interview

HTP, interview

Make Your Phone Screens More Effective

I’m doing a webinar Thursday, May 17 for Kennedy. See Using Behavior Description Questions in Phone Screens. I am expecting to take questions and help people convert their essential technical skill, non-technical skill, and elimination questions into behavior-description questions. I hope you decide to join me. Labels: phone screen, webinar

HTP, interview

Interviewing Your Manager

A reader emailed me and asked, “how do I interview a manager who will be my superior?”The short answer is the same way you interview peers. However, your feelings about your position or your potential boss’ position (or even someone “higher” than one level above you) will certainly influence how you feel and how you

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Allocating Interview Time

Adam Goucher has a post about how he organizes interviews, So, you’ve got yourself an interview with me. I asked Adam why he spends so much time on Company/Position overview (15 minutes) and the candidate’s Elevator Pitch (5 minutes). He said (I’m paraphrasing) that he’s hit the war for talent, and feels that he needs

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Questions to Ask at the End of the Interview

Louise points to an article about questions candidates should ask at the end of the interview and follows up with her own, Questions to Ask at the End of the Interview: A year from now, how will you evaluate if I have been successful in this position?” Louise goes on to explain why she likes

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Are Introverts at a Disadvantage in Interviews?

At the SD conference a few weeks ago, a colleague asked me this question. (I’m using the Myers-Briggs terminology:If you’re wondering, I often describe introverts as people who need to think in order to speak, and extaverts as people who need to speak in order to think.) Well, the answer is Yes and No. If

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What Would You Like to Know?

Bruce Eckel has a nice post, What Questions Would You Ask?, especially for developers. I really like the question about books :-)Here’s how I would expand on that for project managers and testers: How do we you make project decisions? Can you give me an example? What happens at the end of the project? or

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Reviewing Resumes for an Agile Team: Look for Practices

Once you’ve seen some evidence of a lifecycle, look for the practices the candidate has used on projects. To be honest, I can imagine seeing one or two of these on a resume; certainly not all. Test-driven development (likely to be on a resume) Unit testing (likely to be on a resume) Pair programming (likely

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Behavior-Description Questions from Agile 2006

  A few weeks ago at the “Hiring for an Agile Team” session, the group generated a number of behavior-description questions. I promised I would post them, so here they are: “Tell me about a time you made a mistake.” Using the context of shipping/releasing a product late: “What did you change?” (Notice the past

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