Midlands Consulting Centre Reveal Candidates’ Most Unusual Job Interview Behaviour

As a society, we are willing to quickly forgive some mistakes, yet when it comes to others we’re still unsure where we stand. Midlands Consulting Centre looks at how interviews unusual behaviours may be misinterpreted.
By: Melanie Brown
 
July 14, 2010 - PRLog -- In the world of candidate interviews, the balance between what is acceptable and what is not can often be shaky — particularly in our current economy, with competition and pressure for jobs is at a high.  With that in mind, we’re a bit sympathetic to the “most unusual” and interview blunders listed below. Everyone makes mistakes, and by examining our weaknesses in interviews, maybe we can all learn something — and become more polished  (candidates) and more prepared to handle tricky situations (employers).

Candidates’ most unusual interview blunders:
•   Candidate wore a business suit with flip flops
•   Candidate asked if the interviewer wanted to meet for a drink after
•   Candidate ate food in the office kitchen after completion of interview
•   Candidate recited poetry and quotes to describe himself
•   Candidate applying for a customer service job said, “I don’t really like working with people”
•   Candidate had to go immediately to get his dog that had gotten loose in the parking lot
•   Candidate looked at the ceiling during the entire interview
•   Candidate used Dungeons & Dragons as an example of teamwork
•   Candidate clipped fingernails

On another note, while some of the behaviours listed below wouldn’t fly in any interview (like, clipping fingernails — unless you’re applying for a nail technician job!), some of the behaviours below, when examined more closely, actually may make sense for some types of jobs — or should at least be given the benefit of the doubt by an employee.

What can employers learn from these examples?
1. When possible, give candidates the benefit of the doubt.
Candidates applying to your jobs are human, and like anyone else, they may do things you deem “weird” or “unusual” but that they see as normal. If you’re interviewing a really strong candidate, and they suddenly break out into poetry or impromptu beat-boxing, think about the implications on your business. Could this be a really creative candidate who just needs the right role and mentoring to thrive and help take your business to the next level?
Or if a candidate’s looking at the ceiling, might he or she be thinking hard or simply very nervous during interviews? Again, depending on the role at hand, these behaviours may simply not be acceptable (outside sales, for example), but if the candidate seems like a great candidate otherwise, what about getting him or her in a different setting or on the company floor and observing the interactions or ideas that come about? The candidate may surprise you

2. Consider that a candidate may in fact know something you don’t.
Using Dungeons & Dragons as an example of teamwork, although mentioned by an employer in the survey results as an “unusual response,” is actually not that far-fetched. It’s been reported that playing video games may lead to a lucrative tech job, for example, and that playing games like World of Warcraft can be great breeding grounds for real-world leadership skills. Whether it’s an affinity for video games or something else, a candidate’s ability to relate subjects he or she is passionate about to their job role may be worth a listen. Don’t be so quick to write the candidate off — he or she could be your next star employee.

3. Candidates have personal lives, just like you — and sometimes situations happen that are out of a candidate’s control.
A candidate’s dog got loose from its leash while waiting in the parking lot, and Concerned Candidate #1 must attend to his or her pet. Hey, it happens. We all have families, pets, and other personal things to attend to, and sometimes those things unintentionally cross over into our personal lives. A situation like this is more about how the candidate handles it. Does he or she handle it with grace and humour, apologize, and try to make up for the blunder? If so, you may consider letting Concerned Candidate #1 — if not Fido — into your office on a more permanent basis.

4. Sometimes candidates are hungry.
That, however, does not excuse swiping food from the office kitchen, as one candidate did, according to the survey. But candy at the reception desk may do the trick.

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Midlands Consulting Centre Ltd,
SBQ 1, 2nd Floor
29 Smallbrook Queensway
Birmingham England B5 4HE,
Phone: 0121-270-5379 ext.12#,
Email: info@midlandscc.co.uk
http://www.midlandscc.co.uk.

Midlands Consulting Centre Ltd is a UK based marketing company helping to increase customer acquisitions and brand awareness worldwide.

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Midlands Consulting Centre is an outsourced Sales and Marketing company, working with Named Brand Clients to increase Brand Awareness & Customer Acquisition.
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