Accessibility links

  • Skip to content
  • Accessibility Help

You are using an outdated browser. Upgrade your browser today for a better experience of this site and many others.

Click button to open menu
  • Home
  • About Us
    • About The Firm
    • Company History
    • Why Choose Us?
    • Meet the Team
    • Join the Team
    • Mission Statement
    • Corporate Social Responsibility
    • The Finnies App
  • Services
    • Services for Business
      • Overview
      • Accountancy
      • Auditing
      • Bookkeeping
      • Business Growth
      • Company Secretarial
      • Corporate Finance Services
      • Exit Planning
      • Human Resources Support
      • Payroll
      • Rescue & Recovery
      • Succession Planning
    • Services for Individuals
      • Overview
      • Retirement Planning
      • Self Assessment
      • Wealth Management
    • Tax
      • Overview
      • Personal Tax Planning
      • Corporate Tax
      • Estate and Inheritance Tax
      • Capital Gains Tax
      • HMRC Investigations
      • VAT Advice
      • International Tax
    • Cloud Accounting
      • Overview
      • QuickBooks Online
      • Xero
      • Making Tax Digital – What does it mean to me?
  • Specialisms
    • Manufacturing
    • Academies
      • Overview
      • Audit
      • Payroll Services
      • Responsible Officer Duties
    • Musicians
      • Overview
      • For You Personally
      • Incorporation of Your Business
      • Overseas Engagement
      • VAT Registration
  • Resources
    • Your business
      • Overview
      • Developing your business
      • Essentials
      • Limited companies
      • PAYE, NICs and benefits
      • Starting a business
      • VAT
    • Your money
      • Overview
      • Personal taxation
      • Savings & investments
    • Tax information
      • Overview
      • Autumn Budget
      • Spring Statement
      • Tax calendar
      • Tax rates and allowances
    • Guides
    • Tax strategies
      • Overview
      • Tax and financial strategies 2025/26
      • Strategies for your business
      • Exiting your business
      • Tax and employment
      • Planning for yourself and your family
      • Making the most of savings and investments
      • A comfortable retirement
      • Tax-efficient estate planning
    • Interactive tools
      • Overview
      • Calculators
      • Companies House forms
      • HMRC forms
      • Links
    • IRIS OpenSpace
  • Blog
    • Blog
    • Business News
    • Hot Topics
  • Contact Us
finnies
Facebook X LinkedIn Google+ YouTube
01482 861919 enquiries@finnies.org.uk

Conducting a successful interview

  1. Resources
  2. Your business
  3. Developing your business
  4. Managing your staff

At Finnies we can advise on many aspects of business life. Here are some tips on conducting recruitment interviews...

Hiring suitable staff is essential to the success of your business, so it is vital to get the interview process right.

Here are some of the factors to consider if you want to avoid losing a great candidate, or employing an unsuitable one.

Consider the post carefully

Draw up a job description detailing the responsibilities involved. This will help you to clarify the type of skills and experience that you're looking for in the employee. Make a list of these characteristics and compare it with your impressions of the candidate.

Set the right questions

Everybody knows the classic interview questions. But standard questions can elicit standard responses, so you need to focus on what it is you are really trying to discover about the candidate. The old favourite "Where do you see yourself in five years time?" won't necessarily tell you how the applicant will actually perform in the specified role.

Interviewers are increasingly using open-ended 'behavioural' questions which allow the candidate to demonstrate how he or she has acted in relevant situations in the past. For example, you could ask the applicant: "Can you describe a time when you were hard-pressed to meet a difficult project deadline with limited resources? How did you handle the situation?"

(See the box below for some great traditional and behavioural questions)

Prepare yourself

You want the candidate to be relaxed, not overly wary, so explain the form the interview will take beforehand. Be prepared to answer the candidate's questions about the company's size, mission, culture and future. The interview is a two-way process, and in a competitive job market you may want to create as good an impression for applicants as they do for you. Why not put together a one-page factsheet with details about the business?

Take notes and be consistent

Keep notes of your impressions as the interview progresses. These will act as a memory aid when interviewing a large number of candidates, and will also help you to be consistent and use the same criteria for each interviewee.

Check references

Be sure to follow up references from candidates' previous employers. Remember that what is not said can be as important as what is said

Avoid discrimination

It is essential to ensure that you do not discriminate against any candidates on the grounds of race, age, gender, religion or sexual orientation.

Ten great interview questions

'Traditional' questions

  1. Why are you here?
  2. What motivates you?
  3. How do you take advantage of your strengths and compensate for your weaknesses?
  4. What's the one accomplishment you're most proud of and why?
  5. What are the most important attributes of successful people, and how do you measure up?

'Behavioural' questions

  1. Give an example of a time when you needed to adjust quickly. What did you do and how successful were you?
  2. Describe an occasion when you had to deal with a difficult customer. What solutions did you come to?
  3. Tell me about a time when you had to make an important decision and a colleague strongly disagreed with you. How did you resolve the issue?
  4. Describe a time when you were asked to do something for which you had no training. How did you handle the task?
  5. Tell me about a period when your workload became very heavy. How did you cope with the pressure?

If you are looking for help and advice from a team of professional accountants and business advisers, contact Finnies.

Bringing training in-house Conducting a successful interview Consulting your staff Employee incentives...that won't break the bank Getting the most out of staff appraisals Hiring winning sales staff How to keep your best staff Identify your star employees Keep a look-out for signs of stress Managing absence Opening the books can improve profitability Recruiting executives Recruiting the right staff The do's and don'ts of incentive schemes Your staff handbook

Connect with us

Facebook LinkedIn X Google+ YouTube
Copyright

© 2025 Finnies Chartered Certified Accountants. All rights reserved.

We use cookies on this website, you can find more information about cookies here.
Address
Finnies Chartered Certified Accountants, 4-6 Swaby's Yard, Walkergate, Beverley HU17 9BZ

Please call:
01482 861919

Or email us:
enquiries@finnies.org.uk

Quicklinks

Home | Contact Us | Site map | Accessibility | Legals and Disclaimer | Help |

XERO logo quickbooks.png
Reviews and Ratings for accountant Neil Tomlin, Hull