Everyone always has questions about what interview questions they will be asked. In today’s job market, that is a great thing! Hiring managers and HR professionals want candidates that are fully prepared and are giving the best interview possible.

We tallied our top five interview questions that are asked in various interview types. However, it is important to note, that all questions are asked differently. By this we mean, “Tell me about yourself” versus “How would you describe yourself to a stranger?”. Two different questions, but both looking for similar answers.

In this article, we will discuss behavioral questions, general questions, testing questions, stressful questions and tricky questions.

If you are looking for more questions on any of these categories, we urge you to go to our interview questions tab to view over 300!!

Behavioral Interview Question

Tell me about a time when something unplanned happened during your day. How did you deal with it?

This kind of question is commonly asked in most interviews regardless of what kind of job. What the interviewer is looking to get out of you, deviously, is to see if you are an organized person. If you are organized, then most unplanned events should be easy to manage. However, emergencies always come up throughout the day and interviewer will really be seeking your ability to multi-task. Even the most organized person will still have unplanned things occur. They will want to hear how you handled them and then how you will in the future. As a bonus, you can also explain the outcome of the unplanned event and how, because of your diligence, everything turned out successful.

General Interview Question

How do you handle pressure, conflict and/or stress?

This question, on the surface, seems easy. The answer is always, “Great!”. While that is the correct answer, it couldn’t be more wrong! A big rule of interviewing is NEVER give one word answers. You answer this question by explaining a story. This story is something that has happened to you in the past. “One time, I was under a tight deadline for a huge project. It was due in 5 hours and the team had only 15% of the project complete. Here’s what I did…” If you have limited work experience then you can speak about a college project or a time when you were volunteering. The interviewer is not looking for the obvious here, how you handle stress, however they are looking to see how you work under pressure and still produce successful results. They will only understand that if you tell them in detail.

Testing Interview Question

What challenges do you think you might expect in this job if you were hired?

This question, unfortunately, catches so many people off-guard. It is easy to say, “I believe the challenges I will face are…. nothing, meeting a sales goal, immediately decreasing ____ project time, learning all software interfaces, etc…” While those are logical answers and make sense, again, they are the wrong answers. You’d essentially be telling the interviewer everything you would NOT be able to do, thus how you would be the wrong person to hire. Instead, you can give examples such as, “getting to know the whole team, learning all policies and procedures, or red tape”. As a bonus, you should follow up all of your answers, no matter what you say, with how you would overcome those challenges. Again, you have to remember, any and all interviews are about providing solutions. Tell them why they need to hire you and how you can fix their problems.

Stressful Interview Question

Are you under/over qualified for this job?

It would seem the obvious answer to this question is, “No”. But as stated above, you never want to give one word answers to any interview question. Instead, take this opportunity to restate why you are the best person for the job. You have to talk about the specific value you would bring to the organization. This strategy does change a bit depending on if you actually are under or over qualified, but either way, this question is designed to see whether or not you can sell yourself along with convincing the interviewer that they should hire you.

Tricky Interview Question

How many jellybeans will fit in a car?

WHAT!? Is this a real question? Yes, it sure is and it is actually one of the more common questions being asked in companies such as Zappos, Google and Facebook. It is a question that tests your creative thinking abilities as well as your ability to think out of the box. On the surface it really does seem like a dumb question and most candidates will answer, “um, 10,000?”. Then the question and interview is over. This question can be asked many different ways; anything in anything. The right way to answer this question is to ask questions back. You must be inquisitive and challenge what seems to be the status quo. For example, “How big are the jellybeans?”, “Are there seats in the car?”, “Can I put them in the trunk?”, “Does the car have a spare tire?”, “Can they go in the inside of the tires?”. You get the point. The interviewer wants to see will you just accept a project and start working on it with no questions asked… OR… will you question them and fully understand the project you will be working on.

These are just five types of interview questions that you will be asked. We recommend that you go to our services tab and try a mock interview with us. We will conduct a real live interview with you and ask you questions similar to these. Then, together, we will give you feedback and tailor the appropriate responses so you can have the best interview possible.