top of page

Strange but True Interview Experiences from You!

  • Writer: Melissa Morse
    Melissa Morse
  • Feb 7, 2017
  • 2 min read

HRSBT recently asked, “What’s the strangest job interview you’ve ever conducted?” And the responses rolled in!


One reader, Gary, gave us multiple examples of strange interviews:

"At one company I worked for, I had to interview employees for a job in my department, from different departments when they wanted a job transfer.
One candidate started out by explaining that he didn’t know why he was interviewing because he hated the company, hated his coworkers, hated his boss, but maybe a transfer would help. He never once looked at me, staring at the floor the entire time. I asked a few simple questions, but the attitude was scary.
After other in-house interviews, I selected my preference. I was told I couldn’t have the guy I wanted for 90 days, but 'mister-personality' was available immediately. I told them I would wait.
At another company I worked for, I witnessed four people come in to fill out applications—three guys and a girl. The stench of body odor and cigarette smoke was overpowering. Their clothes were dirty. Part of the application included a simple math test with commonsense questions and all answers were multiple choice. The girl scored 19 wrong out of 20. Needless to say, the applications went in the circular file, and the room deodorizer came out.
I was in charge of conducting new employee safety training. With one candidate, after some safety videos, to take a break, I took him on a facilities tour to show him safety and fire equipment as well as to cover emergency evacuation. When we got to the packaging department, he appeared agitated.
He said: 'There’s a lot of people here, a lot going on. Do you have a job where I can work alone by myself without all these people?'
My reply: 'No, actually, you will start here in packaging.'
His reply: 'Sorry, not for me, how do I get out of here?' And he was gone …
He previously was a long-haul truck driver.
Everyone razzed me for quite some time that my safety training bored people too much so they would leave."

Another reader, Steve, shared these, after having viewed the first one on a CareerBuilder list of strange interview situations: “ … a candidate who brought a pizza and didn’t share. I had one who brought a six-pack of Budweiser with two empties he had enjoyed while waiting to be called in. He didn’t share those either.”


About Melissa Morse

I am a seasoned Product and Content Marketing professional with a passion for continuous learning and sharing my knowledge. For the last decade, I have been focused on creating engaging marketing content for B2B audiences at the mid-market and enterprise levels. 

bottom of page