Are You Smart Enough To Work at Google?
Trick Questions, Zen-like Riddles, Insanely Difficult Puzzles, and Other Devious Interviewing Techniques You Need To Know To Get a Job in the New Economy
Are You Smart Enough To Work at Google?: Trick Questions, Zen-like Riddles, Insanely Difficult Puzzles, and Other Devious Interviewing Techniques You Need To Know To Get a Job in the New Economy. Little, Brown. Jan. 2012. c.288p. illus. bibliog. ISBN 9780316099974. $19.99. CAREERS
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Poundstone (How Would You Move Mount Fuji?) gives readers tips on Google's (and others') interviewing strategies. The first half of the book includes word problems and story-based questions typical of the Google-type interview, and the second half explains the answers. While quite difficult to solve on the spot, these questions give readers some idea of what to expect from a nontraditional interview. (One example of a Google interview question: "Design an evacuation plan for San Francisco.") Google and other companies are using this method to identify creativity and analytical thinking and to sort candidates in a flooded market. One helpful section is "Salvaging a Doomed Interview," which includes ways to "avoid dead air." While this is a helpful look into a new style of interviewing now performed by large corporations, the book is overly full of tough questions and long answers that would be a challenge for anyone to memorize.
VERDICT For those who want something extra in their repertoire for their next interview.
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