7 Types of Questions To Ask During An Interview: 7Tweet0Printemail
7 Types of Questions To Ask During An Interview: 7Tweet0Printemail
7 Types of Questions To Ask During An Interview: 7Tweet0Printemail
Interview
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There are seven types of questions to ask when conducting an interview.
1. History Questions – These questions address education, work history and responsibilities,
what they find most fulfilling and demotivating in their work, and general information about the
candidate. It’s like a “get to know you” aspect of interviewing.
2. Spiritual Journey & Personal Growth Questions – These questions explore the candidates
spiritual journey, when and how they came to Christ, significant highlights in their spiritual
journey, understanding how their beliefs resonate with your church (and denomination), and
gauging their commitment to personal and professional growth.
3. Character Questions – Character is obviously a non-negotiable when hiring staff. Character
questions address integrity, greatest character strengths and weaknesses, how the candidate
handles moral or ethical dilemmas, and an assessment of the candidates personal character.
4. Chemistry, Values, and Philosophy Questions – This is one of the most difficult aspects to
evaluate in a candidate. Honestly, the more time you can spend interacting with them the better
you’ll be able to assess their fit. Do a personality assessment and an emotional intelligence
assessment. Furthermore, there should be opportunity to see them interact with your team face to
face. Ask them questions about their core values as well as if there’s a particular model of
ministry that they resonate with most (purpose-driven, emergent, seeker-sensitive, multi-site, cell
church, traditional, missional, etc.). If your church operates by one model but they are passionate
about a different model, they may find themselves frustrated in your system. Furthermore, two
good question to ask are:
What are two ways I would find challenging in leading you?
What would other people who have worked with you say about you (boss, peers, direct
reports)?
5. Passion Questions – Just because a candidate has the right skill set to do the job doesn’t mean
they will find fulfillment in the role. There must be passion for what they will be doing. Passion
questions include:
What is important to you in a church? In the leadership of the church?
What are you most passionate about in life and in your work?
6. Competence Questions – These questions drill down on the candidate’s ability to do the job,
their experience, and how God has uniquely wired them. Competence questions include:
Where do you fall on the Creator/Developer/Manager scale?
What are your natural abilities and skills and how are you using them?
What are your primary spiritual gifts and how are you using them?
Would you consider yourself more “task-oriented” or “people-oriented”? Which one puts
emotional energy in your sails?
What in your previous work environments contributed to your success (things beside your
own personal competencies)?
On a scale from 1 to 10 (10 being the best) how would you rank your time management
skills? Attention to detail? Self-Starter? Follow-Through on Tasks and Projects?
Questions specifically related to the role and experience in areas related to the role.
7. General Questions – Conclude your questions by asking how soon they would be available to
start (should an offer be extended), how their family feels about the opportunity, how long they
could see themselves in this role, and what their specific salary requirements are. While salary
can be addressed in more detail in a later interview, I always ask this question in the first
interview so that we don’t continue the interview process if the candidate is completely outside
of our ballpark.
Obviously you need to give the candidate the opportunity to ask you questions as well. In fact, a
good interview is not just about you interviewing them, but them having the opportunity to
interview you too. Be sure to check out 8 Ideas for Creating an Effective Hiring Process to
further guide your interview strategy. And pick up a copy of my book, Creating Your Church’s
Culture, available on Amazon or Kindle to learn more about effective hiring.
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