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Impossible Interviews

Have you ever been faced with an interview question that seemed impossible to answer?


Mine was delivered on the premises of a 'world class' engineering company. "How would you ensure that a project is completed on time?"


My mind raced from the general to the particular - If I knew the answer to that I would be a billionaire! - Strikes, bad weather, supplier failure, poor specifications etc. Probably no words came out as the interviewer started to drop hints, "It begins with a 'P', it ends in 'N', it has four letters." "Plan?" I say. "Exactly!" says he. 'Idiot' thinks I.


In retrospect perhaps it was a test to see if I was suitable to develop for senior management - the 'big picture' people. "We will deliver better value, we will be smarter!" But how? Engineers, small-minded, always bothered about the details!


Needless to say, I didn't get that job. Perhaps just as well.
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  • Coming across this thread again, I remembered reading a number of years ago (in "The Right Stuff" by Tom Wolfe) about the first NASA selection for Astronaut training. One of the questions (from a psychologist) was 'impossible' as it involved handing the candidate a blank sheet of white paper and saying "What do you see?"  Of course a literal answer ("nothing" or "a sheet of paper") resulted in the assessment of "No imagination" while a comment such as "a snowstorm" would be about right (as long as they didn't then expand on their imagination - lost in the blizzard, freezing to death, etc.  My favourite response from the candidates was from Scott Carpenter, who became one of the seven Mercury astronauts, who replied "But its upside-down!"  The psychologist actually took the paper back to look before he realised........

    Alasdair
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  • Coming across this thread again, I remembered reading a number of years ago (in "The Right Stuff" by Tom Wolfe) about the first NASA selection for Astronaut training. One of the questions (from a psychologist) was 'impossible' as it involved handing the candidate a blank sheet of white paper and saying "What do you see?"  Of course a literal answer ("nothing" or "a sheet of paper") resulted in the assessment of "No imagination" while a comment such as "a snowstorm" would be about right (as long as they didn't then expand on their imagination - lost in the blizzard, freezing to death, etc.  My favourite response from the candidates was from Scott Carpenter, who became one of the seven Mercury astronauts, who replied "But its upside-down!"  The psychologist actually took the paper back to look before he realised........

    Alasdair
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