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20 Craziest Job Interview Questions and the Right Answers
MoneyWatch ^ | May 30, 2011 | Lynn O'Shaughnessy

Posted on 08/05/2011 10:53:16 AM PDT by Slings and Arrows

Nobody has to tell you that it’s a rough job market. So when you do finagle a job interview, you’ll want to shine.

-snip-

Procter & Gamble: Sell me an invisible pen.

Facebook: Twenty five racehorses, no stopwatch, five tracks. Figure out the top three fastest horses in the fewest number of races.

Citigroup: What is your strategy at table tennis?

Google: You are climbing a staircase. Each time you can either take one step or two. The staircase has n steps. In how many distinct ways can you climb the staircase?

Capital One: How do you evaluate Subway’s five-foot long sub policy?

Gryphon Scientific: How many cocktail umbrellas are there in a given time in the United States?

Enterprise Rent-A-Car: Would you be okay hearing “no” from seven out of 10 customers.

Goldman Sachs: Suppose you had eight identical balls. One of them is slightly heavier and you are given a balance scale. What’s the fewest number of times you have to use the scale to find the heavier ball?

Towers Watson: Estimate how many planes are there in the sky.

Lubin Lawrence: If you could describe Hershey, Godiva and Dove chocolate as people, how would you describe them?

Pottery Barn: If I was a genie and could give you your dream job, what and where would it be?

Kiewit Corp.: What did you play with as a child?

VWR International: How would you market a telescope in 1750 when no one knows about orbits, moons etc.

Diageo North America: If you walk into a liquor store to count the unsold bottles, but the clerk is screaming at you to leave, what do you do?

Brown & Brown Insurance: How would you rate your life on a scale of 1 to 10?

(Excerpt) Read more at moneywatch.bnet.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Humor; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: napl
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To: Melas

Following up ...

The balls aren’t identical. That’s reality.

Scales can only measure within certain and highly proscribed limits, and only to a certain precision. That’s reality.

People are people and full of all sorts of ways accessing their motives, and thus influencing people-driven outcomes.
THAT’S REALITY.

Goldman Sachs was and still is big into derivatives. Toxic and dangerous derivatives. They hire a myriad of mathematical idiot savants to show how to pull the eighth ball out of seven “identical” balls. Each and every one of them thinks he and she is a bloody genius. Including the ones who know better and the salesmen and marketeers.

They were wrong, they are wrong, but only GOOD social engineers know why, and can help them. And help us, the US. The US of A. The whole world. Save from financial armageddon.

But as you suggest, they ain’t hiring same.


161 posted on 08/05/2011 3:05:53 PM PDT by bvw
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To: bvw

Why is one an idiot savant for being able to see how to proceed with the question? Or in other words, what fault do you find with my solution that yeilded taking two weights on the scale to solve the problem?


162 posted on 08/05/2011 3:12:40 PM PDT by Melas (Sent via Galaxy Tab)
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To: Slings and Arrows

That’s a variant of the Lieutenant’s ordering a Sargent to raise the flagpole solution. In my one mechanical engineering course the Professor praised that kind of engineering solution. Give the problem to someone known for how solve such problems.


163 posted on 08/05/2011 3:13:33 PM PDT by bvw
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To: Melas

The answer desired was the least number of weightings needed. And that is ZERO. Sorry, your answer may be pedagogically interesting as some abstracted example of non-real world engineering, but in the real world someone would figure out how to answer correctly with NO weighting.


164 posted on 08/05/2011 3:18:35 PM PDT by bvw
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To: bvw

Exactly. If Kirk can command a starship, he knows how to delegate.


165 posted on 08/05/2011 3:20:48 PM PDT by Slings and Arrows (Would you like Satan fries with that?)
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To: Slings and Arrows

I wouldn’t use the scale at all. I could tell by hold two at a time in each hand. Don’t need no stinkin scale..


166 posted on 08/05/2011 3:24:35 PM PDT by goseminoles
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To: Slings and Arrows

That didn’t sound right. You guys know what I mean..


167 posted on 08/05/2011 3:26:23 PM PDT by goseminoles
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To: Slings and Arrows

It took more time to formulate the questions, and the clever geeks who made them up knew the answers from the getgo, that is to say they aren’t so clever after all, than the time that is given the candidates to solve them.

Anyone can come up with the Jeopardy answers (which require questions from the contestants) just as anyone can come up with clever clues to a crossword puzzle.


168 posted on 08/05/2011 3:28:22 PM PDT by Revolting cat! (Let us prey!)
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To: Pete
You could do it in one if you guessed right. But the question says "have to use". I take that to mean the fewest number where you always end up with the right answer.

The bolded part in your comment above is critical. This question was asked by Goldman Sachs. They aren't asking the question to see if you can arrive at a number, but to figure out how you, as an individual, personally approach risk-taking.

The answer "3" indicates risk aversion; you're taking the safe path to arrive at the correct answer every time.

The answer "1" is also technically correct, but indicates a willingness to take risks.

The answer "0" is technically correct as well, if you want to indicate that you can use your own intuition (figuring out by feel which ball is heavier, without using the scale) to solve the problem.
169 posted on 08/05/2011 3:30:38 PM PDT by tanknetter
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To: taxcontrol
What is the smallest number divisible by 225 that consists of all 1’s and 0’s?

Don't over think the question; the answer is 2250 divided by 225 = 10. The answer is all 1s and 0s.

170 posted on 08/05/2011 3:36:28 PM PDT by SeaHawkFan
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To: RedQuill; Hoodat

Seems to me you turn one on and leave on for a long time. Then turn that one off. Turn one of the others on and go upstairs. The cold bulb is from the switch you never messed with.


171 posted on 08/05/2011 3:39:52 PM PDT by BufordP ("Drink me if you can't take a joke." -- Kool-aid)
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Comment #172 Removed by Moderator

To: bvw

I wouldn’t have done well om the Kirk question, I would’ve just punched the interviewer in the nose.


173 posted on 08/05/2011 3:53:48 PM PDT by Brett66 (Where government advances, and it advances relentlessly , freedom is imperiled -Janice Rogers Brown)
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To: Abathar
Capital One: How do you evaluate Subway’s five-foot long sub policy?

I would ask for clarification and if the interviewer meant to say the Subway 5-dollar foot-long promotion. I think this is a question is used to determine if you are actually paying attention.

174 posted on 08/05/2011 3:54:03 PM PDT by SeaHawkFan
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To: Brett66

Almost all the questions (excepting SIG’s and one other) I’ve seen are “proof of lemminghood” types.


175 posted on 08/05/2011 3:56:09 PM PDT by bvw
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To: SeaHawkFan

I’d ask CapOne a bunch of nasty questions designed to make the interviewer squirm if he had a soul.


176 posted on 08/05/2011 3:57:52 PM PDT by bvw
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To: bvw

The question isn’t designed to literally come up with a real world application to find the heaviest ball. It’s a down and dirty test to see if the candidate understands the information potential of the scale. The vast majority of applicants will see the scale as a binary device and proceed accordingly. Those who can correctly ascertain that the scale can provide three and not two possible results are a leg up on those who cannot.

Now the question I found interesting was the one involving the 25 race horses. Unless I’m missing something, there isn’t enough data to figure it out. I would need to know how many horses race at once. The simplist solution would be to race all 25 horses at once and get the top three, but I doubt that 25 horses can race at once. Which leaves me stuck until I can learn how many can be on a track at a given time.


177 posted on 08/05/2011 3:58:31 PM PDT by Melas (u)
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To: bvw

Re-write the algorythm of course.


178 posted on 08/05/2011 4:06:55 PM PDT by Professional Engineer (Gov. Perry is a solid conservative... as long as it's campaign season.)
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To: tanknetter
The answer "3" indicates risk aversion; you're taking the safe path to arrive at the correct answer every time.

False. The correct path will use two weights to arrive at the correct answer every time.

IMHO, you completelly missed what they're looking for. They're looking for the candidate who understands how to maximize the information from the scale to arrive at the correct answer 100% of the time.

The majority of applicants will see the scale as a device capable of giving binary information as you have done when you concluded that three attempts will put you on the safe path and yeild the correct answer 100% of the time.

However, the scale is capable of giving a trinary answer shortening the safe path that yeilds a correct answer 100% of the time from three attempts to two. That's what they're looking for.

179 posted on 08/05/2011 4:07:28 PM PDT by Melas (u)
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To: Melas
The statement:
The question isn’t designed to literally come up with a real world application to find the heaviest ball. It’s a down and dirty test to see if the candidate understands the information potential of the scale.
... is an assumption. A presumptive assumption. Even if you were the very person who wrote the test and how to score it, it would still be so.

When Goldman Sachs invented many of its derivative instruments they also ignored or were utterly ignorant of the presumptive assumptions that reality has now demonstrated and will continue to demonstrate that underlie their houses of cards.

180 posted on 08/05/2011 4:18:24 PM PDT by bvw
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