Saturday, November 10, 2012

The Art of The Behavioral/Fit Interview

Here are questions you will most definitely receive in the behavioral interview. This breaks down each question into what exactly is the interviewer looking for and the key points you should hit to make sure the interviewer can see you are a good fit. Here are some general rules:
  • Answers should be concise! Ideal answers are around 1:30 to 2 min.
  • Even fit questions require structure. More on this within each question below.

1. Tell me about yourself

Most interviews will open with this question. You need to make use of this opportunity to tell your story. What the interviewer is really asking with this question is:
  • Why are you here today? (Why are you interviewing with our firm specifically?)
  • What are your goals? (What is it that you can gain by joining our firm?)
  • Why consulting now?
If you have never worked in consulting before or worked in a very unrelated industry (ie. banking, software development, etc.) this is the place to explain why you are suddenly trying to switch into consulting.

2. Why do you want to do consulting?

There is a 99.99% probability you will get this question. The interviewer wants to know not only whether you can handle consulting but whether you will truly love doing it. There are several things you want to emphasize:
You love the nature of the work
  • Diverse exposure to industries, diverse experiences in functions
  • Like big challenges, enjoy the problem solving process
  • Fits with your long term goals
Just mentioning these generic points is not enough since everyone simply can and will do that. You need to draw from your own experiences to demonstrate these points through stories that will stick in the interviewer’s head. Refer to a project that required you to break down an ambiguous problem. Talk about how you enjoyed the process and that you think that consulting can provide more of such experiences.

3. Why this firm?

The more specific you can be, the better. You might want to break it down into 2 or 3 key points. For example:
  • Type of work (firm is strong in your area of interest, it has your preferred location, etc.)
  • People (you liked the people you’ve met, they are not only smart  but also fun, etc.)
  • Philosophy and culture (travel policy, hierarchical structure)

4. Tell about a time when you failed

Many people have a hard time with this one because they believe revealing a failure might contradict some of the strengths they’ve mentioned or make them look bad. This is absolutely not true if you do it right. You should pick a failure that you recovered from.
How to pick a good failure
  • Pick a failure that is unrelated to the job requirement. Hobbies provide a great pool of examples (sports, music, debate, programming projects, etc.) You can talk comfortably about these failures rather casually since they are not deal breakers for the job.
  • Pick a failure that shows you applied what you learned from the failure in achieving success the second time around. This demonstrates you have a positive attitude towards failure. You believe many successes are not possible without first failing and learning from the failure, and you have real life examples that demonstrate how a failure was instrumental in the success of future project.

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