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Chapter 6

Chapter 6. Principles of Interviewing. Planning the Interview. Define the goal Identify and analyze the other party. Factors to Consider. Knowledge level The other’s concept of self Your image Attitude. Interview Structure. Highly structured-consists of a standard list of questions

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Chapter 6

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  1. Chapter 6 Principles of Interviewing

  2. Planning the Interview • Define the goal • Identify and analyze the other party

  3. Factors to Consider • Knowledge level • The other’s concept of self • Your image • Attitude

  4. Interview Structure • Highly structured-consists of a standard list of questions • Most common in market research, opinion polls, and attitude surveys • Most questions allow only a limited range of answers

  5. Interview Structure • Nonstructured-allow for flexibility; may consist of a topic without specific questions, or it might consist of a few key questions and the interviewer builds on answers given

  6. Interview Structure • Moderately structured-combines features of the highly structured and the nonstructured. • Interviewer has a list of topics to be covered and a possible order for topics, has a list of questions and possible follow-ups to answers

  7. Possible Questions • Primary and secondary questions • Open and closed questions • Factual and opinion questions • Direct and indirect questions • Hypothetical and critical questions • Leading questions

  8. Primary & Secondary Questions • Primary questions introduce new topic areas within topics • “Do you have any questions for me?” • Secondary questions aim at gathering additional information about a topic that has already been introduced • “Tell me more about that.”

  9. Open & Closed Questions • Open questions invite a broader, more detailed range of responses • “Why are you interested for working for us?” • Closed questions restrict the interviewee’s response • “Would you rather stay in this department or have a transfer?”

  10. Factual & Opinion Questions • Factual questions investigate matters of fact • “Have you taken any speech courses?” • Opinion questions ask for the respondent’s judgment • “Do you think taking a risk on Joe is worthwhile?”

  11. Direct & Indirect Questions • Direct questions use a straightforward approach to getting answers • “”What area of public speaking interests you the most?” • Indirect questions elicit information without directly asking for it • “If you were manager of this department what changes would you make?”

  12. Hypothetical & Critical Incident Questions • Hypothetical questions seek the respondent’s answer to what-if questions • “If you were in my shoes, what would you do?” • Critical incident questions ask the interviewee about a specific account of a real situation • “Think of a time when you needed to decide between two choices. How did you choose?”

  13. Leading Questions • Leading questions force or tempt the respondent to answer in one way • “Don’t you think that proposal is a little pricey?” • “You aren’t seriously asking for a raise now, are you?”

  14. Arrange the Setting • Time-carefully evaluate how long you think you will need to accomplish your purpose and let the other person know. • Place-consider distractions , physical arrangement of the setting, closeness and distance

  15. Conducting the Interview • Opening • Body • Closing

  16. Opening • Greeting and building rapport • Introductions, small talk • Orientation • Explain the reason for the interview • Explain what information is need and how it will be used • Clarify any ground rules • Mention the approximate length of the interview

  17. Body • Responsibilities of the Interviewer • Control & focus the conversation • Listen actively • Use secondary questions to get more information

  18. Body • The interviewee’s role • Listen actively • Give clear, detailed answers • Correct any misunderstandings • Cover your own agenda

  19. Closing • Review & clarify the results of the interview • Establish future goals • Conclude with pleasantries

  20. Ethics of Interviewing • Obligations of the interviewer • Make only promises you are able and willing to keep • Keep confidences • Allow the interviewee to make free responses • Treat every interviewee with respect

  21. Ethics of Interviewing • Obligations of the interviewee • Don’t misrepresent the facts or your position • Don’t waste the interviewer’s time

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