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You're sitting in a
conference room or office, face-to-face with the person you most want to impress
- your prospective boss - and he or she is asking you, "What is your biggest
weakness?" How do you answer a question like that? The good news is,
it's a job interview, not a confessional. No one expects you to demonize
yourself in hopes of appearing forthright. After all, you are selling yourself
and you want the interviewer to buy, not pass.
You could try
stalling - think hard for a minute or two and answer something to the effect of,
"I can't really think of any aspect of my personality that has compromised my
performance at work. All of my performance reviews have been positive and I've
never had any problems with past employers." The problem with this approach,
though, is that you run the risk of appearing smug.
A better approach
to take with the weakness question is to answer it honestly in a way that makes
you look positive. Try to come up with a problem or difficulty you had at work a
long time ago - the farther back, the better. Explain how that one minor flaw
affected your performance in a way that enabled you to correct the problem and
learn from it. This will show your employer how you have learned from a
mistake.
"The classic
'weakness' answers are those where the weakness is a strength in disguise," said
Jenn Schraut, Human Resources and Compensation Associate at Salary.com. "But
avoid the blatant, overused ones, like, 'My problem is, I work too hard'," she
said.
With the weakness
question, you'd better be prepared. If you think of something on the spot, your
example might have flaws you don't have time to think about.
-
Brian Braiker, Salary.com contributor
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