Interview questions

10 Interview Questions That Successful CEOs Love to Ask

Photo of Richard Branson smiling with his arms up and holding a model plane.

When you’re running a company, every second counts. A successful CEO doesn’t have the luxury to spend a lot of time chitchatting over lunch. If they’re experienced, they’ve likely learned how to drill down quickly in order to find the most important skills or character traits they’re looking for in a new hire.

Here are some of the best interview questions current CEOs say they would ask, if they only had time for one single question:

Question 1: How would you describe yourself in one word?

Dara Richardson-Heron, former CEO of YWCA, always asks job seekers this question because she feels “the best candidates are the ones who know exactly who they are.” However, Richardson-Heron doesn't judge people on the word they choose. She’s more interested in discovering how people define themselves. The best candidates, she explains, take some time to reflect and consider the question before answering.

Question 2: What is the last thing you’ve learned on the job?

Andrew Felev, CEO of Wrike, likes this question, because it measures a candidate’s curiosity and passion to learn. He listens for how recently they learned something new and how challenging it was. He believes the best candidates are always learning new things that they aren’t required to learn, and by doing so they prove to be workers who will go above and beyond others.

Question 3: What didn’t you get a chance to include on your resume?

In his book, "The Virgin Way: Everything I Know About Leadership," Virgin Group founder Richard Branson says he doesn’t put a lot of faith in the typical job interview. A good resume is always important, he writes, “but if you were going to hire by what they say about themselves on paper, you wouldn't need to waste time on an interview." He likes to dig deeper than the resume and find out what someone is really passionate about that might not be appropriate corporate resume fodder.

Question 4: How long are you willing to fail at this job before you succeed?

This is Jon Sterling, co-founder of Interview Circuit’s favorite question because it throws people off - they often can’t just come up with something obvious that will instantly satisfy the interviewer. Sterling says a good candidate will express that they’re willing to stick with the job for as long as it takes to succeed. Weaker prospects will dodge the question, by changing the topic or sidestepping the question in some other way.

Question 5: What’s in the newspaper today?

It may sound insignificant, but Deborah Bial, president of the Posse Foundation, says it’s the small talk that often reveals what the person is really going to be like to work with. She wants to know what someone thinks, how someone thinks, and how they express what it is they’re thinking. In order to do that effectively, you have to get into a discussion about something. “I want to assess how interesting someone is as a person,” she says, “in addition to how effective they might be at work.”

Question 6: What makes you really special? If you were writing 500 words about yourself, what would you say?

Penny Herscher, former CEO of First Rain loves this question, because she says it helps her measure three traits in a candidate: I.Q., integrity and energy. She has come to believe that IQ, integrity and energy are three traits you can’t teach someone. She likes to get a candidate talking and then sit back and listen.

Question 7: What percentage of your life do you control?

Mitch Rothschild, founder of Vitals, chooses this topic because it helps him understand how someone feels about the world around them. Whether someone can force change to happen, or just lets change happen to them says a lot about a person, he explains. Because Rothschild runs a small company, he says he always wants to hire people who can make change happen.

Question 8. Tell me something that’s true, that almost nobody agrees with you on.

Peter Thiel, PayPal CoFounder and President of Clarium Capital, asks this question because he’s looking for people who aren’t afraid to speak their minds. This question is a great test for originality of thinking, he says, and it also measures a candidate’s courage in speaking up in a difficult context. While many people believe that being original is easy, Thiel feels it’s actually really hard to be original, and when you find it it’s really valuable.

Question 9: Describe a day where you’ve just had the greatest working day of your life. You’re driving home and you’re on cloud nine. What was it about that working day that made you so happy?

Lew Cirne of New Relic uses this question to uncover someone’s passion and enjoyment for their work. He strongly believes that people who are doing what they love to do will execute at a higher level than others.

Question 10: So (insert name), what's your story?

Richard Funess, Finn Partners' managing partner asks this question because he enjoys the fact that there is no correct answer. Instead, he says, it always demands a creative response. Whatever a candidate answers will tell you a lot about their character, imagination and inventiveness. Invariably the answer is the beginning of a story, and in today's world the ability to tell a story and create a feeling is critical. On the negative side, if someone acts defensively or pauses too long before answering this question, Funess feels they may take things too literally.

In the end, what’s important to remember is that it’s not just about finding the right interview questions, but also learning how to listen and appropriately interpret a candidate’s response in order to find the right fit for your company.

*Image by Hardo Müller

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