Question 6 The “Silent Treatment”
TRAPS: Beware – if you are unprepared for this
question, you will probably not handle it right and possibly blow the
interview. Thank goodness most interviewers don’t employ it. It’s
normally used by those determined to see how you respond under stress.
Here’s how it works:
You answer an interviewer’s question and then, instead of asking
another, he just stares at you in a deafening silence.
You wait, growing a bit uneasy, and there he sits, silent as Mt. Rushmore,
as if he doesn’t believe what you’ve just said, or perhaps
making you feel that you’ve unwittingly violated some cardinal rule
of interview etiquette.
When you get this silent treatment after answering a particularly difficult
question , such as “tell me about your weaknesses”, its intimidating
effect can be most disquieting, even to polished job hunters.
Most unprepared candidates rush in to fill the void of silence, viewing
prolonged, uncomfortable silences as an invitation to clear up the previous
answer which has obviously caused some problem. And that’s what
they do – ramble on, sputtering more and more information, sometimes
irrelevant and often damaging, because they are suddenly playing the role
of someone who’s goofed and is now trying to recoup. But since the
candidate doesn’t know where or how he goofed, he just keeps talking,
showing how flustered and confused he is by the interviewer’s unmovable
silence.
BEST ANSWER: Like a primitive tribal mask, the Silent
Treatment loses all it power to frighten you once you refuse to be intimidated.
If your interviewer pulls it, keep quiet yourself for a while and then
ask, with sincere politeness and not a trace of sarcasm, “Is there
anything else I can fill in on that point?” That’s all there
is to it.
Whatever you do, don’t let the Silent Treatment intimidate you
into talking a blue streak, because you could easily talk yourself out
of the position.
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