
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Here’s a quick rundown of this week’s episode…
How you answer different types of interview questions will determine whether or not you get hired. Employers ask PhDs 4 key question types in order to gauge their communication skills and their interpersonal skills.
These question types are used as a framework for the interviewer to gauge whether or not you’re a good fit for the position. Studies reported in the Human Resource Management Review found that interviewer judgments based on structured interview questions are more predictive of job performance than those from unstructured interviews. Overall, the studies concluded that adding structure to the interview process enhances the reliability and validity of interviewer evaluations.
As a PhD, there are four different kinds of questions you are likely to face in an industry interview:
Respectively, these question types will focus on your experience and credentials, your opinions and how you see the word, behavioral questions, and competency questions.
Employers will typically start their interviews with the more basic question types, including the Credibility Question and Opinion Question types. They will spend 5 minutes asking Credibility Questions and 5-10 minutes asking Opinion Questions.
For shorter interviews, interviewers will still spend 10-20% of their time on these question types and for interviews early in the interview funnel, such as initial phone screens, gatekeepers may spend much more time on these questions – up to 50-80% of their time.
Behavioral and Competency Questions are leveraged much more during the later interview stages, including video, panel and site visit interviews. For an hour interview, 20 minutes or more can be spent on Behavioral Questions and another 20 minutes can be spent on Competency Questions.
Knowing this will set your expectations and set you at ease so you can perform your best when answering these question types.
If you’re ready to start your transition into industry, you can apply to book a free Transition Call with our founder Isaiah Hankel, PhD or one of our Transition Specialists. Apply to book a Transition Call here.
The post The 4 Types of Interview Questions All PhDs Are Asked appeared first on Cheeky Scientist.
By Cheeky Scientist4.4
4141 ratings
Here’s a quick rundown of this week’s episode…
How you answer different types of interview questions will determine whether or not you get hired. Employers ask PhDs 4 key question types in order to gauge their communication skills and their interpersonal skills.
These question types are used as a framework for the interviewer to gauge whether or not you’re a good fit for the position. Studies reported in the Human Resource Management Review found that interviewer judgments based on structured interview questions are more predictive of job performance than those from unstructured interviews. Overall, the studies concluded that adding structure to the interview process enhances the reliability and validity of interviewer evaluations.
As a PhD, there are four different kinds of questions you are likely to face in an industry interview:
Respectively, these question types will focus on your experience and credentials, your opinions and how you see the word, behavioral questions, and competency questions.
Employers will typically start their interviews with the more basic question types, including the Credibility Question and Opinion Question types. They will spend 5 minutes asking Credibility Questions and 5-10 minutes asking Opinion Questions.
For shorter interviews, interviewers will still spend 10-20% of their time on these question types and for interviews early in the interview funnel, such as initial phone screens, gatekeepers may spend much more time on these questions – up to 50-80% of their time.
Behavioral and Competency Questions are leveraged much more during the later interview stages, including video, panel and site visit interviews. For an hour interview, 20 minutes or more can be spent on Behavioral Questions and another 20 minutes can be spent on Competency Questions.
Knowing this will set your expectations and set you at ease so you can perform your best when answering these question types.
If you’re ready to start your transition into industry, you can apply to book a free Transition Call with our founder Isaiah Hankel, PhD or one of our Transition Specialists. Apply to book a Transition Call here.
The post The 4 Types of Interview Questions All PhDs Are Asked appeared first on Cheeky Scientist.

26 Listeners

235 Listeners

8 Listeners

21,500 Listeners