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  1. #1
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    I will post them all, because some of them are interesting.

    Some companies ask candidates to describe their strengths and weaknesses during a job interview, while others like global consulting firm Bain & Company, ask applicants to figure out how many ping pong balls can fit into the overhead compartment of a 747 plane.

    In recent years, tech companies like Google have developed a reputation for conducting tough interviews, but according to a recent survey by Glassdoor.com, a job search engine, it's really consulting groups like Bain & Company that ask candidates the most difficult questions.

    Glassdoor analyzed employee reviews for dozens of companies on its site to pinpoint the organizations with the most daunting interviews and found consulting firms dominated the very top of the list, while Google ranked down at No. 21, just behind fellow tech giants eBay and Amazon.

    So what is it that makes interviewing at a consulting company so difficult?

    "With consulting companies, the questions aren't just about your resume. It's also situational problems that job candidates have to reason through to find a solution," said Samantha Zupan, a spokesperson for Glassdoor. "And we all know it's really stressful to have to go deep into those questions and try to shine while coming up with an answer."

    Just because these companies have tough interviews doesn't make them bad places to work. In fact, just the opposite seems to be true. Glassdoor's reviews found that employees were generally satisfied with most of the companies on this list, despite the difficult interview process. As Zupan points out, these tough interview questions arguably help companies find the most suitable workers, and help workers determine if the company is right for them so that both are more satisfied in the long run.

    Here are the 10 companies with the hardest interview questions, ranked on a scale of one to five, with five being the hardest, along with some sample questions from each company, as provided to Glassdoor by their employees. Start preparing for the interview now.


    BP
    BP may be infamous for other reasons, but it turns out the oil company is also notorious for its job interviews.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.5

    "How many volts does it take to power an offshore rig?" -- For an engineering internship.

    "If you had to change a tire how would you do it?" -- For a mechanical engineering position.

    Red Ventures
    This South Carolina-based marketing group boasts that it has been called the next Google, but in reality, the company has surpassed Google, at least in terms of the interview process. However, unlike some of the other companies on this list, its questions often veer toward the eccentric rather than problem solving.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.5

    "If you were an animal, what animal would you be?" -- For a regional account representative.

    "Tell me a joke." -- For a sales agent.

    A.T. Kearney
    A.T. Kearney is the first of several consulting firms to make the list, and focuses mainly on working with companies to be more socially responsible, perhaps most notably by improving their environmental sustainability.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.5

    "What companies in the Polish energy sector do you know?" -- For a business analyst position.

    "How big is the market size for wheelchairs in Shanghai?" -- For a business analyst position.

    Teach for America
    Teach for America is known for being one of the most challenging -- though rewarding -- experiences a young adult can undertake, training recent college graduates to teach in low-income public schools around the country. Given the stress that comes with the job, it should come as little surprise that the organization would have a particularly difficult interview process to weed out applicants.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.5

    "You want to take the third graders on a field trip to the zoo, but there is no extra funding to do so. You must ask the principal to reconsider and allow your students to go on the field trip. Explain how you would persuade the principal." -- For a teaching position.

    "Can you think of anything that might make you leave TFA earlier than your two-year commitment?" -- For a teaching position.

    Palantir Technologies
    One of the few technology companies to rank near the top of the list, Palantir specializes in putting out software to help governments and financial organizations analyze data.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.5

    "You have a 10x10x10 rubix cube. You paint the outside. How many cubes have paint on them?" -- For an embedded analyst position.

    "You are outside a room. Inside the room there are two light bulbs. One light bulb is on all the time, the other light bulb only turns on when you open the door. How do you determine which light bulb is on all the time?" -- For an engineering position.

    Boston Consulting
    This Boston-based consulting group often ranks as one of the best companies to work for, and indeed, Glassdoor's data show high levels of employee satisfaction here, with the average worker giving the company a four rating overall. Still, the interview questions range from quirky to brain busters and will likely make candidates sweat in their seats.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.6

    "Estimate the market size of IVF treatment in Sweden." -- For a management consulting position.

    "Why do you like singing?" -- For a consulting associate.


    Bain & Company
    As we mentioned in the beginning, this is one consulting group that really knows how to ask a hard question.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.6

    "Help me estimate how many car dealerships there are in the United States." -- For a consultant position.

    "What is the revenue of an inner city Sydney gym?" -- For an associate consultant position.

    Cree
    Cree produces LED light fixtures and bulbs and is the only other tech company to rank high on Glassdoor's list. Its questions are particularly fascinating.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.7

    "How is the pothole formed?" -- For a science position.

    "How many barbers would you need in a city of 1 million?" -- For a process engineer.

    Jane Street Capital
    It's not just consulting groups and tech companies that pose difficult questions. Jane Street Capital, a trading firm with offices in New York, London and Hong Kong, knows how to grill job candidates better than most. Its questions of choice focus on math skills.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.7

    "What's 26 times 27?" -- For a capital trader position.

    "What is the expected number of flips of a coin to simulate a six-sided die?" -- For a capital assistant trader position.

    McKinsey & Company
    Of all the major companies, none poses a more challenging interview than McKinsey & Company, a global consulting group that helps big businesses manage customers, developer marketing strategies and handle mergers and acquisitions. Since employees at this company play such a crucial role advising other businesses, it stands to reason that they need to be highly qualified, hence the tough questions.

    Interview Difficulty Rating: 3.9

    "A Canadian beer manufacturer notices that when they increase the price of beer, other drinks' consumption goes up. How will you predict the change in quan y bought based on change in price?" -- For an analytics specialist.

    "A mom-and-pop music shop wants to grow with stiff compe ion. How should they go about it? Calculate customer lifetime value." -- For a marketing professional.

    http://financiallyfit.yahoo.com/fina...view-questions

    ---------------------------------------------

  2. #2
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    The answer to the Rubik's cube question:

    620

    (two sides of 100 each, with four sides of 80 (100 minus two rows of 10 that were already counted in the first two sides), assuming by "cubes" they meant the little squares that aren't quite cubes that comprise the parts of a Rubik's cube.


    (highlight to see spoiler)

  3. #3
    GFY I. Hustle's Avatar
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    Sunuva
    How did you know I have an interview today and that I am already nervous?

  4. #4
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    "What is the expected number of flips of a coin to simulate a six-sided die?" -- For a capital assistant trader position.
    The answer to this one is

    Three.

    First one decides 1-3 or 4-6
    Second one decides 1-2 or 2-3 (4-5 or 5-6)
    Third one decides 1 or 2, 2 or 3, 4 or 5, 5 or 6


    As far as I can figure.

  5. #5
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Sunuva
    How did you know I have an interview today and that I am already nervous?
    You're welcome.

    Be yourself. Answer honestly, and not what you think they want to hear.

  6. #6
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    (duplicate post)

  7. #7
    Scrumtrulescent
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    You are outside a room. Inside the room there are two light bulbs. One light bulb is on all the time, the other light bulb only turns on when you open the door. How do you determine which light bulb is on all the time?" -- For an engineering position.
    Enter the room and close the door behind you.

    "What is the expected number of flips of a coin to simulate a six-sided die?" -- For a capital assistant trader position.
    3. A 6 sided dice has 6 possible outcomes. A coinflip has 2. 6 / 2 = 3.

    "How many barbers would you need in a city of 1 million?" -- For a process engineer.
    I'd assume everyone gets 1 haircut a month. I'd assume 1 barber can give 20 haircuts a day. 12 million haircuts in a year / 20 a day = 600,000 barber work days a year. Assume a barber works 300 days a year (to keep the math simple) equals 2,000 barbers.
    Last edited by coyotes_geek; 07-12-2011 at 09:49 AM.

  8. #8
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Enter the room and close the door behind you.
    That was my first answer as well.


    Also occurred to me:

    Alternately, one could simply walk in and see which bulb is hotter, if it were an old school incandescant.
    Ask for the wiring specs.
    To be able to switch this it would require some sort of trigger. If the trigger were in the door frame, just reach over and press it while the door is open.

    It was a very open ended question, so one would hope they weren't expecting just one answer.

  9. #9
    Your so smart Online. Frenzy's Avatar
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    If Google ask questions like this can't you say "let me use your fantastic site to answer all your questions,one min"

  10. #10
    Scrumtrulescent
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    That was my first answer as well.


    Also occurred to me:

    Alternately, one could simply walk in and see which bulb is hotter, if it were an old school incandescant.
    Ask for the wiring specs.
    To be able to switch this it would require some sort of trigger. If the trigger were in the door frame, just reach over and press it while the door is open.

    It was a very open ended question, so one would hope they weren't expecting just one answer.
    It's about the thought process, not the actual answer. Did the candidate find a simple solution to a complicated problem? Did the candidate take a methodical, scientific approach? Did the candidate get flustered and give up?

    That's pretty much the common theme among all these questions. How do you approach solving problems.

  11. #11
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    It's about the thought process, not the actual answer. Did the candidate find a simple solution to a complicated problem? Did the candidate take a methodical, scientific approach? Did the candidate get flustered and give up?

    That's pretty much the common theme among all these questions. How do you approach solving problems.
    Yup. Some are knowledge based though:
    "A Canadian beer manufacturer notices that when they increase the price of beer, other drinks' consumption goes up. How will you predict the change in quan y bought based on change in price?" -- For an analytics specialist.
    That captures the concepts in economics like price elasticity and subs ution, so even if you can't get the answer, they would probably give you some cred for recognizing the nature of the question.

    This ain't grandpa's job interviews, that's for sure.

  12. #12
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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    "Tell me a joke." -- For a sales agent.
    A Chinaman goes to see his optometrist; the doctor tells him "Wong, you have a cataract".

    "No I don't; I drive a Rincoln", says Wong.

  13. #13
    Orange Whip? Orange Whip? Viva Las Espuelas's Avatar
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    42 long. 38?

  14. #14
    Veteran hater's Avatar
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    2 penguins are walkin on the the ice.

    one turns to the other and says "you look like you are wearing a tux"
    the other answers "maybe I am"

  15. #15
    Believe.
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    Having been through this whole process not too long ago myself, really the best way is to go for plenty of interviews. Memorizing from google really is not a good way to impress them, at best you sound generic, at worst they know you just repeating word for word an answer they heard before.

  16. #16
    GFY I. Hustle's Avatar
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    two rednecks are walking down a country road and come upon a dog licking his genitals. Cosmic Cowboy looks at the other and says "Gee, I sho wish i could do that." The other responds "He'll bite you."

  17. #17
    The Timeless One Leetonidas's Avatar
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    A Chinaman goes to see his optometrist; the doctor tells him "Wong, you have a cataract".

    "No I don't; I drive a Rincoln", says Wong.
    Raugh out roud!

  18. #18
    The D.R.A. Drachen's Avatar
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    rmao!

    Oh and Dude, Chinaman is not the prefered nomenclature, asian american, please.

  19. #19
    GFY I. Hustle's Avatar
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    rmao!

    Oh and Dude, Chinaman is not the prefered nomenclature, asian american, please.
    He right. They no rike when you pray joke. Oh sure it ok for them to put peepee in your coke but carr them a chinaman and all herr breaks roose.


  20. #20
    Linger Ficking Good! CuckingFunt's Avatar
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    He right. They no rike when you pray joke. Oh sure it ok for them to put peepee in your coke but carr them a chinaman and all herr breaks roose.

  21. #21
    The D.R.A. Drachen's Avatar
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    He right. They no rike when you pray joke. Oh sure it ok for them to put peepee in your coke but carr them a chinaman and all herr breaks roose.

    Dude, you're being very unDude.

  22. #22
    hope and change
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    3. A 6 sided dice has 6 possible outcomes. A coinflip has 2. 6 / 2 = 3.
    third flip of the coin = 8 possible outcomes, 4th = 16, etc.

    you'd have to do it randomguy's way
    I'd assume everyone gets 1 haircut a month. I'd assume 1 barber can give 20 haircuts a day. 12 million haircuts in a year / 20 a day = 600,000 barber work days a year. Assume a barber works 300 days a year (to keep the math simple) equals 2,000 barbers.
    most women and children and some men don't use "barbers"
    plus what percentage of people get haircuts from their wives or shave their heads or are bald...

  23. #23
    GFY I. Hustle's Avatar
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    Dude! The chinaman is not the issue here!

  24. #24
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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    The answer to this one is

    Three.

    First one decides 1-3 or 4-6
    Second one decides 1-2 or 2-3 (4-5 or 5-6)
    Third one decides 1 or 2, 2 or 3, 4 or 5, 5 or 6


    As far as I can figure.
    I don't think that's correct. Let's say Heads means lower half, Tails means upper half.

    To get a 1 you'd need HHH, whose probability (assuming a fair coin) is 1/2*1/2*1/2 = 1/8 (not 1/6). By contrast a 2 could be realized with either HHT or HTH, giving a probability of 1/8 + 1/8 = 1/4. That method would replicate a pretty biased die. Without looking I don't know a good answer though.

  25. #25
    Scrumtrulescent
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    I don't think that's correct. Let's say Heads means lower half, Tails means upper half.

    To get a 1 you'd need HHH, whose probability (assuming a fair coin) is 1/2*1/2*1/2 = 1/8 (not 1/6). By contrast a 2 could be realized with either HHT or HTH, giving a probability of 1/8 + 1/8 = 1/4. That method would replicate a pretty biased die. Without looking I don't know a good answer though.
    Nice catch. I botched it too.

    On my second attempt, I'll say it would take 5 flips.

    1 H = 1
    2 H = 2
    3 H = 3
    4 H = 4
    5 H = 5
    0 H = 6

    edit: argh. that doesn't seem right either since the odds of flipping all heads or all tails would be 1 / 2^5, or 0.03125. Certainly not .167.

    My final answer is going to be "trick question". You can use as few as three flips to come up with 6 possible outcomes, but there's no way you can make each of those 6 outcomes equal in probability. The fundamental problem is that to simulate a dice role you need to come up with a number of equally weighted outcomes that is divisible by 6 (2 times 3) and you can't do that using a coin where all outcomes come in multiples of 2.
    Last edited by coyotes_geek; 07-12-2011 at 05:07 PM.

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