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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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  • Arran,


    I think your comment is posted against the wrong topic.


    In general it is not a good idea to take the experience of what must be, in absolute terms, a small number of people from a minority group and then play the proportion game. We used to call that 'swings and roundabouts'. Either 'everyone is equal' and they get to make free choices or we keep heading towards the stupidity of directing x% of category B29X into tractor production to achieve 'equality of outcome' to the benefit of no-one, or 'society' at large.


    Judging by their building works and the cars they drive the two 'Muslim taxi drivers' in my parents' road seem to have done a lot better than my 'professional engineer' father, regardless or not of whether they hold STEM degrees. If only there had been someone to push them off the self-employed swings onto the employees' roundabout!
Reply
  • Arran,


    I think your comment is posted against the wrong topic.


    In general it is not a good idea to take the experience of what must be, in absolute terms, a small number of people from a minority group and then play the proportion game. We used to call that 'swings and roundabouts'. Either 'everyone is equal' and they get to make free choices or we keep heading towards the stupidity of directing x% of category B29X into tractor production to achieve 'equality of outcome' to the benefit of no-one, or 'society' at large.


    Judging by their building works and the cars they drive the two 'Muslim taxi drivers' in my parents' road seem to have done a lot better than my 'professional engineer' father, regardless or not of whether they hold STEM degrees. If only there had been someone to push them off the self-employed swings onto the employees' roundabout!
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