Why are you Best for this job? | How to Answer Job Interview Questions | Mock Interviews

31,628 views ・ 2019-06-16

Rachel's English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:00
Have you ever really made a mess of something at work?
0
0
3280
00:03
A potential employer might ask about this in an interview to hear about how you handled it,
1
3280
4680
00:07
to understand more about you as an employee.
2
7960
3040
00:11
Today we’ll study how to talk about mistakes at work in a way that can still impress your employer.
3
11000
5160
00:16
We’re going to study four job interviews, a teacher, a doctor, a social worker, and a marketing expert.
4
16160
6880
00:23
We’ll study how they answer common interview questions
5
23040
2920
00:25
to figure out how you can form your own compelling answers.
6
25960
3400
00:29
At the end, there will be a lesson for my non-native English speaking students
7
29360
3880
00:33
on some of the idioms that came up in answers.
8
33240
3180
00:36
The prompts we’ll study today are: tell me about a mistake you made at work and how you handled it,
9
36420
6020
00:42
talk about a time you exhibited leadership in your current position,
10
42440
3600
00:46
and tell us why you’re the right person for this job.
11
46040
3160
00:49
12
49200
3360
00:52
Everyone makes mistakes from time to time,
13
52560
2240
00:54
and you can still really impress your interviewer when talking about something you messed up.
14
54800
5140
00:59
Let’s hear how Adrienne, who works in marketing in the performing arts, handled this prompt.
15
59940
5200
01:05
A couple years ago, I was working on an email blast for a major initiative at my company
16
65140
5020
01:10
and this was one of those emails with an incredibly large list. We had about
17
70160
3660
01:13
thirty to forty thousand people receiving this email.
18
73820
3040
01:16
And even though we had a team of people checking and rechecking to make sure that everything was accurate,
19
76860
6100
01:22
once we hit send, and it was already out,
20
82960
2720
01:25
we received a message back from one of the people who received it that the link was incorrect.
21
85680
4440
01:30
And that is just the worst thing as someone sending out emails as a marketer, just to know that
22
90120
5200
01:35
you've messaged all these people to try to get them to do something, and the link is not the right link.
23
95320
5300
01:40
So immediately, I went and I spoke with my boss about it and we had a conversation about what was most
24
100620
4900
01:45
practical, as the next step to try to resolve this,
25
105520
3500
01:49
and we agreed that we should send out a follow-up email to people
26
109020
4400
01:53
to just let them know oops we we apologize that we sent the incorrect link, here's the correct link,
27
113420
5460
01:58
and thank you so much for your understanding.
28
118880
2600
02:01
And it worked out. It's funny how I sort of had forgotten about that until this question.
29
121480
4220
02:05
But it felt like such a big deal at the time.
30
125700
3100
02:08
So now, I'm a lot more meticulous with checking links
31
128800
2720
02:11
even when I know an entire team of other people have already tested and approved all of the details.
32
131520
6000
02:17
This is great. She gives one really specific example, and talks about how she resolved it.
33
137520
5580
02:23
She went straight to her supervisor and they discussed it together.
34
143100
3720
02:26
Let’s also talk about what she doesn’t do: she doesn’t blame someone else for this.
35
146820
4940
02:31
It could be tempting to say something like
36
151760
2700
02:34
“the person who was supposed to check all the links didn’t do her job”.
37
154460
3640
02:38
But remember, part of what someone is looking for here is how you talk about your mistake.
38
158100
4920
02:43
Blaming others or speaking ill of others will likely reflect poorly on you.
39
163020
4860
02:47
Don’t dwell on whose fault it was.
40
167880
2760
02:50
She then goes on to talk about having learned a lesson from it:
41
170640
3720
02:54
she says she’s now even more meticulous about checking the links in emails.
42
174360
5260
02:59
Let’s hear how Jeff, a doctor, answered this question.
43
179620
3260
03:02
So one of the mistakes that I made at work was not
44
182880
4440
03:07
getting an important certification that I needed to do my job in at the appropriate time.
45
187320
6260
03:13
Part of the reason behind that was that I was so busy doing many, many other things
46
193580
3620
03:17
that I didn't give it the priority that it needed.
47
197200
3020
03:20
It was an obvious important thing to finish in order to complete the work,
48
200220
5640
03:25
or to do the work that I that I have to do on a daily basis.
49
205860
3580
03:29
The way I rectified that was to realize that you can't just wait until the very end to kind of get things done.
50
209440
5840
03:35
You need to put steps in a process and finish those steps
51
215280
4140
03:39
as sort of mini goals in order to reach the final goal.
52
219420
3720
03:43
I also developed a priority list for my work, kind of listing from one to ten,
53
223140
6300
03:49
the things that I really need to focus on every day, every week, every month in order to get things done.
54
229440
7040
03:56
I’m impressed with the system Jeff put in place to make sure a mistake like this doesn’t happen again.
55
236480
5920
04:02
His system is detailed, and he described that detail.
56
242400
3440
04:05
Make sure you talk about what you’ve changed since making that mistake.
57
245840
3620
04:09
That can really impress a potential employer.
58
249460
3520
04:12
Dan is a social worker.
59
252980
1900
04:14
Let’s listen to how he answered the question.
60
254880
2480
04:17
So as a social worker, I think one of the things that's the hardest about my job is knowing when to say 'no'
61
257360
8800
04:26
and how to do that in a professional manner.
62
266160
3840
04:30
63
270000
960
04:30
Recently, I was working with a family, who elderly couple,
64
270960
4640
04:35
the the husband was bed bound with severe memory deficits, and the elderly wife was his only caretaker.
65
275600
7580
04:43
And doing home visits with them,
66
283180
3320
04:46
it was very touching and heartbreaking to see that she was doing her best to take care of him,
67
286500
5400
04:51
but really wasn't successful, and wasn't able to do it well.
68
291900
3460
04:55
She did not feel that way, she felt like she was doing what she needed to do for her husband,
69
295360
6460
05:01
and she wanted to keep him in home as long as possible.
70
301820
3020
05:04
71
304840
680
05:05
And I tried to meet her where she was and
72
305520
4580
05:10
to be there and be as supportive as possible in finding any kind of
73
310100
5460
05:15
outside services that would help her take care of her husband.
74
315560
3460
05:19
Ultimately, all of the things that I found didn't work for her, for one reason or another,
75
319020
5040
05:24
and later, another social worker who became involved,
76
324060
6180
05:30
reported the case to adult protective services,
77
330240
2780
05:33
which then initiated a court proceeding that then forced her to get him moved to an assisted living facility.
78
333020
11740
05:44
This seems kind of like a kind of a harsh thing to do but in hindsight,
79
344760
3360
05:48
it's what needed to happen, and it probably should have happened earlier,
80
348120
3380
05:51
than me trying to help her find solutions that that worked for her, because
81
351500
6140
05:57
it became clear that the longer that we work together, that she was.
82
357640
3380
06:01
There was no solution that worked for her. And she felt very trapped but just couldn't agree to anything.
83
361020
6080
06:07
So the courts coming in to help solve this was really the only way to go and I,
84
367100
5340
06:12
I think I should have recognized that earlier.
85
372440
2860
06:15
Here, as he talks about a mistake he made, Dan also really lets me know about one of his strengths.
86
375300
5460
06:20
He really wanted to work with this woman, to meet her where she was, and he tried everything he could to do so.
87
380760
6280
06:27
He was very empathetic, and as social worker, that’s an important trait to have.
88
387040
4980
06:32
In the end, the situation had to be handled differently.
89
392020
2880
06:34
But I appreciate that what led to this mistake was Dan’s big-heartedness.
90
394900
5000
06:39
As you think of past mistakes at work, try to think of ones that lead to specific,
91
399900
4960
06:44
real changes that you can talk about.
92
404860
2380
06:47
Try to think of mistakes that came from something like
93
407240
2900
06:50
too much empathy or working too hard
94
410140
2760
06:52
rather than being checked out or not engaged in what was happening at work.
95
412900
4560
06:57
Another common interview question is leadership.
96
417460
3520
07:00
Tell me about a time you exercised leadership, or showed leadership, at your job.
97
420980
5240
07:06
Let’s listen to how Adrienne, Dan, and Jeff answered this question.
98
426220
4080
07:10
In my last position, an area of leadership for me was when we
99
430300
4680
07:14
moved the entire organization over to a new online ticketing system.
100
434980
4620
07:19
And so this is a major undertaking that intersects with colleagues in a lot of different departments,
101
439600
5460
07:25
who have a lot of different conflicting priorities.
102
445060
2780
07:27
And so I, in order to push this through and get this ticketing system online,
103
447840
4820
07:32
I had to initiate conversations with colleagues in all different areas,
104
452660
5160
07:37
and really understand what they needed and what they were afraid of, and
105
457820
4140
07:41
try to make them comfortable with this new system,
106
461960
2600
07:44
and make sure that we had very clear timelines for them to submit all the materials that they needed to submit,
107
464560
6000
07:50
so we could make sure that they were covered with this new system.
108
470560
2820
07:53
And so it worked really well to just have really clear lines of communication,
109
473380
4580
07:57
and I was the one point person to really make sure that everything was happening on deadline.
110
477960
7220
08:05
Adrienne used the phrase ‘point person’.
111
485180
2860
08:08
This is the main contact, the leader.
112
488040
2380
08:10
So there were various different departments involved,
113
490420
2460
08:12
and she was the one person who was talking to all of them, keeping track of all of the parts of the project.
114
492880
5940
08:18
This is a great example.
115
498820
1340
08:20
It’s a big project, there were many people involved, and she does mention that she established very clear
116
500160
5960
08:26
communication and that the deadline was met.
117
506120
3020
08:29
So as a supervisor, I had a staff of nine, and in a previous position, I was working with the staff to try to
118
509140
8040
08:37
find ways to encourage them to promote their own learning, and to help them find leadership
119
517180
7480
08:44
roles within the organization.
120
524660
2560
08:47
So the organization I worked for had a lot of staff,
121
527220
4000
08:51
but we're having trouble finding people who were ready to move to the next level,
122
531220
4140
08:55
manager, administrator level positions.
123
535360
3380
08:58
So I was instrumental in helping to bring a program on board in which we identified
124
538740
5900
09:04
staff members that we then called senior staff, and gave them extra roles.
125
544640
5780
09:10
So on my team, I had a senior staff member who was responsible for helping me run team meetings,
126
550420
7400
09:17
helping me gather data, planning for team events,
127
557820
5400
09:23
looking at metrics, being part of performance improvement projects.
128
563220
4680
09:27
And I worked more one-on-one with this person
129
567900
5380
09:33
in our supervision to talk about ways in which they could really focus on their leadership style,
130
573280
10300
09:43
learning from other leaders,
131
583580
1760
09:45
being comfortable enough to ask questions in a safe environment where they could
132
585340
4300
09:49
really start to look at their job as a stepping stone to the next job.
133
589640
3960
09:53
And I'm happy to say that the
134
593600
3460
09:57
person that I worked with then got promoted on to a management position afterwards.
135
597060
4580
10:01
Great – Dan has an example where he was specifically leading a team.
136
601640
4080
10:05
He started a program to help meet one of the company’s goals,
137
605720
3120
10:08
and personally mentored an employee to move that person up to a leadership position.
138
608840
5600
10:14
Dan used the word ‘instrumental’.
139
614440
2780
10:17
I was instrumental in helping to bring a program on board.
140
617220
3820
10:21
Instrumental music is music with no vocals.
141
621040
3020
10:24
But when it’s used outside of the context of music, it means, something or someone that was influential,
142
624060
6280
10:30
very necessary to make something else happen.
143
630340
2580
10:32
It’s a great word to use to describe yourself in an interview.
144
632920
4440
10:37
Here are a couple sample sentences:
145
637360
2740
10:40
I was instrumental in ramping up our social media presence.
146
640100
4340
10:44
I played an instrumental role in developing our best-selling product.
147
644440
4240
10:48
So I would say one of the specific moments where I showed leadership was when I brought together two
148
648680
5640
10:54
different coalitions in our community that were working on trying to prevent childhood lead poisoning.
149
654320
6000
11:00
There was a health system that developed a coalition, and then there was a
150
660320
3900
11:04
community-based of providers stakeholders that were also dealing with the same issue.
151
664220
6280
11:10
The leadership piece, what I felt was important was that there really didn't need to be two separate
152
670500
5360
11:15
groups working on the same issue within our community.
153
675860
3620
11:19
So what I decided to do was to bring those two together
154
679480
3140
11:22
and to enhance the purpose and power of two groups coming together on a singular issue.
155
682620
8680
11:31
Great, Jeff gives a really concrete example of one time, one project where he was a leader,
156
691300
5900
11:37
he saw something he could improve, he took the initiative, and he did it,
157
697200
3780
11:40
pulling two important groups together to more effectively solve a problem in his community.
158
700980
5200
11:46
As you think of your answer to this prompt, make sure you’re getting really specific
159
706180
4180
11:50
– if Jeff had said something like, I show leadership when I bring groups of people together –
160
710360
5340
11:55
that’s a generic answer, it’s a claim with no example to back it up.
161
715700
4160
11:59
Make sure you’re answering with examples from your past.
162
719860
3740
12:03
A really common question to be asked is, why should we hire you for this job?
163
723600
4340
12:07
Or, why are you the best person for this job?
164
727940
3360
12:11
Here’s a chance to really sell yourself,
165
731300
2540
12:13
and with this question, don’t worry about sounding arrogant or like a know-it-all.
166
733840
4860
12:18
Let’s listen to how Adrienne answered it.
167
738700
2360
12:21
I think I'm really a perfect fit for this marketing director position at this performing arts center because
168
741060
5560
12:26
I have the deep understanding of New York city's classical music world and I know the nuance of
169
746620
6220
12:32
communicating with more traditional audiences about this kind of music.
170
752840
4600
12:37
But then I also have the really strong digital marketing chops where I really understand video strategy,
171
757440
6180
12:43
and online ad strategy, and the richness of audience understanding, and how important that is, and I think
172
763620
6680
12:50
bringing all those things together can really take the marketing strategy to the next level here.
173
770300
4760
12:55
If we think about ways to optimize and improve some of the digital marketing approaches,
174
775060
5280
13:00
I think it's really gonna make a huge impact here.
175
780340
3540
13:03
Her answer focuses on two things:
176
783880
1920
13:05
understanding and skill.
177
785800
1940
13:07
And for what she’s doing, those two things really matter.
178
787740
2760
13:10
If you had someone
179
790500
1140
13:11
with great marketing skills who didn’t really understand the classical music scene in New York City,
180
791640
4920
13:16
then those skills couldn’t be put to good use.
181
796560
2820
13:19
Think about what's needed at the job.
182
799380
2040
13:21
Look at the job description.
183
801420
1680
13:23
Pick out the most important points,
184
803100
1880
13:24
and be able to concisely and convincingly talk about how you’re great at them.
185
804980
4920
13:29
This is not the time to bring up a weakness,
186
809900
2700
13:32
focus only on what you do very well.
187
812600
3040
13:35
Think about what makes you different from other candidates.
188
815640
2920
13:38
what do you think you can do better than anyone else applying for the job?
189
818560
4240
13:42
I think I'm the best person for this position because I have a lot of clinical experience.
190
822800
4620
13:47
I've been in the field for over 12 years, working with homeless folks, mentally ill folks, impatient patients,
191
827420
9700
13:57
the veteran population.
192
837120
3300
14:00
I've also got a lot of supervisory experience under my belt so I've supervised two different clinical teams,
193
840420
5580
14:06
social workers, nurses, and I'm a self-starter, I'm a team player, I take direction and I value feedback,
194
846000
9680
14:15
I'm comfortable with critical feedback.
195
855680
2740
14:18
I'm a self-starter and I really want to learn and grow.
196
858420
3240
14:21
And I'm very excited about this position.
197
861660
2660
14:24
Dan got specific at the beginning talking about his experience.
198
864320
3520
14:27
He didn’t just say, I have a lot of experience,
199
867840
2680
14:30
but he said exactly the kinds of people he has experience working with:
200
870520
3820
14:34
the homeless, veterans, and so on.
201
874340
2440
14:36
He also got specific about his experience as a supervisor, supervising two teams.
202
876780
5920
14:42
Then he went into a couple of personality traits:
203
882700
2660
14:45
self-starter, team player, takes critical feedback well.
204
885360
3680
14:49
It’s okay to add a few of these kinds of things, but make sure it’s not all you say.
205
889040
4380
14:53
As with all questions, give detail.
206
893420
3100
14:56
How did Lisa answer this question?
207
896520
2240
14:58
One of my strengths, which I think makes me great for this position, is that I am a positive thinker.
208
898760
7620
15:06
I don't complain. I don't look at the negative. I try to focus on the positive. Also, I'm a team member.
209
906380
6620
15:13
I like to work with other people.
210
913000
2860
15:15
I love to help other people.
211
915860
2280
15:18
And I tend to have a habit of setting high expectations for myself.
212
918140
7020
15:25
So I think these qualities make me great for this position.
213
925160
3720
15:28
Here, Lisa talked about traits in her personality that make her good for the position.
214
928880
4300
15:33
they’re certainly things that matter in the work place,
215
933180
2420
15:35
but I think Adrienne’s and Dan’s answers were a little stronger because they focused more on experience.
216
935600
5700
15:41
That speaks to what they’ve done.
217
941300
1880
15:43
Traits speak generically to what you WILL DO in a position.
218
943180
3720
15:46
Employers are more interested in hearing what you HAVE DONE,
219
946900
3320
15:50
and how that will translate into the job they’re hiring you for.
220
950220
3720
15:53
Speaking to your specific experience is a great way to sell yourself in this question.
221
953940
4540
15:58
Let’s hear Jeff’s answer.
222
958480
1540
16:00
So I think I'm best suited for this position for several reasons.
223
960020
3800
16:03
One is that I do take a broad view and I feel like I can see
224
963820
3960
16:07
a little bit into the future enough to see where we need to go and where we need to head
225
967780
4160
16:11
in order to achieve the goals that we want to set for ourselves.
226
971940
3240
16:15
I also feel like I'm very relational, and I feel that that is one of the key elements of working within teams,
227
975180
7740
16:22
because basically nothing gets done now unless you can work within a team and work well with others.
228
982920
4980
16:27
So I feel that being able to envision into the future,
229
987900
2820
16:30
to work well within the team that you're situated in at the time, that's a good combination for doing well in this job.
230
990720
6640
16:37
Jeff also lists two traits,
231
997360
1980
16:39
first, that he can take a broad view, that he’s a visionary who can see greater goals for the organization.
232
999340
6100
16:45
It’s a good answer, but if he was able to get specific with an example of doing this in the past,
233
1005440
5460
16:50
that would add more detail.
234
1010900
1960
16:52
He also speaks to working well within a team,
235
1012860
2500
16:55
and comments that nothing can happen without the ability to work within a team.
236
1015360
4140
16:59
I like this extra thought he added, it shows that he’s really invested in working in a team for practical reasons,
237
1019500
6700
17:06
to get care delivered to patients.
238
1026200
2420
17:08
You have a lot to think about as you come up with your answer for this question.
239
1028620
4260
17:12
Speak to your strengths and your unique experience or knowledge.
240
1032880
3760
17:16
Speak to past achievements and how you can do the same or better at this new position.
241
1036640
5060
17:21
Do speak with details, but watch the timing.
242
1041700
3200
17:24
Keep your answer to around a minute.
243
1044900
2180
17:27
Anything much longer than that and you run the risk of rambling,
244
1047080
3460
17:30
which waters down the strength of your answer.
245
1050540
3300
17:33
In the next video, we’re going to talk about something really tricky: discussing salary in an interview, and,
246
1053840
6040
17:39
after you get the job, negotiating your salary.
247
1059880
3340
17:43
For my non-native students, we’re going to get to your English lesson in just a minute.
248
1063220
4140
17:47
If you haven’t already, be sure to click the subscribe button and the bell for notifications.
249
1067360
5040
17:52
I make new videos on the English language and American culture every Tuesday
250
1072400
3920
17:56
and have over 600 videos on my channel to date
251
1076320
3180
17:59
focusing on listening comprehension and accent reduction.
252
1079500
3460
18:02
While you’re waiting for next week’s video, a great next step would be to check out this “get started playlist.”
253
1082960
6460
18:09
Now for the English lesson.
254
1089420
1620
18:11
I want to study Adrienne’s answer to the question, why are you the best person for this position?
255
1091040
5700
18:16
We’ll go over two idioms she used that you might not be familiar with.
256
1096740
4300
18:21
Adrienne, why are you the best person for this job?
257
1101040
3400
18:24
Because I have the deep understanding of New York city's classical music world and I know the nuance
258
1104440
6860
18:31
of communicating with more traditional audiences about this kind of music.
259
1111300
4940
18:36
But then I also have the really strong digital marketing chops–
260
1116240
3420
18:39
She has digital marketing chops. What does ‘chops’ mean here?
261
1119660
4140
18:43
This is a word that can be used to apply to a skill.
262
1123800
2980
18:46
When someone has ‘chops’, they excel at the skill.
263
1126780
3820
18:50
Some example sentences: He’s got serious compositional chops – he writes great music.
264
1130600
6280
18:56
I don’t have the coding chops to apply to that position.
265
1136880
3440
19:00
I developed my chops as a writer in grad school.
266
1140320
3220
19:03
Let’s listen to how Adrienne used it again.
267
1143540
2760
19:06
But then I also have the really strong digital marketing chops where I really understand video strategy,
268
1146300
6100
19:12
and online ad strategy–
269
1152400
1520
19:13
She also used the phrase ‘take it to the next level’.
270
1153920
3400
19:17
And I think bringing all those things together can really take the marketing strategy to the next level here.
271
1157320
5480
19:22
To take something to the 'next level' means to improve it, or to go beyond what was expected.
272
1162800
5100
19:27
Some examples:
273
1167900
1080
19:28
She took her training to the next level when she stayed after practice to work on her free throws.
274
1168980
5680
19:34
Their vegan dishes are top-notch, they really take them to the next level.
275
1174660
5240
19:39
Go to Youglish.com and do a search on these two terms.
276
1179900
3240
19:43
See how others use them in context to help deepen your understanding.
277
1183140
4440
19:47
That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
278
1187580
4820
19:52
279
1192400
21080
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7