Really, really weird interview...

I've just had a second interview with a local medium-sized company for the role of HR manager. First interview was standard with several 'Give an example of when you...' and 'What would you do if...' questions. So far, so good.

I was one of two asked back for a second interview. The second interview, which with the same two interviewers as before but also the CEO, was an hour of 'If you were an animal, what would it be', 'Who would you most like to have round for dinner', 'Where's your ideal holiday', and 'What's your perfect weekend'. 

Eh??? Did I miss the CIPD's briefing on new questioning regime?

Were they just trying to see if I'd fit in (which is what I was told) or were there ulterior motives behind each of the questions. Because I said 'hedgehog' to the animal question does this mean I'm prickly and hide from conflict; should I have said something more aggressive like Rottweiler or polecat? As 'Italy' was my ideal holiday does that mean I'm unadventurous and conventional; should I have gone backpacking in the Andes or building schools in Malawi? By the end of the hour I was absolutely drained. 

Joking aside, it was actually a surreal experience and made me wonder what I was getting myself into. Luckily, I didn't get the job. Anyone else had - or conducted - an interview like this?

Parents
  • I once attended an interview conducted by the lady who was leaving, let's call her 'Polly', and her boss. He looked bored and sulky throughout the interview which was conducted mainly by Polly with the usual run of competency-based questions, I felt we were getting nowhere so asked him what he was looking for in Polly's replacement? "I want another Polly", he said. "But what does that actually mean in real terms?" I asked, and he repeated "I just want another Polly" twice without defining what that actually meant. I stood up and told them both I saw no point in continuing the interview on that basis, and left! (I could quite understand why Polly was leaving!)
Reply
  • I once attended an interview conducted by the lady who was leaving, let's call her 'Polly', and her boss. He looked bored and sulky throughout the interview which was conducted mainly by Polly with the usual run of competency-based questions, I felt we were getting nowhere so asked him what he was looking for in Polly's replacement? "I want another Polly", he said. "But what does that actually mean in real terms?" I asked, and he repeated "I just want another Polly" twice without defining what that actually meant. I stood up and told them both I saw no point in continuing the interview on that basis, and left! (I could quite understand why Polly was leaving!)
Children
No Data