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Alison Doyle

Weird Interview Questions

By , About.com GuideDecember 29, 2010

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nullThere are interview questions that are difficult to answer,  some that are just typical interview questions, and there are some that are just, well, a bit weird.

 Glassdoor.com has spent some time going through the more than 80,000 interview questions shared by job candidates to come up with a list of the Top 25 Oddball Interview Questions. 


  1. "If you were shrunk to the size of a pencil and put in a blender, how would you get out?" - Asked at Goldman Sachs, Analyst position
  2. "How many ridges [are there] around a quarter?" - Asked at Deloitte, Project Analyst position
  3. "What is the philosophy of Martial Arts?" - Asked at Aflac, Sales Associate position
  4. "Explain [to] me what has happened in this country during the last 10 years." - Asked at Boston Consulting, Consultant position
  5. "Rate yourself on a scale of 1 to 10 how weird you are." - Asked at Capital One, Operations Analyst position
  6. "How many basketball[s] can you fit in this room" - Asked at Google, People Analyst position
  7. "Out of 25 horses, pick the fastest 3 horses. In each race, only 5 horses can run at the same time. What is the minimum number of races required?" - Asked at Bloomberg LP Financial, Software Developer position
  8. "If you could be any superhero, who would it be?" - Asked at AT&T, Customer Sales Representative position
  9. "You have a birthday cake and have exactly 3 slices to cut it into 8 equal pieces. How do you do it?" - Asked at Blackrock Portfolio Management Group, Fixed Income Analyst position
  10. "Given the numbers 1 to 1000, what is the minimum numbers guesses needed to find a specific number if you are given the hint "higher" or "lower" for each guess you make." - Asked at Facebook, Software Engineer position
  11. "If you had 5,623 participants in a tournament, how many games would need to be played to determine the winner?" - Asked at Amazon, Manager position
  12. "An apple costs 20 cents, an orange costs 40 cents, and a grapefruit costs 60 cents, how much is a pear?" - Asked at Epic Systems, Project Manager position
  13. "There are three boxes, one contains only apples, one contains only oranges, and one contains both apples and oranges. The boxes have been incorrectly labeled such that no label identifies the actual contents of the box it labels. Opening just one box, and without looking in the box, you take out one piece of fruit. By looking at the fruit, how can you immediately label all of the boxes correctly?" - Asked at Apple, Software QA Engineer position
  14. "How many traffic lights in Manhattan?" - Asked at Argus Information & Advisory Services, Analyst position
  15. "You are in a dark room with no light. You need matching socks for your interview and you have 19 grey socks and 25 black socks. What are the chances you will get a matching pair? " - Asked at Eze Castle, Quality Assurance position
  16. "What do wood and alcohol have in common?" - Asked at Guardsmark, Staff Writer position
  17. "How do you weigh an elephant without using a weigh machine?" - Asked at IBM, Software Engineer position
  18. "You have 8 pennies, 7 weigh the same, one weighs less. You also have a judges scale. Find the one that weighs less in less than 3 steps." - Asked at Intel, Systems Validation Engineer position
  19. "Why do you think only a small percentage of the population makes over $150K?" - Asked at New York Life, Sales Agent position
  20. "You are in charge of 20 people, organize them to figure out how many bicycles were sold in your area last year." - Asked at Schlumberger, Field Engineer position
  21. "How many bottles of beer are drank in the city over the week." - Asked at The Nielsen Company, Research Analyst position
  22. "What's the square root of 2000?" - Asked at UBS, Sales and Trading position
  23. "A train leaves San Antonio for Huston at 60mph. Another train leaves Huston for San Antonio at 80mph. Huston and San Antonio are 300 miles apart. If a bird leaves San Antonio at 100mph, and turns around and flies back once it reaches the Huston train, and continues to fly between the two, how far will it have flown when they collide."- Asked at USAA, Software Engineer position
  24. "How are M&M's made?" - Asked at US Bank, Leadership Program Development position
  25. "What would you do if you just inherited a pizzeria from your uncle?" - Asked at Volkswagen, Business Analyst position

Before you head out to a job interview, take a look at Glassdoor's Interview section to see what questions what you might be asked. That way you can prepare an answer - especially if it's a weird interview question that you might not expect or one where you have to figure out answer, like some of the interview questions on the Top 25 list!

Related: Glassdoor.com | Interview Questions and Answers

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Image © Glassdoor

Comments
January 5, 2011 at 8:51 am
(1) neil tristan yabut says:

a good deal of the examples here, especially for positions in computers and engineering, are math questions routinely encountered in honors class. in these cases, the questions are not exactly weird in the sense of impropriety; they do gauge the applicant’s theoretical math skills important in these fields, as well as testing how far back in high school math they can recall.

can’t say the same for the other pageant-type questions.

July 25, 2011 at 10:18 pm
(2) Liz says:

I am a computer science student and I was going to say the exact same thing, esp about number ten, that question is based on a simple theory that is extremely important in coding.

January 13, 2011 at 3:31 pm
(3) Luiza says:

well, what can I say but that is obviously that the interviewers have run out of imagination and have absolutely no idea how to choose the best candidate for a position….
And I am pretty sure that not even them know the answer the questions.

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