Question No.1
Most of the executives during interviews ask this question from the candidates, “Why should I hire you?” How will you respond to this question in your interview?
Answer
Because there are only five areas of interest that they have about you as a candidate:
· Skills
· Knowledge about the company
· Manageability
· Affordability
· Whether can go above and beyond the job description
Don't repeat your resume or employment history. Offer one or two examples to explain why you're talking to this particular company. What's the most compelling example you can give to prove your interest?
This question often remains unasked, but it's always in the back of the recruiter's mind. Even if this question isn't asked, you should find an opportunity to use your prepared response sometime during the interview, perhaps in your closing remarks.
"My uncle had a company that was a small-scale manufacturer in the industry, and although he later sold the business, I worked there for five summers doing all sorts of odd jobs. For that reason I believe I know this business from the ground up, and you can be assured that I know what I'd be getting into as a plant manager here."
In this day of "lean and mean" operations philosophy, employers are looking for employees who can think bigger and perform duties above and beyond their jobs.
Question No.2 (5)
Write a short paragraph on the topic of your choice, using at least FIVE transitional markers.
Answer
Essentially the results suggest that women were much more likely to express positive attitudes toward shopping than were men, and correspondingly those men were far more likely to express negative attitudes toward shopping than women. What is more, women were far more likely to express a strong positive
Attitude--that is, to say that they ‘1oved' shopping tether than that they merely 'liked' it. Correspondingly, men were far more likely to express a strong negative attitude--that is, to say that they ‘hated' it rather than merely ‘disliked' it. In addition, women were more prone to express positive attitudes toward a range of different kinds of shopping, whilst when males expressed a positive attitude it was more likely to be toward a very product-specific form of shopping (for example, shopping for records, computers or electric goods). Finally, women were also much more likely than men to express a preference for shopping above other forms of leisure-time activity, such as watching a film or eating in a restaurant.
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