How to handle interviewer interrupting me and doing other actions while talking? [closed]

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I was in an interview yesterday with one of the top Indian "services" company that is also famous for "Applying Thought". :)



The interviewer requested that we do a Skype Video call, and soon he started behaving weirdly. He asked a question, and while I was answering, he started taking screenshots of my Skype video; I kept hearing the screen capture shutter sound. In fact, I said "excuse me" at least a few times.



Well, obviously the first question, he asked me about "Tell me about yourself". I just started "I graduated in two thousand and ..." He interrupted and said I don't want your family history, just tell me what you did recently.



While I tried to answer this question, in just 20 seconds he asked me the next question, "What is the difference between ..."



Again I tried to answer this but he did not allow me to finish though it was just 30 seconds. As I was saying my technical skills, he was googling and was asking me questions related to that. For instance, when I said "I have worked extensively on JQuery". He googled and asked "Can you tell how many APIs are there in JQuery?"



He kept doing these rapid fire, interrupting questions for 45 minutes, then finally asked me "Do you have any questions for me?". Though I honestly wanted to blast him with some stinging questions of my own, I didn't say anything. He just hung up the Skype call. I have almost 15 years of experience, but later when I checked his profile on LinkedIn, he just had 7 years' experience which made my night sleepless. I felt very much harassed.



How can I handle this sort of interview in the future?







share|improve this question














closed as primarily opinion-based by JakeGould, gnat, Jan Doggen, Garrison Neely, mhoran_psprep Aug 23 '14 at 11:48


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • Why do you care what he posts on his linkedin profile? Also how did you maintain patience for 45 minutes with this? Dealing with nonsense for that long may be actually a hidden talent. Still from the description the guy sounds like fake
    – Brandin
    Aug 22 '14 at 5:39










  • Hi oneworld! I've edited your question to better fit our format and hopefully get you more answers and upvotes. Please feel free to edit it further if I messed anything up or to improve it further. I hope to see you around! :)
    – Matt Giltaji
    Aug 22 '14 at 16:10

















up vote
0
down vote

favorite
1












I was in an interview yesterday with one of the top Indian "services" company that is also famous for "Applying Thought". :)



The interviewer requested that we do a Skype Video call, and soon he started behaving weirdly. He asked a question, and while I was answering, he started taking screenshots of my Skype video; I kept hearing the screen capture shutter sound. In fact, I said "excuse me" at least a few times.



Well, obviously the first question, he asked me about "Tell me about yourself". I just started "I graduated in two thousand and ..." He interrupted and said I don't want your family history, just tell me what you did recently.



While I tried to answer this question, in just 20 seconds he asked me the next question, "What is the difference between ..."



Again I tried to answer this but he did not allow me to finish though it was just 30 seconds. As I was saying my technical skills, he was googling and was asking me questions related to that. For instance, when I said "I have worked extensively on JQuery". He googled and asked "Can you tell how many APIs are there in JQuery?"



He kept doing these rapid fire, interrupting questions for 45 minutes, then finally asked me "Do you have any questions for me?". Though I honestly wanted to blast him with some stinging questions of my own, I didn't say anything. He just hung up the Skype call. I have almost 15 years of experience, but later when I checked his profile on LinkedIn, he just had 7 years' experience which made my night sleepless. I felt very much harassed.



How can I handle this sort of interview in the future?







share|improve this question














closed as primarily opinion-based by JakeGould, gnat, Jan Doggen, Garrison Neely, mhoran_psprep Aug 23 '14 at 11:48


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • Why do you care what he posts on his linkedin profile? Also how did you maintain patience for 45 minutes with this? Dealing with nonsense for that long may be actually a hidden talent. Still from the description the guy sounds like fake
    – Brandin
    Aug 22 '14 at 5:39










  • Hi oneworld! I've edited your question to better fit our format and hopefully get you more answers and upvotes. Please feel free to edit it further if I messed anything up or to improve it further. I hope to see you around! :)
    – Matt Giltaji
    Aug 22 '14 at 16:10













up vote
0
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
0
down vote

favorite
1






1





I was in an interview yesterday with one of the top Indian "services" company that is also famous for "Applying Thought". :)



The interviewer requested that we do a Skype Video call, and soon he started behaving weirdly. He asked a question, and while I was answering, he started taking screenshots of my Skype video; I kept hearing the screen capture shutter sound. In fact, I said "excuse me" at least a few times.



Well, obviously the first question, he asked me about "Tell me about yourself". I just started "I graduated in two thousand and ..." He interrupted and said I don't want your family history, just tell me what you did recently.



While I tried to answer this question, in just 20 seconds he asked me the next question, "What is the difference between ..."



Again I tried to answer this but he did not allow me to finish though it was just 30 seconds. As I was saying my technical skills, he was googling and was asking me questions related to that. For instance, when I said "I have worked extensively on JQuery". He googled and asked "Can you tell how many APIs are there in JQuery?"



He kept doing these rapid fire, interrupting questions for 45 minutes, then finally asked me "Do you have any questions for me?". Though I honestly wanted to blast him with some stinging questions of my own, I didn't say anything. He just hung up the Skype call. I have almost 15 years of experience, but later when I checked his profile on LinkedIn, he just had 7 years' experience which made my night sleepless. I felt very much harassed.



How can I handle this sort of interview in the future?







share|improve this question














I was in an interview yesterday with one of the top Indian "services" company that is also famous for "Applying Thought". :)



The interviewer requested that we do a Skype Video call, and soon he started behaving weirdly. He asked a question, and while I was answering, he started taking screenshots of my Skype video; I kept hearing the screen capture shutter sound. In fact, I said "excuse me" at least a few times.



Well, obviously the first question, he asked me about "Tell me about yourself". I just started "I graduated in two thousand and ..." He interrupted and said I don't want your family history, just tell me what you did recently.



While I tried to answer this question, in just 20 seconds he asked me the next question, "What is the difference between ..."



Again I tried to answer this but he did not allow me to finish though it was just 30 seconds. As I was saying my technical skills, he was googling and was asking me questions related to that. For instance, when I said "I have worked extensively on JQuery". He googled and asked "Can you tell how many APIs are there in JQuery?"



He kept doing these rapid fire, interrupting questions for 45 minutes, then finally asked me "Do you have any questions for me?". Though I honestly wanted to blast him with some stinging questions of my own, I didn't say anything. He just hung up the Skype call. I have almost 15 years of experience, but later when I checked his profile on LinkedIn, he just had 7 years' experience which made my night sleepless. I felt very much harassed.



How can I handle this sort of interview in the future?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 22 '14 at 16:27









Jan Doggen

11.5k145066




11.5k145066










asked Aug 22 '14 at 1:35









oneworld

21429




21429




closed as primarily opinion-based by JakeGould, gnat, Jan Doggen, Garrison Neely, mhoran_psprep Aug 23 '14 at 11:48


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as primarily opinion-based by JakeGould, gnat, Jan Doggen, Garrison Neely, mhoran_psprep Aug 23 '14 at 11:48


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • Why do you care what he posts on his linkedin profile? Also how did you maintain patience for 45 minutes with this? Dealing with nonsense for that long may be actually a hidden talent. Still from the description the guy sounds like fake
    – Brandin
    Aug 22 '14 at 5:39










  • Hi oneworld! I've edited your question to better fit our format and hopefully get you more answers and upvotes. Please feel free to edit it further if I messed anything up or to improve it further. I hope to see you around! :)
    – Matt Giltaji
    Aug 22 '14 at 16:10

















  • Why do you care what he posts on his linkedin profile? Also how did you maintain patience for 45 minutes with this? Dealing with nonsense for that long may be actually a hidden talent. Still from the description the guy sounds like fake
    – Brandin
    Aug 22 '14 at 5:39










  • Hi oneworld! I've edited your question to better fit our format and hopefully get you more answers and upvotes. Please feel free to edit it further if I messed anything up or to improve it further. I hope to see you around! :)
    – Matt Giltaji
    Aug 22 '14 at 16:10
















Why do you care what he posts on his linkedin profile? Also how did you maintain patience for 45 minutes with this? Dealing with nonsense for that long may be actually a hidden talent. Still from the description the guy sounds like fake
– Brandin
Aug 22 '14 at 5:39




Why do you care what he posts on his linkedin profile? Also how did you maintain patience for 45 minutes with this? Dealing with nonsense for that long may be actually a hidden talent. Still from the description the guy sounds like fake
– Brandin
Aug 22 '14 at 5:39












Hi oneworld! I've edited your question to better fit our format and hopefully get you more answers and upvotes. Please feel free to edit it further if I messed anything up or to improve it further. I hope to see you around! :)
– Matt Giltaji
Aug 22 '14 at 16:10





Hi oneworld! I've edited your question to better fit our format and hopefully get you more answers and upvotes. Please feel free to edit it further if I messed anything up or to improve it further. I hope to see you around! :)
– Matt Giltaji
Aug 22 '14 at 16:10











1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
2
down vote













The purpose of an interview, for a candidate, is to get an offer. I would remain professional at all time and try to answer questions to the best of my abilities. There is nothing much else you can do.



I can speculate two possibilities for the interviewer actions:



  1. He wanted to see how you react under pressure and tried to make you react,

  2. He is clueless, does not know what he is doing, and probably inexperienced.

Assuming he is in the first category, this also put him in the second. :-)



Bottom line, the is not much you can do but focus, remain professional, and remember that the interview is just one more obstacle before you can get an offer.






share|improve this answer






















  • 3. Maybe this guy is not genuine at all?? = troll
    – Brandin
    Aug 22 '14 at 5:39










  • I agree, it sounds like this guy is completely lost. I would advise mental counseling to him, if you don't want the job off-course :-).
    – Rob Angelier
    Aug 22 '14 at 7:29






  • 3




    question is, would you want a job with a company that considers this kind of interview a good idea...
    – jwenting
    Aug 22 '14 at 9:19










  • I don't really value that company anymore. I sent an email to the HR manager that I would like to provide feedback about the interview; I got a rude reply that I am not really put for the next round, better luck next time :| Crap!
    – oneworld
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:26











  • @oneworld sorry to hear that. Good luck with your next opportunity!
    – David S.
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:27

















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
2
down vote













The purpose of an interview, for a candidate, is to get an offer. I would remain professional at all time and try to answer questions to the best of my abilities. There is nothing much else you can do.



I can speculate two possibilities for the interviewer actions:



  1. He wanted to see how you react under pressure and tried to make you react,

  2. He is clueless, does not know what he is doing, and probably inexperienced.

Assuming he is in the first category, this also put him in the second. :-)



Bottom line, the is not much you can do but focus, remain professional, and remember that the interview is just one more obstacle before you can get an offer.






share|improve this answer






















  • 3. Maybe this guy is not genuine at all?? = troll
    – Brandin
    Aug 22 '14 at 5:39










  • I agree, it sounds like this guy is completely lost. I would advise mental counseling to him, if you don't want the job off-course :-).
    – Rob Angelier
    Aug 22 '14 at 7:29






  • 3




    question is, would you want a job with a company that considers this kind of interview a good idea...
    – jwenting
    Aug 22 '14 at 9:19










  • I don't really value that company anymore. I sent an email to the HR manager that I would like to provide feedback about the interview; I got a rude reply that I am not really put for the next round, better luck next time :| Crap!
    – oneworld
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:26











  • @oneworld sorry to hear that. Good luck with your next opportunity!
    – David S.
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:27














up vote
2
down vote













The purpose of an interview, for a candidate, is to get an offer. I would remain professional at all time and try to answer questions to the best of my abilities. There is nothing much else you can do.



I can speculate two possibilities for the interviewer actions:



  1. He wanted to see how you react under pressure and tried to make you react,

  2. He is clueless, does not know what he is doing, and probably inexperienced.

Assuming he is in the first category, this also put him in the second. :-)



Bottom line, the is not much you can do but focus, remain professional, and remember that the interview is just one more obstacle before you can get an offer.






share|improve this answer






















  • 3. Maybe this guy is not genuine at all?? = troll
    – Brandin
    Aug 22 '14 at 5:39










  • I agree, it sounds like this guy is completely lost. I would advise mental counseling to him, if you don't want the job off-course :-).
    – Rob Angelier
    Aug 22 '14 at 7:29






  • 3




    question is, would you want a job with a company that considers this kind of interview a good idea...
    – jwenting
    Aug 22 '14 at 9:19










  • I don't really value that company anymore. I sent an email to the HR manager that I would like to provide feedback about the interview; I got a rude reply that I am not really put for the next round, better luck next time :| Crap!
    – oneworld
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:26











  • @oneworld sorry to hear that. Good luck with your next opportunity!
    – David S.
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:27












up vote
2
down vote










up vote
2
down vote









The purpose of an interview, for a candidate, is to get an offer. I would remain professional at all time and try to answer questions to the best of my abilities. There is nothing much else you can do.



I can speculate two possibilities for the interviewer actions:



  1. He wanted to see how you react under pressure and tried to make you react,

  2. He is clueless, does not know what he is doing, and probably inexperienced.

Assuming he is in the first category, this also put him in the second. :-)



Bottom line, the is not much you can do but focus, remain professional, and remember that the interview is just one more obstacle before you can get an offer.






share|improve this answer














The purpose of an interview, for a candidate, is to get an offer. I would remain professional at all time and try to answer questions to the best of my abilities. There is nothing much else you can do.



I can speculate two possibilities for the interviewer actions:



  1. He wanted to see how you react under pressure and tried to make you react,

  2. He is clueless, does not know what he is doing, and probably inexperienced.

Assuming he is in the first category, this also put him in the second. :-)



Bottom line, the is not much you can do but focus, remain professional, and remember that the interview is just one more obstacle before you can get an offer.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 22 '14 at 15:29

























answered Aug 22 '14 at 5:12









David S.

3,9902441




3,9902441











  • 3. Maybe this guy is not genuine at all?? = troll
    – Brandin
    Aug 22 '14 at 5:39










  • I agree, it sounds like this guy is completely lost. I would advise mental counseling to him, if you don't want the job off-course :-).
    – Rob Angelier
    Aug 22 '14 at 7:29






  • 3




    question is, would you want a job with a company that considers this kind of interview a good idea...
    – jwenting
    Aug 22 '14 at 9:19










  • I don't really value that company anymore. I sent an email to the HR manager that I would like to provide feedback about the interview; I got a rude reply that I am not really put for the next round, better luck next time :| Crap!
    – oneworld
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:26











  • @oneworld sorry to hear that. Good luck with your next opportunity!
    – David S.
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:27
















  • 3. Maybe this guy is not genuine at all?? = troll
    – Brandin
    Aug 22 '14 at 5:39










  • I agree, it sounds like this guy is completely lost. I would advise mental counseling to him, if you don't want the job off-course :-).
    – Rob Angelier
    Aug 22 '14 at 7:29






  • 3




    question is, would you want a job with a company that considers this kind of interview a good idea...
    – jwenting
    Aug 22 '14 at 9:19










  • I don't really value that company anymore. I sent an email to the HR manager that I would like to provide feedback about the interview; I got a rude reply that I am not really put for the next round, better luck next time :| Crap!
    – oneworld
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:26











  • @oneworld sorry to hear that. Good luck with your next opportunity!
    – David S.
    Aug 22 '14 at 15:27















3. Maybe this guy is not genuine at all?? = troll
– Brandin
Aug 22 '14 at 5:39




3. Maybe this guy is not genuine at all?? = troll
– Brandin
Aug 22 '14 at 5:39












I agree, it sounds like this guy is completely lost. I would advise mental counseling to him, if you don't want the job off-course :-).
– Rob Angelier
Aug 22 '14 at 7:29




I agree, it sounds like this guy is completely lost. I would advise mental counseling to him, if you don't want the job off-course :-).
– Rob Angelier
Aug 22 '14 at 7:29




3




3




question is, would you want a job with a company that considers this kind of interview a good idea...
– jwenting
Aug 22 '14 at 9:19




question is, would you want a job with a company that considers this kind of interview a good idea...
– jwenting
Aug 22 '14 at 9:19












I don't really value that company anymore. I sent an email to the HR manager that I would like to provide feedback about the interview; I got a rude reply that I am not really put for the next round, better luck next time :| Crap!
– oneworld
Aug 22 '14 at 15:26





I don't really value that company anymore. I sent an email to the HR manager that I would like to provide feedback about the interview; I got a rude reply that I am not really put for the next round, better luck next time :| Crap!
– oneworld
Aug 22 '14 at 15:26













@oneworld sorry to hear that. Good luck with your next opportunity!
– David S.
Aug 22 '14 at 15:27




@oneworld sorry to hear that. Good luck with your next opportunity!
– David S.
Aug 22 '14 at 15:27


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