What do you do if the interviewer interrupts you continuously?

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Recently, I attended a job interview during which I was interrupted several times by the interviewer in order to ask another question. I wasn't finished answering yet. I didn't mind the division of my speech and answered the new question.



I got the impression that it was intentional. Could it be some kind of interviewing strategy or it could be my misinterpretation?



If it is a strategy, what is the pupose of this? What could be done in this situation to answer questions properly?







share|improve this question


















  • 1




    agree with Joe. I noticed I use to get cut off all the time in interviews until someone was eventually kind enough to tell me that I had a habit of reiterating what I said several times for every answer.
    – pi31415
    May 23 '14 at 11:20










  • I don't think I talked too much. Interviewer interrupted me after 2 or 3 short sentences.
    – user2191454
    May 23 '14 at 11:23







  • 1




    Hard to say. I ran into one interviewer who asked me a series of rapid fire questions that kept me off-balance and responding with the first thing that came to mind, and the first thing that came to mind was the truth. It is also possible that the interviewer doesn't particularly care about your feelings and as soon as you are giving you the reply he is looking for, he'll be firing the next question at you while your mind is still on the previous questions. Every other interviewer I ran into took a more relaxed approach, even as they skewered me.
    – Vietnhi Phuvan
    May 23 '14 at 11:53







  • 1




    The interviewer may be less experienced at interviewing than you.
    – kevin cline
    May 23 '14 at 13:59

















up vote
10
down vote

favorite












Recently, I attended a job interview during which I was interrupted several times by the interviewer in order to ask another question. I wasn't finished answering yet. I didn't mind the division of my speech and answered the new question.



I got the impression that it was intentional. Could it be some kind of interviewing strategy or it could be my misinterpretation?



If it is a strategy, what is the pupose of this? What could be done in this situation to answer questions properly?







share|improve this question


















  • 1




    agree with Joe. I noticed I use to get cut off all the time in interviews until someone was eventually kind enough to tell me that I had a habit of reiterating what I said several times for every answer.
    – pi31415
    May 23 '14 at 11:20










  • I don't think I talked too much. Interviewer interrupted me after 2 or 3 short sentences.
    – user2191454
    May 23 '14 at 11:23







  • 1




    Hard to say. I ran into one interviewer who asked me a series of rapid fire questions that kept me off-balance and responding with the first thing that came to mind, and the first thing that came to mind was the truth. It is also possible that the interviewer doesn't particularly care about your feelings and as soon as you are giving you the reply he is looking for, he'll be firing the next question at you while your mind is still on the previous questions. Every other interviewer I ran into took a more relaxed approach, even as they skewered me.
    – Vietnhi Phuvan
    May 23 '14 at 11:53







  • 1




    The interviewer may be less experienced at interviewing than you.
    – kevin cline
    May 23 '14 at 13:59













up vote
10
down vote

favorite









up vote
10
down vote

favorite











Recently, I attended a job interview during which I was interrupted several times by the interviewer in order to ask another question. I wasn't finished answering yet. I didn't mind the division of my speech and answered the new question.



I got the impression that it was intentional. Could it be some kind of interviewing strategy or it could be my misinterpretation?



If it is a strategy, what is the pupose of this? What could be done in this situation to answer questions properly?







share|improve this question














Recently, I attended a job interview during which I was interrupted several times by the interviewer in order to ask another question. I wasn't finished answering yet. I didn't mind the division of my speech and answered the new question.



I got the impression that it was intentional. Could it be some kind of interviewing strategy or it could be my misinterpretation?



If it is a strategy, what is the pupose of this? What could be done in this situation to answer questions properly?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 23 '14 at 12:15









yoozer8

4,10442955




4,10442955










asked May 23 '14 at 10:43









user2191454

78141534




78141534







  • 1




    agree with Joe. I noticed I use to get cut off all the time in interviews until someone was eventually kind enough to tell me that I had a habit of reiterating what I said several times for every answer.
    – pi31415
    May 23 '14 at 11:20










  • I don't think I talked too much. Interviewer interrupted me after 2 or 3 short sentences.
    – user2191454
    May 23 '14 at 11:23







  • 1




    Hard to say. I ran into one interviewer who asked me a series of rapid fire questions that kept me off-balance and responding with the first thing that came to mind, and the first thing that came to mind was the truth. It is also possible that the interviewer doesn't particularly care about your feelings and as soon as you are giving you the reply he is looking for, he'll be firing the next question at you while your mind is still on the previous questions. Every other interviewer I ran into took a more relaxed approach, even as they skewered me.
    – Vietnhi Phuvan
    May 23 '14 at 11:53







  • 1




    The interviewer may be less experienced at interviewing than you.
    – kevin cline
    May 23 '14 at 13:59













  • 1




    agree with Joe. I noticed I use to get cut off all the time in interviews until someone was eventually kind enough to tell me that I had a habit of reiterating what I said several times for every answer.
    – pi31415
    May 23 '14 at 11:20










  • I don't think I talked too much. Interviewer interrupted me after 2 or 3 short sentences.
    – user2191454
    May 23 '14 at 11:23







  • 1




    Hard to say. I ran into one interviewer who asked me a series of rapid fire questions that kept me off-balance and responding with the first thing that came to mind, and the first thing that came to mind was the truth. It is also possible that the interviewer doesn't particularly care about your feelings and as soon as you are giving you the reply he is looking for, he'll be firing the next question at you while your mind is still on the previous questions. Every other interviewer I ran into took a more relaxed approach, even as they skewered me.
    – Vietnhi Phuvan
    May 23 '14 at 11:53







  • 1




    The interviewer may be less experienced at interviewing than you.
    – kevin cline
    May 23 '14 at 13:59








1




1




agree with Joe. I noticed I use to get cut off all the time in interviews until someone was eventually kind enough to tell me that I had a habit of reiterating what I said several times for every answer.
– pi31415
May 23 '14 at 11:20




agree with Joe. I noticed I use to get cut off all the time in interviews until someone was eventually kind enough to tell me that I had a habit of reiterating what I said several times for every answer.
– pi31415
May 23 '14 at 11:20












I don't think I talked too much. Interviewer interrupted me after 2 or 3 short sentences.
– user2191454
May 23 '14 at 11:23





I don't think I talked too much. Interviewer interrupted me after 2 or 3 short sentences.
– user2191454
May 23 '14 at 11:23





1




1




Hard to say. I ran into one interviewer who asked me a series of rapid fire questions that kept me off-balance and responding with the first thing that came to mind, and the first thing that came to mind was the truth. It is also possible that the interviewer doesn't particularly care about your feelings and as soon as you are giving you the reply he is looking for, he'll be firing the next question at you while your mind is still on the previous questions. Every other interviewer I ran into took a more relaxed approach, even as they skewered me.
– Vietnhi Phuvan
May 23 '14 at 11:53





Hard to say. I ran into one interviewer who asked me a series of rapid fire questions that kept me off-balance and responding with the first thing that came to mind, and the first thing that came to mind was the truth. It is also possible that the interviewer doesn't particularly care about your feelings and as soon as you are giving you the reply he is looking for, he'll be firing the next question at you while your mind is still on the previous questions. Every other interviewer I ran into took a more relaxed approach, even as they skewered me.
– Vietnhi Phuvan
May 23 '14 at 11:53





1




1




The interviewer may be less experienced at interviewing than you.
– kevin cline
May 23 '14 at 13:59





The interviewer may be less experienced at interviewing than you.
– kevin cline
May 23 '14 at 13:59











2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
14
down vote



accepted










Without a lot more detail, it's hard to know for sure.



One possibility is that you were giving a more detailed answer than the interviewer wanted to hear. Most times, an interviewer will have a set of questions that they want to go through and they only have a limited time to get through them. If a candidate spends too much time answering some questions, that leaves less time for the remaining questions. An interviewer may need to interrupt to keep the conversation moving forward.



I suppose it's also possible that the interviewer is acting rudely intentionally in order to see how a candidate reacts to rude customers. That's more likely if the position is something that has a lot of direct action with customers. I'm far from a fan of that sort of thing but I'm sure there are interviewers that take that approach.



Undoubtedly, though, there are other possibilities. Perhaps the interviewer was just in a bad frame of mind-- perhaps she had a major project due and was anxious to get back to her desk to finish it. Perhaps the interviewer was just a bad interviewer. Perhaps your communication styles just didn't mesh well-- it sometimes takes people time to figure out when someone else is pausing because they're done speaking rather than pausing as a natural part of speaking, for example. It's impossible to know with any real certainty what might have been in any particular interviewer's mind during any particular interview.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    -3
    down vote













    One other alternative: the interviewer may have judged after only two or three sentences of yours that your answer would be perfect... or utter crap. In either case, he may have thought that continuing your answer would not yield incremental information about you to him. So he rather switched to something else. I'll agree that there are more and less polite ways to do this.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 5




      This is not an answer, nor does it add an alternative too Justin's answer. It's just his first option told in other words.
      – Kevin
      May 23 '14 at 11:37










    Your Answer







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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    14
    down vote



    accepted










    Without a lot more detail, it's hard to know for sure.



    One possibility is that you were giving a more detailed answer than the interviewer wanted to hear. Most times, an interviewer will have a set of questions that they want to go through and they only have a limited time to get through them. If a candidate spends too much time answering some questions, that leaves less time for the remaining questions. An interviewer may need to interrupt to keep the conversation moving forward.



    I suppose it's also possible that the interviewer is acting rudely intentionally in order to see how a candidate reacts to rude customers. That's more likely if the position is something that has a lot of direct action with customers. I'm far from a fan of that sort of thing but I'm sure there are interviewers that take that approach.



    Undoubtedly, though, there are other possibilities. Perhaps the interviewer was just in a bad frame of mind-- perhaps she had a major project due and was anxious to get back to her desk to finish it. Perhaps the interviewer was just a bad interviewer. Perhaps your communication styles just didn't mesh well-- it sometimes takes people time to figure out when someone else is pausing because they're done speaking rather than pausing as a natural part of speaking, for example. It's impossible to know with any real certainty what might have been in any particular interviewer's mind during any particular interview.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      14
      down vote



      accepted










      Without a lot more detail, it's hard to know for sure.



      One possibility is that you were giving a more detailed answer than the interviewer wanted to hear. Most times, an interviewer will have a set of questions that they want to go through and they only have a limited time to get through them. If a candidate spends too much time answering some questions, that leaves less time for the remaining questions. An interviewer may need to interrupt to keep the conversation moving forward.



      I suppose it's also possible that the interviewer is acting rudely intentionally in order to see how a candidate reacts to rude customers. That's more likely if the position is something that has a lot of direct action with customers. I'm far from a fan of that sort of thing but I'm sure there are interviewers that take that approach.



      Undoubtedly, though, there are other possibilities. Perhaps the interviewer was just in a bad frame of mind-- perhaps she had a major project due and was anxious to get back to her desk to finish it. Perhaps the interviewer was just a bad interviewer. Perhaps your communication styles just didn't mesh well-- it sometimes takes people time to figure out when someone else is pausing because they're done speaking rather than pausing as a natural part of speaking, for example. It's impossible to know with any real certainty what might have been in any particular interviewer's mind during any particular interview.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        14
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        14
        down vote



        accepted






        Without a lot more detail, it's hard to know for sure.



        One possibility is that you were giving a more detailed answer than the interviewer wanted to hear. Most times, an interviewer will have a set of questions that they want to go through and they only have a limited time to get through them. If a candidate spends too much time answering some questions, that leaves less time for the remaining questions. An interviewer may need to interrupt to keep the conversation moving forward.



        I suppose it's also possible that the interviewer is acting rudely intentionally in order to see how a candidate reacts to rude customers. That's more likely if the position is something that has a lot of direct action with customers. I'm far from a fan of that sort of thing but I'm sure there are interviewers that take that approach.



        Undoubtedly, though, there are other possibilities. Perhaps the interviewer was just in a bad frame of mind-- perhaps she had a major project due and was anxious to get back to her desk to finish it. Perhaps the interviewer was just a bad interviewer. Perhaps your communication styles just didn't mesh well-- it sometimes takes people time to figure out when someone else is pausing because they're done speaking rather than pausing as a natural part of speaking, for example. It's impossible to know with any real certainty what might have been in any particular interviewer's mind during any particular interview.






        share|improve this answer












        Without a lot more detail, it's hard to know for sure.



        One possibility is that you were giving a more detailed answer than the interviewer wanted to hear. Most times, an interviewer will have a set of questions that they want to go through and they only have a limited time to get through them. If a candidate spends too much time answering some questions, that leaves less time for the remaining questions. An interviewer may need to interrupt to keep the conversation moving forward.



        I suppose it's also possible that the interviewer is acting rudely intentionally in order to see how a candidate reacts to rude customers. That's more likely if the position is something that has a lot of direct action with customers. I'm far from a fan of that sort of thing but I'm sure there are interviewers that take that approach.



        Undoubtedly, though, there are other possibilities. Perhaps the interviewer was just in a bad frame of mind-- perhaps she had a major project due and was anxious to get back to her desk to finish it. Perhaps the interviewer was just a bad interviewer. Perhaps your communication styles just didn't mesh well-- it sometimes takes people time to figure out when someone else is pausing because they're done speaking rather than pausing as a natural part of speaking, for example. It's impossible to know with any real certainty what might have been in any particular interviewer's mind during any particular interview.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered May 23 '14 at 11:02









        Justin Cave

        34.8k9112136




        34.8k9112136






















            up vote
            -3
            down vote













            One other alternative: the interviewer may have judged after only two or three sentences of yours that your answer would be perfect... or utter crap. In either case, he may have thought that continuing your answer would not yield incremental information about you to him. So he rather switched to something else. I'll agree that there are more and less polite ways to do this.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 5




              This is not an answer, nor does it add an alternative too Justin's answer. It's just his first option told in other words.
              – Kevin
              May 23 '14 at 11:37














            up vote
            -3
            down vote













            One other alternative: the interviewer may have judged after only two or three sentences of yours that your answer would be perfect... or utter crap. In either case, he may have thought that continuing your answer would not yield incremental information about you to him. So he rather switched to something else. I'll agree that there are more and less polite ways to do this.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 5




              This is not an answer, nor does it add an alternative too Justin's answer. It's just his first option told in other words.
              – Kevin
              May 23 '14 at 11:37












            up vote
            -3
            down vote










            up vote
            -3
            down vote









            One other alternative: the interviewer may have judged after only two or three sentences of yours that your answer would be perfect... or utter crap. In either case, he may have thought that continuing your answer would not yield incremental information about you to him. So he rather switched to something else. I'll agree that there are more and less polite ways to do this.






            share|improve this answer














            One other alternative: the interviewer may have judged after only two or three sentences of yours that your answer would be perfect... or utter crap. In either case, he may have thought that continuing your answer would not yield incremental information about you to him. So he rather switched to something else. I'll agree that there are more and less polite ways to do this.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited May 23 '14 at 13:13









            Kevin

            1,55911629




            1,55911629










            answered May 23 '14 at 11:30









            Stephan Kolassa

            8,35532850




            8,35532850







            • 5




              This is not an answer, nor does it add an alternative too Justin's answer. It's just his first option told in other words.
              – Kevin
              May 23 '14 at 11:37












            • 5




              This is not an answer, nor does it add an alternative too Justin's answer. It's just his first option told in other words.
              – Kevin
              May 23 '14 at 11:37







            5




            5




            This is not an answer, nor does it add an alternative too Justin's answer. It's just his first option told in other words.
            – Kevin
            May 23 '14 at 11:37




            This is not an answer, nor does it add an alternative too Justin's answer. It's just his first option told in other words.
            – Kevin
            May 23 '14 at 11:37












             

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