
GreenLantern
John Stewart
- Nov 18, 2018
- 129
I mean if you actually want to get the job. As in if you answer some of their questions honestly instead of giving the "right" answer they want, you won't get the job.
For example, one question I've been consistenly asked in job interviews is: "how do you deal with conflict with difficult employees and managers"?
Now the "right" answer if you want to get hired is something along the lines of: Oh I work really well with all kinds of people, I talk things out with them without being challenging, I'm assertive with them but kind and listen to them too, I work with them and negotiate with them, yadda yadda, blah blah blah. I probably didn't articulate that the best I could, but I've done it successfully in interviews and got the job.
The thing is, even though most applicants know what they're supposed to say to get the job, but it's a lie. If I were to answer this question honestly, I wouldn't have been hired by these jobs. The truth for me is, difficult co-workers and managers have been the bane of my fucking existence since I started working 20 years ago. Now in some cases, I actually did try talking it out with them and all that stuff I mentioned in the "right" answer I gave before. And with some good understanding people, it worked. But in most cases, it did not. So sometimes I had to resort to other methods such as telling the supervisor/HR, giving their disrespect back to them, ignoring them, and yes, unfortunately sometimes even quitting altogether. But of course, if I were to tell them that I did those things, of course I wouldn't get the job.
One manager even told me straight up in an interview that he hates employees reporting workplace bullying to him. He said I hate "babysitting", I despise it. And notice how some managers will condescend and call it "babysitting" if you report/"tattle" to them about someone harassing you at work. Soo, people are supposed to just sit back and take it when someone consistently mistreats them at work just so the boss doesn't have to be burdened? And of course if someone does quit or even react in an adverse way, the first thing that management/HR will say is: "oh if he was being picked on, he should've reported it to us". But they don't mean that because they don't want to deal with it really.
For example, one question I've been consistenly asked in job interviews is: "how do you deal with conflict with difficult employees and managers"?
Now the "right" answer if you want to get hired is something along the lines of: Oh I work really well with all kinds of people, I talk things out with them without being challenging, I'm assertive with them but kind and listen to them too, I work with them and negotiate with them, yadda yadda, blah blah blah. I probably didn't articulate that the best I could, but I've done it successfully in interviews and got the job.
The thing is, even though most applicants know what they're supposed to say to get the job, but it's a lie. If I were to answer this question honestly, I wouldn't have been hired by these jobs. The truth for me is, difficult co-workers and managers have been the bane of my fucking existence since I started working 20 years ago. Now in some cases, I actually did try talking it out with them and all that stuff I mentioned in the "right" answer I gave before. And with some good understanding people, it worked. But in most cases, it did not. So sometimes I had to resort to other methods such as telling the supervisor/HR, giving their disrespect back to them, ignoring them, and yes, unfortunately sometimes even quitting altogether. But of course, if I were to tell them that I did those things, of course I wouldn't get the job.
One manager even told me straight up in an interview that he hates employees reporting workplace bullying to him. He said I hate "babysitting", I despise it. And notice how some managers will condescend and call it "babysitting" if you report/"tattle" to them about someone harassing you at work. Soo, people are supposed to just sit back and take it when someone consistently mistreats them at work just so the boss doesn't have to be burdened? And of course if someone does quit or even react in an adverse way, the first thing that management/HR will say is: "oh if he was being picked on, he should've reported it to us". But they don't mean that because they don't want to deal with it really.