Good interview questions for a Service Desk Candidate?
N2IT
Inactive Imported Users Posts: 7,483 ■■■■■■■■■■
Comments
-
YFZblu Member Posts: 1,462 ■■■■■■■■□□You already know this, but I think for Service Desk it might be best to ask questions that reveal HOW someone thinks, rather than simply answering the question correctly.
Other softball technical questions you can throw out:
-User tries to turn on the computer, but nothing happens. What do you do?
-Outlook keeps asking for a username and password, what are your troubleshooting steps?
-A user's personal folders are missing in Outlook: How would you assist him/her with that?
-You don't immediately know how to resolve an issue, what resources would you use to find an answer, and at what point do you ask for help? -
Akaricloud Member Posts: 938With something that entry level I usually like to use questions that give insight into two things:
1. What they actually know.
and
2. What they do when they don't know.
With that said it really depends on what you're expecting out of them. To answer #1 I used to ask about how to join the computer to a domain, how to reset an AD password, a simple PST file question, ect.
Then a few questions that they likely wouldn't know the answer in order to see how they problem solve and handle the unknown. Random things such as: "You see a default gateway of 0.0.0.0 and the computer won't connect to websites, what should you do to resolve the problem?". -
QHalo Member Posts: 1,488A user calls and says the restroom is out of toilet paper. Seriously, we used to use this one. It shows how a candidate will respond to an asinine question that has nothing to do with IT because as we all know, most people have no clue what IT really does. Modify it to your liking/HR policy.
-
RouteMyPacket Member Posts: 1,104Technical Questions should revolve around TCP/IP troubleshooting and local MS apps (Outlook, Word, Excel)Modularity and Design Simplicity:
Think of the 2:00 a.m. test—if you were awakened in the
middle of the night because of a network problem and had to figure out the
traffic flows in your network while you were half asleep, could you do it? -
cyberguypr Mod Posts: 6,928 ModThere's a bomb on a bus. Once the bus goes 50 miles an hour, the bomb is armed. If it drops below 50, it blows up. What do you do? What do you do?
-
FloOz Member Posts: 1,614 ■■■■□□□□□□cyberguypr wrote: »There's a bomb on a bus. Once the bus goes 50 miles an hour, the bomb is armed. If it drops below 50, it blows up. What do you do? What do you do?
never hit 50mph so the bomb never arms -
DPG Member Posts: 780 ■■■■■□□□□□"When does the Narwhal bacon?"
If they have a puzzled look on their face, continue the interview.
If they answer correctly, end the interview immediately. -
undomiel Member Posts: 2,818Akaricloud wrote: »With something that entry level I usually like to use questions that give insight into two things:
1. What they actually know.
and
2. What they do when they don't know.
I believe that holds true for any position. When I'm interviewing a candidate I usually try to work out what a baseline of knowledge in an area, figure out what their specialty is (I interview lots of generalists) and put them in a position that is out of their comfort zone where they don't know the answer. It helps weed out the ones that don't like to think.Jumping on the IT blogging band wagon -- http://www.jefferyland.com/ -
netsysllc Member Posts: 479 ■■■■□□□□□□A vital question is 'when does the day end' to many people have the 8-5 attitude and leave regardless if things are finished
-
Psoasman Member Posts: 2,687 ■■■■■■■■■□Based on their resume, ask them questions you feel they should know. And, ask them questions that they probably don't know, as this will show some of how they think and react to unknowns.
-
pumbaa_g Member Posts: 353My previous boss used to start off with something simple, tell me about yourself etc. Then ask questions on that or he would just read the resume and ask something related to what you have written in the resume. I asked him about that once, he told me firstly it puts them at ease and secondly if you screw it up it shows where you stand. For the record most of the people he interviewed got stumped on these.
My experience has been it not the question that is important its way you answer that tells a lot about the candidate. For service desk its not important if the guy knows AD or Networking its more important if that he knows where to find the information quickly, can do attitude or if he/she is willing to learn. Sometimes being too technical in a Helpdesk/Service Desk role is not good.
I remember the old joke where the interviewer asks the candidate "Whats 2+2" and he jumps up, closes the blinds and then whispers "how much do you want it to be!"[h=1]“An expert is one who knows more and more about less and less until he knows absolutely everything about nothing.” [/h]