HR Interview Questions and Answers
Question - 1 : - Tell me about yourself?
Answer - 1 : - Start with the present and tell why you are well qualified for the position. Remember that the key to all successful 
interviewing is to match your qualifications to what the interviewer is looking for. In other words you must sell what the 
buyer is buying. This is the single most important strategy in job hunting. 
So, before you answer this or any question it's imperative that you try to uncover your interviewer's greatest need, want, 
problem or goal. 
To do so, make you take these two steps:
Do all the homework you can before the hr interview to uncover this person's wants and needs (not the generalized needs of 
the industry or company)
As early as you can in the interview, ask for a more complete description of what the position entails. You might say: “I 
have a number of accomplishments I'd like to tell you about, but I want to make the best use of our time together and talk 
directly to your needs. To help me do, that, could you tell me more about the most important priorities of this position? All 
I know is what I (heard from the recruiter, read in the classified ad, etc.)”
Then, ALWAYS follow-up with a second and possibly, third question, to draw out his needs even more. Surprisingly, it's 
usually this second or third question that unearths what the interviewer is most looking for. 
You might ask simply, "And in addition to that?..." or, "Is there anything else you see as essential to success in this 
position?: 
This process will not feel easy or natural at first, because it is easier simply to answer questions, but only if you uncover 
the employer's wants and needs will your answers make the most sense. Practice asking these key questions before giving your 
answers, the process will feel more natural and you will be light years ahead of the other job candidates you're competing 
with. 
After uncovering what the employer is looking for, describe why the needs of this job bear striking parallels to tasks you've 
succeeded at before. Be sure to illustrate with specific examples of your responsibilities and especially your achievements, 
all of which are geared to present yourself as a perfect match for the needs he has just described.
Question - 2 : - What are your greatest strengths ?
Answer - 2 : - You know that your key strategy is to first uncover your interviewer's greatest wants and needs before you answer questions. 
And from Question 1, you know how to do this. 
Prior to any interview, you should have a list mentally prepared of your greatest strengths. You should also have, a specific 
example or two, which illustrates each strength, an example chosen from your most recent and most impressive achievements.
You should, have this list of your greatest strengths and corresponding examples from your achievements so well committed to 
memory that you can recite them cold after being shaken awake at 2:30AM. 
Then, once you uncover your interviewer's greatest wants and needs, you can choose those achievements from your list that 
best match up. 
As a general guideline, the 10 most desirable traits that all employers love to see in their employees are:
A proven track record as an achiever...especially if your achievements match up with the employer's greatest wants and needs.
Intelligence...management "savvy".
Honesty...integrity...a decent human being. 
Good fit with corporate culture...someone to feel comfortable with...a team player who meshes well with interviewer's team.
Likeability...positive attitude...sense of humor.
Good communication skills.
Dedication...willingness to walk the extra mile to achieve excellence.
Definiteness of purpose...clear goals.
Enthusiasm...high level of motivation.
Confident...healthy...a leader.
Question - 3 : - What are your greatest weakness ?
Answer - 3 : - Disguise a strength as a weakness. 
Example: “I sometimes push my people too hard. I like to work with a sense of urgency and everyone is not always on the same 
wavelength.”
Drawback: This strategy is better than admitting a flaw, but it's so widely used, it is transparent to any experienced 
interviewer. 
BEST ANSWER: (and another reason it's so important to get a thorough description of your interviewer's needs before you 
answer questions): Assure the interviewer that you can think of nothing that would stand in the way of your performing in 
this position with excellence. Then, quickly review you strongest qualifications. 
Example: “Nobody's perfect, but based on what you've told me about this position, I believe I' d make an outstanding match. I 
know that when I hire people, I look for two things most of all. Do they have the qualifications to do the job well, and the 
motivation to do it well? Everything in my background shows I have both the qualifications and a strong desire to achieve 
excellence in whatever I take on. So I can say in all honesty that I see nothing that would cause you even a small concern 
about my ability or my strong desire to perform this job with excellence.”
Alternate strategy (if you don't yet know enough about the position to talk about such a perfect fit): 
Instead of confessing a weakness, describe what you like most and like least, making sure that what you like most matches up 
with the most important qualification for success in the position, and what you like least is not essential. 
Example: Let's say you're applying for a teaching position. “If given a choice, I like to spend as much time as possible in 
front of my prospects selling, as opposed to shuffling paperwork back at the office. Of course, I long ago learned the 
importance of filing paperwork properly, and I do it conscientiously. But what I really love to do is sell (if your 
interviewer were a sales manager, this should be music to his ears.)
Question - 4 : - Tell me about something you did – or failed to do – that you now feel a little ashamed of ?
Answer - 4 : - As with faults and weaknesses, never confess a regret. But don’t seem as if you’re stonewalling either.
Best strategy: Say you harbor no regrets, then add a principle or habit you practice regularly for healthy human relations.
Example: Pause for reflection, as if the question never occurred to you. Then say to hr, “You know, I really can’t think of 
anything.” (Pause again, then add): “I would add that as a general management principle, I’ve found that the best way to 
avoid regrets is to avoid causing them in the first place. I practice one habit that helps me a great deal in this regard. At 
the end of each day, I mentally review the day’s events and conversations to take a second look at the people and 
developments I’m involved with and do a double check of what they’re likely to be feeling. Sometimes I’ll see things that do 
need more follow-up, whether a pat on the back, or maybe a five minute chat in someone’s office to make sure we’re clear on 
things…whatever.”
“I also like to make each person feel like a member of an elite team, like the Boston Celtics or LA Lakers in their prime. 
I’ve found that if you let each team member know you expect excellence in their performance…if you work hard to set an 
example yourself…and if you let people know you appreciate and respect their feelings, you wind up with a highly motivated 
group, a team that’s having fun at work because they’re striving for excellence rather than brooding over slights or 
regrets.”
Question - 5 : - Why are you leaving (or did you leave) this position ?
Answer - 5 : - (If you have a job presently tell the hr)
If you’re not yet 100% committed to leaving your present post, don’t be afraid to say so. Since you have a job, you are in a 
stronger position than someone who does not. But don’t be coy either. State honestly what you’d be hoping to find in a new 
spot. Of course, as stated often before, you answer will all the stronger if you have already uncovered what this position is 
all about and you match your desires to it.
(If you do not presently have a job tell the hr.)
Never lie about having been fired. It’s unethical – and too easily checked. But do try to deflect the reason from you 
personally. If your firing was the result of a takeover, merger, division wide layoff, etc., so much the better.
But you should also do something totally unnatural that will demonstrate consummate professionalism. Even if it hurts , 
describe your own firing – candidly, succinctly and without a trace of bitterness – from the company’s point-of-view, 
indicating that you could understand why it happened and you might have made the same decision yourself.
Your stature will rise immensely and, most important of all, you will show you are healed from the wounds inflicted by the 
firing. You will enhance your image as first-class management material and stand head and shoulders above the legions of 
firing victims who, at the slightest provocation, zip open their shirts to expose their battle scars and decry the unfairness 
of it all.
For all prior positions:
Make sure you’ve prepared a brief reason for leaving. Best reasons: more money, opportunity, responsibility or growth.
he "Silent Treatment"
Like a primitive tribal mask, the Silent Treatment loses all it power to frighten you once you refuse to be intimidated. If 
your interviewer pulls it, keep quiet yourself for a while and then ask, with sincere politeness and not a trace of sarcasm, 
“Is there anything else I can fill in on that point?” That’s all there is to it.
Whatever you do, don’t let the Silent Treatment intimidate you into talking a blue streak, because you could easily talk 
yourself out of the position.
Question - 6 : - Why should I hire you?
Answer - 6 : - By now you can see how critical it is to apply the overall strategy of uncovering the employer’s needs before you answer 
questions. If you know the employer’s greatest needs and desires, this question will give you a big leg up over other 
candidates because you will give him better reasons for hiring you than anyone else is likely to…reasons tied directly to his 
needs.
Whether your interviewer asks you this question explicitly or not, this is the most important question of your interview 
because he must answer this question favorably in is own mind before you will be hired. So help him out! Walk through each of 
the position’s requirements as you understand them, and follow each with a reason why you meet that requirement so well.
Example: “As I understand your needs, you are first and foremost looking for someone who can manage the sales and marketing 
of your book publishing division. As you’ve said you need someone with a strong background in trade book sales. This is where 
I’ve spent almost all of my career, so I’ve chalked up 18 years of experience exactly in this area. I believe that I know the 
right contacts, methods, principles, and successful management techniques as well as any person can in our industry.”
“You also need someone who can expand your book distribution channels. In my prior post, my innovative promotional ideas 
doubled, then tripled, the number of outlets selling our books. I’m confident I can do the same for you.”
“You need someone to give a new shot in the arm to your mail order sales, someone who knows how to sell in space and direct 
mail media. Here, too, I believe I have exactly the experience you need. In the last five years, I’ve increased our mail 
order book sales from $600,000 to $2,800,000, and now we’re the country’s second leading marketer of scientific and medical 
books by mail.” Etc., etc., etc.,
Every one of these selling “couplets” (his need matched by your qualifications) is a touchdown that runs up your score. IT is 
your best opportunity to outsell your competition.
Question - 7 : - Aren’t you overqualified for this position?
Answer - 7 : - As with any objection, don’t view this as a sign of imminent defeat. It’s an invitation to teach the interviewer a new way to 
think about this situation, seeing advantages instead of drawbacks.
Example: “I recognize the job market for what it is – a marketplace. Like any marketplace, it’s subject to the laws of supply 
and demand. So ‘overqualified’ can be a relative term, depending on how tight the job market is. And right now, it’s very 
tight. I understand and accept that.”
“I also believe that there could be very positive benefits for both of us in this match.”
“Because of my unusually strong experience in ________________ , I could start to contribute right away, perhaps much faster 
than someone who’d have to be brought along more slowly.”
“There’s also the value of all the training and years of experience that other companies have invested tens of thousands of 
dollars to give me. You’d be getting all the value of that without having to pay an extra dime for it. With someone who has 
yet to acquire that experience, he’d have to gain it on your nickel.”
“I could also help you in many things they don’t teach at the Harvard Business School. For example…(how to hire, train, 
motivate, etc.) When it comes to knowing how to work well with people and getting the most out of them, there’s just no 
substitute for what you learn over many years of front-line experience. You company would gain all this, too.”
“From my side, there are strong benefits, as well. Right now, I am unemployed. I want to work, very much, and the position 
you have here is exactly what I love to do and am best at. I’ll be happy doing this work and that’s what matters most to me, 
a lot more that money or title.”
“Most important, I’m looking to make a long term commitment in my career now. I’ve had enough of job-hunting and want a 
permanent spot at this point in my career. I also know that if I perform this job with excellence, other opportunities cannot 
help but open up for me right here. In time, I’ll find many other ways to help this company and in so doing, help myself. I 
really am looking to make a long-term commitment.”
NOTE: The main concern behind the “overqualified” question is that you will leave your new employer as soon as something 
better comes your way. Anything you can say to demonstrate the sincerity of your commitment to the employer and reassure him 
that you’re looking to stay for the long-term will help you overcome this objection.
Question - 8 : - Where do you see yourself five years from now?
Answer - 8 : - Reassure your interviewer that you’re looking to make a long-term commitment…that this position entails exactly what you’re 
looking to do and what you do extremely well. As for your future, you believe that if you perform each job at hand with 
excellence, future opportunities will take care of themselves.
Example: “I am definitely interested in making a long-term commitment to my next position. Judging by what you’ve told me 
about this position, it’s exactly what I’m looking for and what I am very well qualified to do. In terms of my future career 
path, I’m confident that if I do my work with excellence, opportunities will inevitable open up for me. It’s always been that 
way in my career, and I’m confident I’ll have similar opportunities here.”
Describe your ideal company, location and job.
The only right answer is to describe what this company is offering, being sure to make your answer believable with specific 
reasons, stated with sincerity, why each quality represented by this opportunity is attractive to you.
Remember that if you’re coming from a company that’s the leader in its field or from a glamorous or much admired company, 
industry, city or position, your interviewer and his company may well have an “Avis” complex. That is, they may feel a bit 
defensive about being “second best” to the place you’re coming from, worried that you may consider them bush league.
This anxiety could well be there even though you’ve done nothing to inspire it. You must go out of your way to assuage such 
anxiety, even if it’s not expressed, by putting their virtues high on the list of exactly what you’re looking for, providing 
credible reason for wanting these qualities.
If you do not express genuine enthusiasm for the firm, its culture, location, industry, etc., you may fail to answer this 
“Avis” complex objection and, as a result, leave the interviewer suspecting that a hot shot like you, coming from a Fortune 
500 company in New York, just wouldn’t be happy at an unknown manufacturer based in Topeka, Kansas.
Question - 9 : - Why do you want to work at our company?
Answer - 9 : - This question is your opportunity to hit the ball out of the park, thanks to the in-depth research you should do before any 
interview.
Best sources for researching your target company: annual reports, the corporate newsletter, contacts you know at the company 
or its suppliers, advertisements, articles about the company in the trade press.
Question - 10 : - 
What are your career options right now?
Answer - 10 : - Prepare for this question by thinking of how you can position yourself as a desired commodity. If you are still working, 
describe the possibilities at your present firm and why, though you’re greatly appreciated there, you’re looking for 
something more (challenge, money, responsibility, etc.). Also mention that you’re seriously exploring opportunities with one 
or two other firms.
If you’re not working, you can talk about other employment possibilities you’re actually exploring. But do this with a light 
touch, speak only in general terms. You don’t want to seem manipulative or copy.