Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Interview. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Interview Quotes And Sayings by 96 Authors including Santosh Avvannavar,Billy Joel,Nancy Jo Sales,Walter Isaacson,Mary Roach for you to enjoy and share.
A good interview is one that makes you feel interviewer was good who gifted the thoughts for years to come, those still lingering with several questions that need to be answered and scenarios that weren't touched upon. And yet you receive an offer.
I'm single but interviewing.
I love to interview outrageous people who speak their minds; also, people who have some kind of mystery attached to them.
Interviews with more than a hundred family members,
For the most part, if somebody approaches me and says, 'I'd like to interview you,' who am I to say no, when I spend all my days going, 'Hello, you don't know me. I'd like to ask you some questions. Do you have a little time?'
Interviews don't go to the core of my life,
When you receive the answers of your interview with yourself~ you become an extremely dangerous person.
As critical acclaim and response has built up, every interview I give is a chance to puncture the myth I've created about my work and refine it.
My advice to all interviewers is: Shut up and listen. It's harder than it sounds.
My basic approach to interviewing is to ask the basic questions that might even sound naive, or not intellectual. Sometimes when you ask the simple questions like 'Who are you?' or 'What do you do?' you learn the most.
A student of mine is an actor, he used to go into these interviews and sometimes not get the part. He was "taken out". Someone would use power in a way that would cause him not to succeed
I don't think of myself as giving interviews. I just have conversations. That gets me in trouble.
I have a hard time with interviews, because I'd rather hear about the interviewer.
I'm not used to interviews. People don't generally interview waitresses.
I just think the word interview, although it is the view between two people exchanged, became a sort of cliche. You ask questions and the other one answers.
I've done so many interviews over the years in so many different languages. Radios. Papers. Magazines. There's always another interview to do. It's quite something, I have to say.
I wanted when we began this to have a conversation, the kind that you're able to have, and the only way I knew how to do it was not to have a pre-interview.
A friend of mine, now retired, was then a major exec at a major bank, and one of her jobs, the last four years, was the farewell interview.
Tonight I'll be interviewing Ken Watanabe, Keisha Castle Hughes, Benecio Del Toro and Djimon Honsou - and yes, those are actors, not caterers.
I've done more than 10,000 interviews, and I've learnt that you've got to do your homework. I bury myself in research beforehand. And you have to be genuinely interested in people; there's a cornucopia of great, ordinary people out there with wonderful, colourful stories.
Some interviewees you make friends with and some you don't.
Before doing any interviews I like to know who I'm meeting with and get a bit of an idea of their sensibilities.
Why should I give you an interview? All you journalists are plagiarists.
'Tell me about yourself.' When interviewers ask this, they don't want to hear about everything that has happened in your life; the interviewer's objective is to see how you respond to this vague yet personal question.
When you do an interview with me, you're talking to a cheap imitation of the person that I really am. There's no magic in my words, it's just me talking.
When I'm interviewing somebody I don't work from prepared questions.
I once was interviewed and got so exasperated that I said, 'What do you want, a shopping list?' They kept asking, 'What's in this picture?'
We were in Little Rock. We were assessing a very important issue. In the midst of our discussions, we were receiving urgent inquiries from The Washington Post asking about interviews.
My biggest thing has always been privacy. With an interview such as this where the questions are about me, I struggle to express myself. I have an immediate answer in my head of what I'd say, but sometimes I feel that it would be too honest. So these wheels of censorship start going around my head.
I don't do interviews under false pretenses.
Besides getting several paper cuts in the same day or receiving the news that someone in your family has betrayed you to your enemies, one of the most unpleasant experiences in life is a job interview.
I am certainly more interested in interviewing than being interviewed. Sometimes you find yourself attacked from the start.
Sometimes I wouldn't give an interview because I didn't have the time or something else was more important. So they come up with a story which I don't think is always true, but they have to sell papers.
People always think I hate doing interviews. I don't. I wouldn't do them if I didn't like them.
Interviews are fun, but I get nervous at red carpets.
For me, the main principle for broadcasters has to be that if people stand to benefit from an interview, they should be prepared to face some downside as well.
If you're doing an interview, you need conversational tension. After you talk to them, you're not going to have a relationship with them, they're not going to like you, they're not going to be your friend.
You never really meet a human being until you live with them or know them for awhile, so this is my clown and they understand that and so these interviews don't bother them.
I like to think that at best the interview becomes something like the unaccountable experience of talking to oneself in a mirror.
I apologize for my terrible interview skills.
What is your position at the company? Right back.
I interviewed Johnny Knoxville once. I was kind of scared to interview him because I thought he might be a real jerk, but he was really nice, and I ripped his chest hair out.
I'm very unrelaxed doing a newspaper interview.
I put my foot in my mouth every time I'm interviewed.
You must stop this interview now as I have come to end of my personality.
When somebody asks me a question, I try to be as straightforward about it as possible. I try not to overthink what I'm going to say in an interview.
One of the strengths of my interviews is that I really, honest to God, have no idea what people are going to say.
I'm not a journalist; I'm probably a horrible interviewer. The one small thing I have is I'm curious, and I'm interested in who I'm with.
So much interviewing these days is about the presenter - I?m a clever boy, I?m going to be smart with people; or it?s a trivial - how do you like your eggs boiled?
I haven't been to a job interview since I was 16 years old. When I was approached by Givenchy it was more like a courtship.
My Lehman interview was representative not just of my own experience, but of thousands of interviews conducted by a dozen investment banks on several dozen college campuses from about 1981 onwards.
Fortunately, I've done so many interviews that I've become very good at detecting when someone is giving a less-than-candid reply.
I sometimes find that in interviews you learn more about yourself than the person learned about you.
I'm not a go-in-for-the-kill kind of interviewer. It's a great thing to me, that kind of interviewer, but I'm not it. It doesn't play to my strengths at all. I like to interview people who are interested in telling their story and tell it as truthfully as they can.
Once we get them in the studio, you interview a person the same way you would interview another. You ask them a question. You let them answer. You try to listen closely and then ask a follow-up.
My interviews are very pointed. I'm an active participant; I will kindly interrupt people. But I've learned there is nothing people won't tell you if you ask in a compassionate and legitimately interested way.
No interviews without appointments except between nine and ten PM on the second Saturdays.
There's a lot of interviews now where nobody seems to talk about anything. Like it's illegal. But it can be fun if you stay involved. Like most conversations.
I never liked the idea of giving interviews. One says many things, but when they are published, they become shortened, condensed. The ideas lose their meaning.
When you're interviewing someone, you're in control. When you're being interviewed, you think you're in control, but you're not.
Often I used my gut instinct to ask the questions and get the answers I thought the audience wanted to hear. Sometimes the interviewees said things that surprised even them.
Job interview question: Q: Where do you see yourself five years from now?A: Well, five years from now I see myself being able to answer this question.
I have a roof over my head. I had a breakfast, and a lot of people in the world can't say that. I'm not going to complain about being interviewed.
Interviews, and hence interviewers, are there to help shed light, and to let viewers judge for themselves. We are not judges, juries, commentators or torturers - nor friends, either.
I don't want anyone to have to interview me. I wish I didn't have to talk too much about myself.
I'm a writer, so I interview people all the time, and I think of it as being a very creative process. Giving interviews is actually one of the most creative parts of the film promotion process.
I've changed my mind about the interview. I shall never give interviews.
Note on Interviews and Attribution
I was an accountant in Chicago, and a friend of mine, Ed Gallagher, was in advertising. At 4:30 every day I'd be bored, and I would call him. He'd interview me.
I have nothing against interviews. I don't pursue them. When people I work for deem it appropriate, I'm perfectly willing to serve.
My first interview at SI, I sat in silence next to Guy LaFleur for five minutes on the New York Rangers team bus until he finally broke the ice. Those early interviews, every one of them was like a terrible first date.
The first interviews I gave were entirely unpleasant. You have people trying to trip you up with impolite questions that have nothing to do with the books. It's simply vulgar curiosity, and I won't have it.
I've found that doing interviews forces you to face yourself; I'm constantly having to search within myself, to see why I do certain things.
I prefer doing interviews where people don't have to interpret what you say. I'm going to be real honest.
When somebody wants to interview me, I've always got something to say.
When I was there, something clicked in my head; I found myself interviewing people, searching out facts and figures. Later on I became much more self-conscious of what I was doing.
People think I don't like interviews but I don't mind speaking about proper and interesting stuff. When it's stupid stuff to build your image and you are told to mention this and mention that, I hate it.
It must be hard interviewing actors.
Interviewing politicians and movie stars, you know what you'll get. I like the people-stories better.
There are very few interviews I turn down, because I really dig talking to people and hanging out.
Sometimes you are being interviewed by someone and you think, if I knew this person they'd be my best friend. Other times you're being interviewed by a complete jerk.
I've become wary of interviews in which you're forced to go back over the reasons why you made certain decisions. You tend to rationalize what you've done, to intellectually review a process that is often intuitive.
I'd rather strive for the kind of interview where instead of me asking to introduce myself to society, society asks me to introduce myself to society.
I still don't like doing interviews. I hardly do any ... I hope this will be the last one for a long while.
There's only one interview technique that matters ... Do your homework so you can listen to the answers and react to them and ask follow-ups. Do your homework, prepare.
I'm a reporter - if I don't interview someone, I don't have much to say, and I definitely can't just sit down and knock out 800 words on any subject you give me.
I love having people around who are better interviewers than I am and who can make the time to do a really great job. All of the interviews that we've published are with people who really interest me.
What is your one-sentence job description?
I don't talk a lot when I interview. My job is to get out of the way.
Okay, here's one. Two years ago we interviewed a man from a small town in Vermont. Great reputation in his community. Owns a chain of highly successful hardware stores in the eastern part of the state.
I'm a terrible interviewer. I'm not a journalist - although I have a Peabody Award - and I'm not really a late-night host. What I am is honest.
I'm notorious for giving a bad interview. I'm an actor and I can't help but feel I'm boring when I'm on as myself.
I've interviewed the president in the White House. I'd interviewed major newsmakers and Hollywood actors.
I like to do an interview when the other person isn't expecting it. I find it's more spontaneous.
Being interviewed is one of the most abnormal things that you can do to somebody else. It's two steps removed from the Inquisition.
INTERVIEWER: Why are you working as a home security guard? Aren't there things you'd like to do?
H.S. GUARD: There's not really anything I'd like to do. I'm more hoping for the world to end quickly.
I hung up and fed myself a slug of Old Forester to brace my nerves for the interview.
Marriage is the interview that never ends.
It must be quite rare for an interviewer to be interviewed.
I remember sitting one time doing 100 interviews in a day, and they're all television interviews and they're kind of - and you just sit there and they bring these people in and out, and in out.