Thursday, February 8, 2007

What Is Your Greatest Weakness?

If you've interviewed much, you've probably been asked this question.  Art Vandalay examines some of the potential answers and their outcome on his blog.  There's also an interesting conversation in the comments over there.  The consensus of those being interviewed seems to be that it is a no-win question.  The managers seem to find it useful.  Which is it? 

I've spoken to people who use this question and asked them what they get out of it.  Their answer is usually "You'd be amazed what some people will say."  True, but if they're really that badly behaved and that intelligent, couldn't you find out some other way?  If you ask a question only to weed out the most incompetent, perhaps there are better uses for that time in the interview.

I see little value in this question.  As Art points out, there are four possible answers:

  1. Lie/Evade - Claim you have no weaknesses or attempt to change the subject.
  2. Answer with a weakness that is really a strength - Say something like "I am a perfectionist"
  3. Honesty - Answer with your truly biggest weakness.
  4. Wiggle out - Give a true weakness but only a very mild one.

Given these 4 choices, the best possible answer is #4.  The first will often upset an interviewer looking for "honesty".  Unfortunately, this question is designed to get you to be dishonest so the interviewer should avoid the question.  The second is lame and probably runs into the same problems as #1.  The third will probably end the interview.  Everyone has weaknesses and without context, your biggest weakness will often dominate the mind of the interviewer.  Game over.  The fourth has some honesty to it but isn't enough to get you thrown out of the interview room. 

As an interviewer, I don't want to put my future employees in a position where they are struggling to find the answer I want to hear rather than the truth.  Why should I put them in a position where lying by avoidance is the best answer?

What are your thoughts?  Is there value in this question? 

3 comments:

  1. Personally, I hate this question.
    I can't see the value it gives. Also, most of the people lie or give an answer they read in a useless book on how to success in job interviews.
    I prefer when the person interviewing tries to drive a normal conversation with the candidate, focusing on questions related to their future or former job position.

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  2. My take on this question is a bit different then trying to expose a lie. I think the question is somewhat valuable in exposing individuals who cannot find fault in their own work. I am well aware of my weaknesses. I try to improve upon them, but I don't try to hide them. I don't ask this question in an interview very often unless I simple feel uneasy with the candidate, but when I do the interviewee usually squirms around a bit. To me this is telling me the individual is probably uncomfortable talking about his/her weaknesses, and potentially will not face them (resulting in finger-pointing and "not my responsibility" type attitudes. But, it is not a make or break type question in an interview.

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  3. I understand what you are getting at but the candidate doesn't know your motivations.  From their perspective, you are just as likely to be the sort that will hold it against them.  For you, an honest answer is the right one. For someone else, that will end the interview.  This, I think, is the great weakness of this question.  The candidate is trapped.  They have to guess what sort of person you are and then give the appropriate answer.  Guessing wrong will greatly lessen their chances of getting hired.

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