What motivates you? Interview Question

Recruiting processes are designed to cross references a candidates skills, qualifications and experiences against the job criteria.

The employer, therefore, uses the job interview questions to predict the applicant’s potential job performance.

More than ever before interviewers are focusing the interview questions on the interviewees temperament, with a goal of creating a positive company culture.

Strength-Based interviews, which are becoming more commonly used, are designed with the culture fit in mind. But even in competency-based job interviews, employers have always, and still do, embed personality questions into the interview process.

One of the most common interview questions used to find the ‘right fit’ employee is the ‘what motivates you?’ interview question.

For the applicant, having an open-ended question to answer, allows them to create a reply that meets many of the criteria on the interview scorecard.

The employers perspective

Employers ask the ‘motivation’ question to help understand what encourages an employee to work harder.

Career psychologists know that by hiring a team that will naturally work well with the environment and culture of the organisation, the team will be more productive, have a lower number of sick days and staff members are less likely to look for new opportunities at competitive companies.

The cost of recruitment is high and eats into the company profits. Recruiters are always looking for the right job interview question that will help them to hire, not only the most skilled and experienced employee, but one that will fit well within the current team.

Honest interviewee

There are two approaches to the ‘motivation’ question.

Honesty, is the first approach. The advice is always to be honest within a job interview.

The problem with true honestly is that many career professionals suffer from imposter syndrome.

A lack of self-belief results in an increase in the self-disclosure of weaknesses, weak worded job interview answers and excessive use of filler words creating an ‘amateurism’ interview identity.

What is needed, throughout the job interview, is a ‘self-assured’ interview identity to help the employer view the candidate as employable.

Being honest, even when the candidate is suitable – the candidate would fit in well with the company culture, can say the wrong thing, resulting in a low scoring answer.

Interview questions like ‘are you a self-starter or a team player?’ or ‘do you like starting or finishing tasks?’ can force an interviewee to choose an option that they don’t really have a preference for – they enjoy working both within a team or on their own initiative.

Not being honest doesn’t mean lying

A career professional can have a natural preference to follow processes and procedures – a detailed employee. But if this same employee ends up landing a job in a creative company where they hire innovative, out the box thinking, do it your own way people, the same details career professional can excel.

In fact, depending on the applicant’s past employers (and their company culture) creates an experience – a frame of reference, that shapes the answer they give. In this way not all honest answers, are honest.

Creating high scoring answers

Researching the company culture prior to the job interview is key to creating high scoring interview answers.

Obvious, I know, but I don’t mean researching the company history blah, blah, blah. What is required is an understanding of the company culture.

The organisations vision directly influences the company values, the company values affect the company manager’s decision-making process creating the workplace environment – the company culture.

Disney’s vision is ‘to make people happy.’ Imagine, in the job interview, being asked what is your purpose? or what motivates you? And the interviewee talks about quality, making great cartoon films, or designing fast-paced roller coasters. All good answers, all relevant to Disney’s brand, but the employer hearing this answer, thinks something is missing, something isn’t quite right.

Employers want to hire employees who are motivated by the same reason as the organisation is – their vision.

In this example, the ‘quality’ driven applicant can reframe their interview answer to be inline with the company vision ‘ to create quality animated films that make people feel good…’

To back up the ‘motivation’ answer, add an example to the initial opening line ‘…in my last company, I always focused of the outcome of films – making the audience to be happy. When working on X project……”

Conclusion

To be successful in a job interview, applicants need to research the culture of the company as the day to day environment of an organisation affects all decisions, including hiring decisions.

Answering questions by referencing how the applicant meets the culture and values of the company will improve the level of scores allocated to each job interview answer, increasing the number of job offers an applicant will receive.

Job Interview Advice

3 Interview Concerns Everyone Worries About

For most, a job interview is not a common occurrence. When we step into the unknown our subconscious checks for danger, looks for a frame of reference and then sends emotional signals to our body so we know how to react.

This process is completed within milliseconds.

This is why public speaking and job interviews rank high for worst fears. Your subconscious ask “how should I react” when you receive your interview invitation, to answer the question the brain finds a “frame of reference” this for most people is your most memorable “public speaking” experience – the negative experience in school when you were asked to read in front of the class, after getting the words wrong the whole classed laughed at you and made you feel upset.

The brain replicates these same negative emotions, associating them to the forthcoming job interview – no wonder we feel so nervous when it comes to a job interview. Other worries then build on this fear, creating in some cases phobia of job interviews and public speaking.

Concerns That Double Your Interview Fear – I’m not good enough

People believe they are living a lie.

We often feel we got to the position in our career because of good luck not our own skills or abilities. When applying for a new position in a new company we wrongly believe our lie will be found out.

We simply feel we are not good enough to be offered the new position, so why bother?

This limiting belief will increase your interview anxiety killing any hopes of a job offer. To combat this growing fear, you need to consciously think about your success and career highlights as this will subconsciously challenge your negative interview beliefs;

  • reread positive job evaluations
  • write a list of your career strengths and skills  
  • compare your rise through the career ranks to others who haven’t been as successful
  • reflect on your work ethic and attitude
  • write a list of strengths that your colleagues would say you possessed

Concerns That Double Your Interview Fear – what if I don’t know what to do?

Interview fears

Interviewees, before even being offered the job role will try to second guess the job duties that they will undertake. This seems like a good idea, especially as a task like this can help your predict the job interview questions.

But the anxious interviewee takes this process one step to far and predicts job duties that they cant possible do, even though they haven’t been mentioned on the job specification.

This negative second guessing only increases anxiety. To combat this process think about previous roles where you have undertaken a new role, task and duty and where you have learnt and develop this new skill to become the expert that you are today.

Remember we all grow by learning new skills and we all get bored in a career that offers no variety at all. To learn you have to make mistakes, the trick is to frame each mistake as a learning curve not a negative experience.

Concerns That Double Your Interview Fear – what if they don’t like me

Imposter Syndrome

One of the common worries for interviewees is the thought that the interviewer wont like them.

When we focus on other peoples opinions and second guess their thoughts we only create worry and concern.

You have no way of knowing what the interviewer will think of you, and if your not a good match, you wont work well together, then isn’t it better to learn that in the interview rather then 6 months down the line?

When you focus on other peoples thoughts, you take the focus away from your task in hand – preparing for the job interview. When this thought passes through your head, ask yourself “what 3 things do I need to do to prepare for my interview?”

This question takes the focus consciously back to the job interview preparation