"Group" Interview

Author
Discussion

mrflibbles

Original Poster:

7,711 posts

290 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
Hello,

Ive just found out I have a "group" interview next week.

This may sound stupid, but what is a group interview? I'd guess it being the same as a panel interview, i.e. one candidate with x number of recruiters.

However, it sounds to me like there will be more than one candidate.....if so, what a stupid way of doing things.

Grrrrr.

puggit

48,805 posts

255 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
Group Interview Tests
Group tests are used by an employer to see how you react in a group. They will want to see if you help or hinder the group reach its objectives. An observer will be watching to see how you take criticism, whether you take on leadership roles and involve less communicative group members. If you chair the meeting the observer will be checking on how you plan and keep control of the meeting. If you are leading a group activity the observer will be interested in seeing how good you are at delegating tasks and how much of the work you keep for yourself.
www.alec.co.uk/interview/group.htm

A truly frightening experience!

mrflibbles

Original Poster:

7,711 posts

290 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
Er....thanks for that. Where is the brown trousers smillie?

So, it will be a lot like an assessment centre then?

Damn HR with their fancy words!

bga

8,134 posts

258 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
Group interviews are fine, imo easier than the actual one-on-one interviews. If they are the same thing that I am thinking about you will have a group of 4 or more people and are set a task, it's all about you interact with the others. Obviously not everyone can be chairman etc so they are judging you on how you fit into the role you adopt or are asked to perform. The difference between that and one-on-one interviews is that it's based on the way you interact with several people rather than just the interviewer.
As part of the whole assesment center "experience" they are not as bad as some of the other exercises out there.

singlecoil

34,251 posts

253 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
Thing is, though, are they necessarily going to choose the applicant that does the best in the test? The idea might be to weed out clever go-getters on the basis that they will get bored in the job they have in mind, or even that they might eventually take over the job of the interviewer?

shadowninja

77,493 posts

289 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
So with a bit of luck you're given the role that you're best suited to and they don't spot your weaknesses... good recruitment methodology then

trooper1212

9,457 posts

259 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
shadowninja said:
So with a bit of luck you're given the role that you're best suited to and they don't spot your weaknesses... good recruitment methodology then


They help to weed out the people with that sort of attitude to things ;P

hirich

3,337 posts

269 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
I've been on the assessing end of these a couple of times (and they don't particularly work - the people chosen turned out to have some interesting faults!). A couple of tips:
- Keep reminding yourself about the real prize. It's about how you act, not how well the group does.
- Choose your moment to talk. Don't talk over people, but be sure to make some contribution (they may measure the number of times you speak).
- Features they may like include chairmanship (ensuring everyone is kept in the activity), project management (everyone has a job, keeping an eye on time, and performance against objectives), being an Indian (shut up, volunteer to take on a particular sub-project, get a clear brief), team building (saying well done)

One trick that can make a good impression. Right from the beginning, take a piece of control, and state that the best way of solving the problem is to split into task groups. For a task of building a bridge, one team works on the overall design, one team on the supports, one looks at the brief for detail points, one looks at the list of items that can be bought, and one person (could be you) deals with the interaction between teams. If the project moves into a construction phase, resplit the group into construction teams, and be ready to move staf between teams.
This makes a massive impression on both the team and assessors. There is a good chance the team will immediately accept you as their overall leader (remember to have team leaders for each job). You also look great, do very little (which frees your mind to clock watch, see how the team is performing and suggest changes) without getting too involved in the project.
If someone challenges you as leader, be open and ask for their view. Get a clear decision from the rest of the group, quickly. If you stand down, make sure you stay involved and don't be seen to sulk - volunteer for a sub-project you can run away from the main group (as mentioned already). If the rest of the group screw up, you still look like a diamond in the pooh.

shadowninja

77,493 posts

289 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
trooper1212 said:

shadowninja said:
So with a bit of luck you're given the role that you're best suited to and they don't spot your weaknesses... good recruitment methodology then



They help to weed out the people with that sort of attitude to things ;P


blah blah blah.

I'm more likely to be found on the other side of the table, organising such a gittish event

snag is with these things is that i, like many people, wouldn't come across in the best light what with interview nerves and being monitored/tested in such a fashion, yet in the real world I perform rather well in such situations, either as chairman, teamleader or teamworker. *shrug*

becksporsche

14 posts

248 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
Just relax, it is to show how you react to different personalities within the room.
You need to make sure you don't a)flirt b) pay too much attention to one person and c)say anything daft.
Make sure you have your questions in advance and take a notepad with you. Make notes this always impresses people it means you pau attentionto detaisl.

Good Luck!

mrflibbles

Original Poster:

7,711 posts

290 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
becksporsche said:
Just relax, it is to show how you react to different personalities within the room.
You need to make sure you don't a)flirt b) pay too much attention to one person and c)say anything daft.
Make sure you have your questions in advance and take a notepad with you. Make notes this always impresses people it means you pau attentionto detaisl.

Good Luck!


Generally (b) leads to (a) which leads to (c)!

shadowninja

77,493 posts

289 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
mrflibbles said:


becksporsche said:
Just relax, it is to show how you react to different personalities within the room.
You need to make sure you don't a)flirt b) pay too much attention to one person and c)say anything daft.
Make sure you have your questions in advance and take a notepad with you. Make notes this always impresses people it means you pau attentionto detaisl.

Good Luck!




Generally (b) leads to (a) which leads to (c)!



so thats where went wrong. and the interviewer told me that i should be addressing the other interviewees more... just didnt listen to her.

edited to correct grand-ma. kinda. innit.

>> Edited by shadowninja on Tuesday 2nd March 23:26

mrflibbles

Original Poster:

7,711 posts

290 months

Tuesday 2nd March 2004
quotequote all
So on a serious note:

The group excersize is likely to take the form of a task / discussion. If a discussion would this be on, for example, current affairs, or something directly related to the job, i.e. "How would you deal with a client who..."?

If the group excersize was a task / not job related, surely they would have to interview individually anyway.....

I dont have much experience with this kind of thing

becksporsche

14 posts

248 months

Wednesday 3rd March 2004
quotequote all
Glad to be of assistance!!!! Interviews are a minefield.. preparation preparation preparation!

If you need tips let me know,I have some experience of interviewing people....

>> Edited by becksporsche on Wednesday 3rd March 08:37

trooper1212

9,457 posts

259 months

Wednesday 3rd March 2004
quotequote all
mrflibbles said:
So on a serious note:

The group excersize is likely to take the form of a task / discussion. If a discussion would this be on, for example, current affairs, or something directly related to the job, i.e. "How would you deal with a client who..."?

If the group excersize was a task / not job related, surely they would have to interview individually anyway.....

I dont have much experience with this kind of thing


A discussion based group interview will almost certainly be on something unrelated to your workplace.

When we used to do them, the discussion topics were things like: Millenium Dome, Whether space exploration is a worthwhile cause, Political issues of the time etc...
The subject is relatively unimportant as you won't be marked on what you say, but how you say it and how you interact. Don't overbear the conversation, don't get animated and defensive, don't sit quietly waiting for your turn, don't smarm up to the observer. Do be enthusiastic, do be prepared to back up your points raised, do question other peoples points in a non-offensive manner.

Don't worry about the person who is trying to lead the discussion, don't try and wrestle control away, just make a worthwhile contribution. If you can be charming and amusing, then play that for all its worth.

Thiw will not be your only interview, I can promise you that There will be 1-2-1 interviews to go along with this.

Davel

8,982 posts

265 months

Wednesday 3rd March 2004
quotequote all
At what stage do you get your kit off?

Oh interviews - sorry....