Your weakness interview question: How do you answer it?
Article By: Carl Mueller
The way you handle your response to the question might be as important if not more important than what you actually say.
What is your biggest weakness?
This is one of those difficult interview questions that interviewers ask from time to time. The way you handle your response to the question might be as important if not more important than what you actually say.
The question is how to answer the question without making it look like you have a weakness that might prevent you from getting hired.
At the same time, you don’t want to mention a weakness that isn’t really a weakness and simply tell the interviewer what you think they want to hear.
Trust me, an experienced interviewer has heard every clichéd answer to this question and will know when you are feeding them a line.
The purpose of asking this question is firstly to see how you handle a stress question and secondly how you actually respond to it.
Here are some guidelines for responding when an interviewer asks what about your biggest weakness:
1. Answer the question honestly. It’s always best to answer any interview question honestly (obviously) but this is an especially important one. Making up a weakness that isn’t really a weakness will most likely be very noticeable to the interviewer. If they think you are lying, they may ask you for another weakness which will cause you even more trouble trying to think of one off the top of your head.
2. Don’t mention a big weakness that could cost you the job. Your goal here isn’t to lie of course, it’s simply to present yourself as best you can. We all have weaknesses but it doesn’t mean we tell an interviewer everything that we do wrong. If for example you are interviewing for a project manager job, it’s probably best not to mention that you have trouble getting along with people since you’re going to be constantly working with others.
3. Don’t evade the question. Don’t try to avoid answering the question. Also be careful about giving a clichéd weakness (ie. I work too hard) and then quickly stating how you deal with it. That looks too scripted and the interviewer has probably heard it one million times before. Admitting a real weakness but then stating what you are doing to improve yourself is preferable ie. “My presentation skills are not as strong as I’d like so I signed up for weekend presentation skills classes and also joined a Toastmasters club.” Rem
I do a lot of interviewing and so many people say that their weakness is that they take on too much work or are a perfectionist! I never believe this! My understanding of people is that we all have weaknesses. The most interesting answers help me know whether or not the applicant knows him/herself and also, if the applicant has made any effort to overcome it. HR person
Hi:
After 17 years in the HR Profession and doing a lot of recruitment and selection I found the question about "my greatest weakness" as fundamentally useless.
In spite of my take I would still get Managers on interview panels asking this question. Too often they were surprised to find that they learned little or nothing more about the candidate. Nothing beats a "Behavioural Based" interview where questions focus on skills relevant to the job drawn from the canidate's experience.
Ed ed.rogusky@gmail.com
My weakness or strength is NOT knowing what the other person is really wanting to hear. Or better yet - how I present myself to the other side....you'd think that after all these years, I would know. What I have come to understand about myself is that I'm too black and white to be diplomatic and too honest to be tactful and this insight of who I am doesn't cut it in the job search game.
I am very open to any and all suggestions or opinions. Lastplace
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