by EviLTwiN on Thu Mar 03, 2005 9:19 pm
[s]Koala Boy wrote on 20:26, 3rd Mar 2005:
I'm applying for graduate positions in financial services firms who get hundreds of applicants per place.
These firms get lots of people for each place, and it's well known that there is little difference between a high 2:1 and a 1st when it comes to being good at a job - it's completely different discipline from university. So given all these applicants, most of whom will have lots of extra curriculars etc, how are they going to differentiate?
Well by posing questions you haven't prepared for and seeing how you react. If you meet a client this could happen, and you have to be able to not just deal with it, but deal with it confidently and effectively. This is just one of many reasons why these questions are important.
Of course if you prepare tons you can have answers ready for most (but not all), which is ok as it shows you've not only done preperation but you've done the RIGHT preparation, without being told to.
Ultimately they get many great applicants, and they could all answer the easy questions well. If you want a job, you have to be able to answer everything, and in style. And that takes practice, just like anything you'll be asked to do in a job.
[hr]
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