The "best possible answer" is the one that makes the employer want to hire you. Since reading minds is currently unavailable - we will have to go with your best answer.
Prepare a short list of the 3-5 best reasons to hire you from the *employers point of view*. Then craft these into a single statement. Make sure it takes no more than 60 seconds to say - time it just to be sure.
This may not be the best possible answer - but it is the best possible answer for you.
2006-08-28 01:06:48
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answer #1
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answered by Joan Mershon 5
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No best possible answer. I would recommmend being honest and tell the interview something about yourself, especially your achievements, what you have done in the past so that they know about your work experience history. If you are fresh grad looking for work, tell the interview about your intern, volunteer work or projects you have successfully completed for them to judge your skills.
2006-08-28 07:30:23
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answer #2
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answered by frutte_lim_sg 2
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list your achievements out but briefly...they can see that from your cv...instead focus on your intangible qualities that u feel may be needed for the job youre applying for...Eg. if the job requires a sticking to a lot of rules tell them that you are a disciplined person and tell them why- as in give an example from personal life...like "im pretty disciplined coz i come from an army family/have trained in dancing/martial arts/ am good at maths which requires me to be orderly...
this tells them youre not bluffing, have qualities that are not shown in ur job list and have the ability to tell ppl about urself- and not just what you do or did
2006-09-01 06:05:57
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answer #3
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answered by payal b 2
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Well, let's see... there is no one best answer. There are several ways to tell about yourself.....
Where are you from?
What is your goal in life?
What is your hobby?
What are your weakness and strengths?
Married and have children?
In order to sell yourself during a interview, explain where and how
did you get your experiences for this job?
2006-08-28 08:06:00
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answer #4
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answered by Kathleen S 1
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It depends on what you have to say. It's an openended question if there ever was one. Use this to demonstrate strength in an area that is needed and which is not obvious from your resume. E.g. you could talk about your strength and weaknesses, you could talk about your career aspirations or you could talk about something you did in your life that had an impact (positive) on you. Good luck!
2006-08-28 07:35:19
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answer #5
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answered by Ivan 5
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this is always a hard question to answer, because we go through much of our lives seeing ourselves in the "mirror image"' which is how others view us but we don't actually see as true. we can say well, i'm nice, caring, thoughtful, etc, and while that probably is true, it's not always. walt whitman (american poet) said," i contradict myself, i contain multitudes". while potential employers might not want to hear this, it's probably the best truth we can all tell about ourselves.
2006-08-28 07:35:50
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answer #6
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answered by Debi K 4
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You could say this:
Where you are from - your hometown.
Where you did schooling, and college.
Where and What you have worked on.
What you are curently working on.
The above is quite standard, but use your common sense and the occasion to make variations.
2006-08-28 07:52:16
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answer #7
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answered by AnswerGuy 2
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starts from u's name u's experiences with achievements, than your's strengts , hobbies & in last abt your's family backgrounds.
2006-08-28 08:09:20
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answer #8
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answered by koolankur2k 1
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i dont know but i tell them " i beilive in an honest days pay for a honest days work",
2006-08-28 07:30:45
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answer #9
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answered by motox 4
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The answer to you question............."No you tell me about you first. I'm interested it what you have to say then me hearing my story again"....................
2006-08-28 07:29:16
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answer #10
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answered by Texan 6
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