Structured Job Interview
Structured Job Interview
Structured Job Interview
HR ASSISTANT
HR SPECIALIST
1. How would you ensure all employees understand and adhere to company
policies?
Tests the candidate’s communication and team management skills.
2. Your employees are not happy with upper-management and demand a change.
How would you handle this situation?
Demonstrates the candidate’s problem-solving skills.
3. What effective methods or systems have you used to ensure all employee records
are kept up-to-date?
Highlights the candidate’s organizational skills.
4. How do you ensure you stay up-to-date on the latest labor laws?
Tests the candidate’s knowledge of labor law resources.
5. Can you describe the methods you use to recruit skilled and qualified employees?
Demonstrates the candidate’s knowledge of recruitment processes.
HR COORDINATOR
HR MANAGER
1. What is the most challenging aspect of HR? How do you handle this?
Shows responsiveness.
2. Describe some of the processes you’ve implemented/improved at other jobs.
What impact did it have?
Reveals more about work history.
3. How do you handle coaching or firing employees and policy enforcement? Use
experiences to support.
Tests ability to handle stress.
4. Which trends in benefits are you excited about? Why? What trends do you hope to
see?
Shows industry awareness.
5. How do you ensure that you’re hiring and retaining top employees?
Tests hiring/coaching skills.
CUSTOMER SERVICE FOR CASHIER
1. A customer wishes to return their meal because it’s incorrect. What process do
you follow?
Highlights the candidate’s knowledge of restaurant processes.
2. How would you handle an aggressive customer?
Tests the candidate’s interpersonal skills.
3. A customer asked you a question but you don’t know the answer. How do you
respond?
Reveals the candidate’s experience in a customer service role.
4. A customer enters the restaurant and places a large order. How would you
guarantee the order details are accurately communicated to the kitchen staff?
Tests the candidate’s communication skills.
5. What strengths do you have that prove your ability to work as a cashier?
Highlights the candidate’s possible strengths.
4. How well do you work under high pressure/in high stress situations?
This question is a great follow up to Question #1 if the candidate is
inexperienced. You’re giving them a chance to show you how they handle stress and
difficult situations. Someone who keeps their cool and tries to understand the
customer is a good choice. Don’t hire anyone who describes themselves as having a
quick temper. Overly emotional personality types aren’t a good fit for customer
service positions, although an empathetic personality who can control their emotions
can make a great pick.
7. If you had to decline a long-term customer’s request, how would you handle it?
Repeat customers are the lifeblood of any business. Turning down a request
from a regular client can be touchy, but it’s going to happen.
Over time, repeat customers may feel like they’re entitled to certain privileges for
their loyalty – ones that might go against your company’s policies or break internal
rules. Where will this rep side? Do they identify too much with the customer, look for
a balanced solution, or answer too harshly (potentially endangering the client
relationship)?
Consider roleplaying this situation and a few other tricky scenarios to get a good feel
for how the potential hire responds.
Additional Customer Service Interview Questions to Ask:
How experienced are you with X technology?
Do you consider yourself a ‘people person’? Why or why not?
Share your previous experience working in customer service
If a customer is using abusive language with you, but has a valid point, how
would you handle it?
What three words would your friends and family choose to describe you? Your
co-workers? You?
What type of work environment do you thrive in?
Describe one customer service scenario you handled particularly well.
What do you know about our company and services?
How do you define customer service?
If we meet again in three years, what goals do you need to have
accomplished in order to feel successful?
BANK TELLER
3. Name one ethical dilemma you faced in your last job. How did you handle it?
You’re looking for an employee with strong ethical and moral character.
Someone who won’t be tempted by opportunity or give in to bribes. You also need an
employee who is willing to inform a manager about poor ethical conduct of co-
workers or even superiors. This question can give you insight into what they
applicant views as morally acceptable and morally reprehensible.
7. If you saw a coworker stealing, how would you handle the situation?
This is a tough question, but an important one for tellers. Trust among
coworkers is important, but loyalty to the bank is more important.
Listen carefully to how the applicant answers this question. You want to hire
someone who is honest to a fault and able to confide in superiors even when it may
endanger their personal relationships with coworkers. You are also looking for a
conflict-avoidant personality or someone who can diffuse conflict quickly and easily.
Additional Interview Questions to Ask:
1. How will you stay motivated?
2. Give an example of great customer service you delivered in your current job.
3. What characteristics do you think good tellers possess?
Situational Interview Questions:
1. What would you do if you made a strong recommendation in a meeting, but your
colleagues decided against it?
2. How would you handle it if your team resisted a new idea or policy you
introduced?
3. How would you handle it if the priorities for a project you were working on were
suddenly changed?
4. What would you do if the work of an employee you managed didn't meet
expectations?
5. What would you do if an important task was not up to standard, but the deadline
to complete it had passed?
6. What steps would you take to make an important decision on the job?
7. How would you handle a colleague you were unable to form a positive
relationship with?
8. What would you do if you disagreed with the way a manager wanted you to
handle a problem?
9. What would you do if you were assigned to work with a difficult client?
10. What would you do if you worked hard on a solution to a problem, and your
solution was criticized by your team?
11. How would you handle working closely with a colleague who was very different
from you?
12. You're working on a key project that you can't complete because you're waiting
on work from a colleague. What do you do?
13. You realize that an early mistake in a project is going to put you behind deadline.
What do you do?