-Based Behavioral Questions
67
College Senior, Computer Engineering, interviewing for first
job after graduation.
As a college senior majoring in computer engineering, Brian
had focused on keeping his 3.67 GPA at the University of Maryland
and had very little real work experience when I first met him.
One of the best things about competency-based resumes and
interviews for less experienced candidates is that they can choose
their examples proving they are strong in key competency areas
from work, school, or volunteer activities.
Question: Tell us about a time you demonstrated initiative
in school.
Action/Result: I worked as a key member of the team that
won the best senior project in the Computer Engineering honors
program this last year. That next week, the department head, who
was teaching the class, asked me to review his article based upon
our project, before he submitted it to the best technical journal in
the field.
Situation/Task/Problem: In my senior honors class, our
professor asked us to work in teams of four to decide on a project
using the computer engineering skills we had learned in the program.
Our group decided to build a robotic fertilizer spreader, and I took
the initiative to take the lead with the computer engineering work
on the hydraulic system design.
Other competencies demonstrated by the candidate in the
answer include:
l Achieves Results
l Analystical Skills
l Information Gathering
l Interpersonal Skills
68
Competency-Based Interviews
Communication Tips for
More Successful Answers
After reviewing the different ways these candidates showed
their initiative, are you beginning to think of some times you’ve
proven that you can demonstrate initiative? You can prepare,
practice, and do all the things you need to do to build the competency
you need to be successful in your next interview. I have confidence.
You’ve already come up with an example or two showing your
initiative!
Before we go to the next chapter, here are a few more tips to
make your answers even better:
1. Make sure you respond to the question being asked. Don’t
assume you understand the question before the interviewer
is finished talking. Listen.
2. Be smart with the language you choose. When possible,
make sure to include the language used by your professional
colleagues. Do some research on specific words and jargon
used by the employer, and remember to include the
employer’s language in your answers. Consider using
competency-related language in your answer. Know
synonyms for each key competency.
3. Expect follow-up questions to your answers. The
interviewer may want some additional information. So do
your homework and review the details of any project or
assignment you may use as an example to provide evidence
that you are competent in a key area. Be able to cite
financials, statistics, or headcount information if it is related
to your example.
4. Once you have brought up a subject, any follow-up question
related to what you have said is fair. So be careful and
choose examples you are willing to talk about in detail.
Expect Competency-Based Behavioral Questions
69
5. Use positive language when answering any question. This
tip is repeated on purpose because it is very important.
Interviewers do not want to offer a job to someone who
they perceive thinks negatively and does not take
responsibility for his or her actions. Don’t be perceived as
a victim. Even when something happens to you (instead of
you making something happen), you always have the ability
to respond with an answer that shows you learned something
from the experience.
6. Prioritize the parts of your answer to say the most
important—to the interviewer—first. This is simply the best
way to make sure the interviewer pays attention to the
most convincing part of your answer—before he possibly
loses attention. In Chapter 5, you’ll be given some examples
that will show you how to prioritize as effectively as possible.
Now you are ready to look at a few additional examples of
competency-based behavioral questions and learn some more tips
that will help you answer these questions more effectively. In the
next chapter, you’ll learn how to pick good examples to prove your
competence in critical competency areas. It takes more than initiative
to be successful! But keep using your initiative to learn what you’re
going to need to ace the next interview. In other words, just keep
reading.
70
Competency-Based Interviews
Key Points for Chapter 4
Competencies provide the interviewer with a target for
behavioral interview questions. As an interviewee, you need
to focus on the same target: competencies.
Key Questions
Answers
Who prepares for interviews?
The best interviewees.
The people who will probably get
the offer.
What are competency-based
behavioral questions?
Competency-based behavioral
questions are questions asking for
examples from your past behavior
and experience to help interviewers
assess how strong you are in key
competency areas.
What must be included in any
good answer to a competencybased interview question?
l
Situation/Problem/Task
l
Action
l
Result
What is the best way to prepare
for a competency-based interview
question?
1. Identify the critical competencies
for the position.
2. Think about your strongest
accomplishments in each key
competency area.
3. Consider how to explain the
accomplishment to the interviewer
using conversational language. Be
concise and complete with your
answer. Don’t forget to cover
situation/task/problem, action,
and result.
4. Be positive and make sure your
nonverbal communication supports the words you are saying.
Expect Competency-Based Behavioral Questions
71
Key Questions
Answers
What order should you use to
talk about situation/problem/
task, action, and result?
It depends on which part of the
answer is the most important—or
the most critical—to the interviewer.
As with any sale, you need to be
aware of the customer’s wants and
needs, and talk about the most
important part first. Saying this
another way, what is most important
to the interviewer should take
priority over what is most importan…

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