Q40. What
would you do if a fellow executive on your own corporate level wasn’t
pulling his/her weight…and this was hurting your department?
TRAPS: This
question and other hypothetical ones test your sense of human relations
and how you might handle office politics.
BEST
ANSWER: Try to gauge the political style of the firm
and be guided accordingly. In general, fall back on universal principles
of effective human relations – which in the end, embody the way
you would like to be treated in a similar circumstance.
Example: “Good human relations would call for me to go directly
to the person and explain the situation, to try to enlist his help in
a constructive, positive solution. If I sensed resistance, I would be
as persuasive as I know how to explain the benefits we can all gain
from working together, and the problems we, the company and our customers
will experience if we don’t.”
POSSIBLE FOLLOW-UP QUESTION: And what would you do
if he still did not change his ways?
ANSWER: “One thing I wouldn’t do is let
the problem slide, because it would only get worse and overlooking it
would set a bad precedent. I would try again and again and again, in
whatever way I could, to solve the problem, involving wider and wider
circles of people, both above and below the offending executive and
including my own boss if necessary, so that everyone involved can see
the rewards for teamwork and the drawbacks of non-cooperation.”
“I might add that I’ve never yet come across a situation
that couldn’t be resolved by harnessing others in a determined,
constructive effort.”
.