During my long HR career, I have conducted over 1000 interviews for a wide range of IT positions. From a range of IT developers, business analysts, technical leads, system architects, engineering and project managers, CTO and CISO positions. Whether in-office or remote, I’ve encountered both professional candidates and a variety of others. It’s been akin to observing the entire IT spectrum unfold before my eyes. But there is one thing I have noticed that it might be strange to share. I often see the surprise on a candidate’s face when I ask, “Please, can you ask me any questions you’re interested in?”
Tilt, ups, what is that? Candidates don’t prepare for the interview with the interviewer, with their future company. They only focus on how to pass the interview themselves. This is fundamentally the wrong approach.
A well-prepared set of questions will not only satisfy your curiosity. It will also show me, the interviewer, that you are interested in making an informed and considered decision about your future job and career path. My top questions for, the HR interviewer, are:
Of course, there’s no need to turn the interview into an interrogation. Choose only the questions that concern you most and feel free to ask them. Remember that the purpose of these questions is not only to gather information but also to show the interviewer how you think and that you are serious about contributing to the company’s development.