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How to Answer the Scariest Interview Questions

How to Answer the Scariest Interview Questions

Having nightmares the night before a job interview? Increased sense of dread and impending doom? Conquer your anxiety with these useful tips.

Every Halloween, front lawns are decorated with scarecrows, plastic skeletons, and nylon cobwebs. But a truly frightening decoration would be a pretend office and a re-enactment of job interviews from years past.

Unless you plan to interview for a position at a haunted house or as Dr. Frankenstein’s lab assistant, job interviews shouldn’t terrify you.

Fear of interviewing is natural, but easily explicable: It’s your anxiety about the unknown.

If you can head into each interview with a better understanding of what to anticipate and how to address it, you can turn a tricky situation into a real treat.

Why Are You Looking For a Change?

Start by determining exactly how you will describe to interviewers why you're interested in the open job. Perhaps you’re seeking more responsibility, an opportunity to learn more, or maybe your current workplace is just starting to feel as monotonous as a string of scary movie sequels.

No matter your motivation, your response should be germane to the position for which you’re applying.

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Don’t say, "I’m stuck in a rut at my current job."

Instead reply, "I want to take on new challenges, and this position’s responsibilities intrigue me."

Nothing in an interview makes the interviewee seem quite as ghoulish as specifically citing pay. Instead, focus on what elements of the job might mean a pay increase, such as: "I am ready at this point in my career for the responsibility of a management position."

What Are Your Greatest Weaknesses?

Feels like a trap, doesn’t it?

Go with the cliché, “I work too hard,” and you risk coming off as both disingenuous and unoriginal.

Answer too forthrightly—“sometimes I lose focus” or “I have bad anxiety attacks,” and you risk becoming your own worst enemy. The Fifth Amendment protects you against such self-incrimination, but you’re afforded no such right in a job interview.

Be honest and avoid being vague. Pinpoint a specific skill that interests you but you have not yet mastered. Discuss what steps you plan to take to learn that skill. This can be a software program, a managerial technique or just about anything that could pertain to the position you're interviewing for.

What is Your Desired Salary?

For many interview questions, there isn’t necessarily a right or wrong answer.

When it comes to salary demands, on the other hand, your response must at least be within a certain ballpark since the hiring organization has a budget with which to operate.

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If this question sends you into a panic, fear not. Research salaries for the same or similar positions in your area to get an understanding of the range you should request.

Don’t get greedy—your new job could do its best Invisible Man impression if you propose an outlandish price range. But don’t shortchange yourself, either.

Low-balling your own salary requirement is a road to self-sabotage.

Maybe there are other interview questions that leave you sleepless. No matter the topic, know that preparation and planning can turn any frightening job interview into a walk through the park. After all, you wouldn’t stroll into a spooky, abandoned house without a flashlight, would you?

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