What questions should you ask the employer in an interview?
Daria Kuznetsova, IT recruiter for Allegians, recommends which questions to ask an HR specialist (and when), which ones to ask the hiring manager, and which ones to skip.
Other articles by the author:
The first stage
— Initially, it is very important to show interest in the position and, in principle, ask questions. If you have no questions, then you are not very interested. If this is a really impressive vacancy, and you want the position, then you can't be passive. On the contrary, you need to show maximum engagement at every stage of the process and understand that it is not only you who is chosen: you also choose, and you have the right to ask questions. To ask them, you need to prepare.
What not to ask
— At the first stage, you definitely should not ask strange questions like: "Will you let me go to the doctor?" "What will happen if my child gets sick?" etc. Questions of this kind show a lack of interest in the product, company, and project. They may be appropriate at the offer stage, but not earlier.
A question like "What does the company do?" is also not appropriate. It looks like you don't know where you're interviewing.
The question of salary is a very delicate point. HR always asks what your salary expectations are. To prepare, it is necessary to monitor the market in advance, identify the salary tiers for this position, and name an amount that is comfortable for you. It's not recommended to ask about the salary yourself. It is extremely rare to find situations when you have reached an offer, but your salary expectations have not been specified. If this happens, then you need to carefully ask which salary tier is provided for this vacancy.
What to ask
— To avoid foolish interview questions, it is better to study all available information about the company in advance. Use Wikipedia, news about the company, LinkedIn, etc., to find out: who the founder is, who are the main shareholder and investor, how many people work in the company, where the offices are located, etc. If you do not know the obvious things, it conveys that the company is not interesting to you.
So, what questions should you ask at the first stage? It is better to ask HR about the company, values, and work schedule.
Each candidate needs to think about what is important to them to know about the company and draft their own list of questions. They should also ask themselves the main question — what does the offer need to include in order for you to accept it? For some, interesting tasks are important, for others it is important that the position cover basic needs, for some the prospect of growth and the possibility of learning are important, etc.
The next stage
— At the first stage, you ask HR general questions about the company and values. At the second stage, you can ask about the position responsibilities, what is expected of you in 3-6 months, what the KPIs are, and what needs to be done to achieve them.
You may also want to ask about:
- future plans for the position;
- tasks and responsibilities; and
- the team — how many people, what does the team look like, is the team expected to expand or are optimization, merger, etc. planned.
Everyone is different, and it is important to understand what is important for you. Some people enjoy a casual atmosphere that features profanity, some are motivated when the boss shouts, while others are horrified by it. Everything is individual. But I would focus on three main question areas for which the answers may be "red flags" for you:
Whether you get this position or not, whether you will have career growth in the future or not, depends entirely on you.
What is important for you to learn at the interview?