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Previously on "Perm Role - Contractors Interviewing"
I interview candidates for client permy roles pretty frequently, I never see them as competition.
In my experience clients usually see the contractor as a subject matter expert and better able to evaluate the true level of the candidates technical skills and knowledge. I can spot a bull sh*tter / blagger within a couple of questions
I did some interviewing for the NHS for BI contract roles and was actually shocked when on two separate occasions candidates answered their phones during an interview.
We also had one chap who, when asked what he understood by the term Business Intelligence said,
"It's about seeing pens for sale in one shop at £1 and in another shop for 70p and buying the cheaper ones!"
After that, it was a short interview
Was his previous role working on a checkout in ASDA?
I did some interviewing for the NHS for BI contract roles and was actually shocked when on two separate occasions candidates answered their phones during an interview.
We also had one chap who, when asked what he understood by the term Business Intelligence said,
"It's about seeing pens for sale in one shop at £1 and in another shop for 70p and buying the cheaper ones!"
After that, it was a short interview
Ha! I thought you said 'penis' for a minute there.
I did some interviewing for the NHS for BI contract roles and was actually shocked when on two separate occasions candidates answered their phones during an interview.
We also had one chap who, when asked what he understood by the term Business Intelligence said,
"It's about seeing pens for sale in one shop at £1 and in another shop for 70p and buying the cheaper ones!"
I watched the IT crowd the other week... at an interview the woman was asked "What does IT stand for"... she didn't know, and for the life of me, I couldn't remember either....
it's when places call it "ICT". that confused me for a while!
I've met people who claim to be competent developers with database experience, yet don't know the expansion of SQL
Well, I know what it stands for but I do think that knowing that is incidental to being able to code it. Though as a general rule for a technical role I'd want people who are so curious by nature that they want to know what every abbreviation stands for, and probably have wanted to know that since about age 5.
I interviewed somone who turned up drunk - he decided to show up after his leaving do at his last place. Arrogant fker too (though could have been the booze talking!). CV went straight in the bin after that.
The Cheeky Blighter - he didnt even offer you a wee drink at the interview ?
Quite Right Sir - leave his name and address in the bin.
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