Q16. Tell
me about a situation when your work was criticized.
TRAPS: This
is a tough question because it’s a more clever and subtle way
to get you to admit to a weakness. You can’t dodge it by pretending
you’ve never been criticized. Everybody has been. Yet it can be
quite damaging to start admitting potential faults and failures that
you’d just as soon leave buried.
This question is also intended to probe how well you accept criticism
and direction.
BEST
ANSWER: Begin by emphasizing the extremely positive feedback
you’ve gotten throughout your career and (if it’s true)
that your performance reviews have been uniformly excellent.
Of course, no one is perfect and you always welcome suggestions on how
to improve your performance. Then, give an example of a not-too-damaging
learning experience from early in your career and relate the ways this
lesson has since helped you. This demonstrates that you learned from
the experience and the lesson is now one of the strongest breastplates
in your suit of armor.
If you are pressed for a criticism from a recent position, choose something
fairly trivial that in no way is essential to your successful performance.
Add that you’ve learned from this, too, and over the past several
years/months, it’s no longer an area of concern because you now
make it a regular practice to…etc.
Another way to answer this question would be to describe your intention
to broaden your master of an area of growing importance in your field.
For example, this might be a computer program you’ve been meaning
to sit down and learn… a new management technique you’ve
read about…or perhaps attending a seminar on some cutting-edge
branch of your profession.
Again, the key is to focus on something not essential to your brilliant
performance but which adds yet another dimension to your already impressive
knowledge base.