PDA

View Full Version : What kind of answer do they want to this?


Jesse613
05-03-2004, 10:21 PM
When you get asked What are your weaknesses?

what do they want to hear to that?

PFire23
05-03-2004, 10:47 PM
Exactly what they are asking. What areas do you percieve yourself to be weak or have weaknesses in. Answer honestly. There is no right or wrong answer for this, just be honest. It shows that you are aware of your faults, and once a person is aware of their weaknesses they can work on strengthening those areas. While this question may seem intimidating, it is a good way for you to examine yourself. One of the toughest things to do is to be honest with yourself and admit to faults.

CALFFBOU
05-03-2004, 10:53 PM
Answers to this and other questions at www.eatstress.com

Hope this helps...Bou

Jesse613
05-03-2004, 11:07 PM
Originally posted by CALFFBOU
Answers to this and other questions at www.eatstress.com

Hope this helps...Bou

I actually just got my eatstress package in today. I havent had a chance to look through all of it. I was just wondering what people would have to say about this question.

CaptBob
05-04-2004, 09:36 AM
Strengths and Weaknesses

Here’s another candidate who asked the same question: I was going over some questions for interviews, and I was hoping someone could help me with an answer. What are good answers for the question; what are your strengths and weaknesses? What are some bad answers? John

Reply: Let's start with what your answers are first.

O.K. If asked those questions I would probably respond with something like; My strengths are education, willingness to start from the bottom, my diverse background in fields other than fire fighting, and the fact that I have experience but am very adaptable to my current surroundings. My weaknesses are occasional tunnel vision, excitability, and no full-time experience. There are probably a thousand faults but you get the point. Where do I go from here? John

First understand that if we start giving answers, everyone would clone them and they would lose their value. I encourage candidates do use their own answers, reflecting their personal life experience.

This question can be asked in many ways, i.e.: What attributes do you think a firefighter should possess, or what qualities, what strengths etc. I think you can come up with better strengths. Education, starting at the bottom and a diverse background are not really strengths. They are what you've done to prepare for the position. Areas relating to loyalty, honesty, and being dependable etc. are strengths.

When you're deciding a weakness, use something that might have been a weakness, but you have already done something to correct it i.e., you had a problem speaking in front of groups. You have improved this situation by taking a public speaking class or joining Toastmasters.

Since firefighters are in a living environment, we would not be looking for someone with occasional tunnel vision and excitability. No full-time experience is not a good choice for a weakness either.

Got a call from a candidate. He lives in Washington now and his oral was in 4 days. He got his Firefighter1 from an academy in Southern California. He said it hasn’t helped much trying to get a job. He has now been a medic for 8 months with no luck in testing. In the most pathetic monotone voice he said this is the department he really wants to work for and (with absolutely no enthusiasm) he will be one of the 15 hired.

He asked if he could run one of his answers on what a negative is for him that his firefighter buddies and other friends helped him work out. Sure, shoot. Joel said a negative for me is my past. Even though I got a DUI and some other minor stuff, that’s not who I really am.

I couldn’t believe my ears. Uh, Joel that answer would only open a can of worms. Don’t use it.

Joel said, OK how about this one. Another negative for me is my paramedic skills. This job will help me improve them. Again, I couldn’t believe my ears. Yep, that’s the guy we want to hire, the one with the poor medic skills. Can’t use this one either.

In case you didn't already know, everyone becomes an expert on how to get hired when they get hired. The answers Joel worked out with some firefighters and friends were definitely not helping but hurting him. The bigger problem is he didn’t even have a clue. This was just one answer. How bad were the others?

I would like to say this was an isolated incident. We encounter these bad answers on a regular basis. It is especially painful in an actual oral board where we see the candidates die a slow death one question after another. Then the candidates wonder why they don't get hired. This is an area where we try to keep candidates from stepping on the land mines.

After a little probing, we did find a negative Joel could use that he was working on to improve.

Captain Bob

www.eatstress.com