When to Shut Your Mouth

by Lance Haun on September 14, 2006

Shut your mouthWhenever I ran cross country, my coach always used to tell me, “If you’re thirsty, it’s too late. You’re already dehydrated and you won’t get rehydrated until you stop running.” The same sort of thing happens when you run your mouth in an interview. If you think you’ve been talking a lot, you’ve been talking way too much. And shutting up after you’ve figured this all out won’t help.

How long should my interview answers be then?

Most people who break this cardinal rule play it off as innocent. “Oh, I was just trying to explain myself fully.” Some even take it offensively. “I thought you wanted me to answer the questions completely.” And maybe they were innocent but imagining a meeting with this person where they are going lecture the group on the finer points of keyboarding for twenty minutes is not necessary. Being able to type is. Most of the time though, these long winded folks are simply searching for the right answer and hoping to stumble upon it within the ten minutes.

Here are four steps which you can pretty much guarantee that you will answer the question with the right timing:

  1. Demonstrate that you know what the interviewer is asking. Ask right at the beginning if you have any clarifying questions before you start to answer. It helps to pause before you answer the question and think about what they asked. If you have prepared yourself, this should be no sweat.
  2. Be detail oriented but leave out the kitchen sink. I like details about the questions I ask. Keep it detailed but focused on the question. As an example, if the interviewer asks “Tell me about a recent disagreement you’ve had with your supervisor,” don’t give a long back story about the history of your relationship with your boss or your relationship with bosses in general. Talk about the disagreement you had giving the interviewer enough details to have the answer they are looking for. Using that example, you definitely want to include that you resolved it to everyone’s satisfaction but you don’t need to go into the great time you had at the pub later.
  3. Confidently end your answer. If you linger out an answer like you might continue answering, I’m not going to interupt you. I am waiting for you to finish your thought and if you make it sound like you are going to continue, I’ll let you. I think this is probaby why many people don’t know when to shut their mouth: I won’t interupt them. In a behavioral interview, it takes some people a little while to put all their thoughts together and so I’ve learned to shut my mouth until you’re done speaking.
  4. If you don’t know the answer, make it snappy. THere are good ways and bad ways to use a non-answer. Good: “I don’t know the answer to that but here are the three steps I would take to figure it out.” Bad: “Hmmm, I…. ohhh… well, that’s a good one. I don’t know the… OH WAIT! If I…. no… hmmm” + 5 minutes. A lot of people fly their plane into the ground instead of knowing when to hit the eject button and say you don’t know.

And I’ll end with a story about a guy who ran his mouth for too long:

I am interviewing this fellow for a retail job and I ask him what a former supervisor would say about him if we called him. He gave this strange look and said “I don’t know what he would say. Probably that I am a cool guy and I am a good skateboarder. Hmmm…” And I just sat there waiting for him. Then he said “Well, it doesn’t matter. I don’t work there anymore and you guys don’t really need to call him?” Again, I just sit there. “Well, I guess he would say I was a pretty decent worker when I wanted to be and that I was late a ton because I was busy skateboarding all the time.”

To be fair though, there wasn’t a really great way he could have answered the question anyway. When you’re constantly late for the entirety of your employment, that is pretty much all your supervisor will talk about.

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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

Colleen Kelly September 15, 2006 at 8:56 am

What about the other side when the interviewer discusses everything but the available position and doesn’t really seem to know much about it? I’ve had at least two of those kinds of interviews in the last 5 years. One interviewer, a CPA, told me her entire relationship story with her ex-husband. Um, I’m there for a job interview….I don’t really care about your love life or lack thereof.

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Your HR Guy September 15, 2006 at 10:37 am

It probably gave you a good indication as whether or not to work there ;-)

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marvin walberg September 15, 2006 at 12:21 pm

Good information…..do you mind if I quote this feed in an up-coming “Getting Hired” column?

Thanks,

Marvin Walberg

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John Lewis February 12, 2007 at 4:42 pm

Yes, I really learned the hard way about “talking yourself out of a job”. I consider myself quite meticulous when it comes to job searching and interview preparation. A few years ago, I had my well-rehearsed interview dialogue stored in my memory perfectly, when I interviewed with a local office of a nationally known insurance company. I was expecting the traditional one on one interview. However, when I entered the interview room, I was shocked to discover that I was going to be interviewed by 3 different supervisors; each asking a separate thought-provoking question in what they called a “competency style interview”. I happened to be a visually impaired job seeker, so naturally, anxiety is always a little higher for me; wondering if I am going to sell my skills past whatever preconceived notions they may have about hiring a blind person. so I was even more rattled, knowing that I could not deliver exactly as I so thoroughly planned. I guess you could say, “they hit me from the blind side” with questions such as,
”How would you describe your idea of a utopian supervisor?”
“Describe a period of your life which you consider to be a total failure.”
”Where do you see yourself in five years from now?”
I felt that I answered all their unexpected silly questions fairly well, considering that I was a bit unnerved. Unfortunately, I made the mistake of trying to weave in bits and pieces of “my selling points” which I thought were more pertinent to the job I was applying for. I later found out, (from one of the interviewers), that one of the reasons I wasn’t considered for the job was due to my “going off on a tangent”, not staying focused on simply answering the question. Later, I crafted some very well-thought responses to about 15 of these competency questions, just in case I ever encounter that kind of interview in the future. It’s been about 4 years now and thankfully I never experienced this situation, but you never know what’s coming!

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