Chewy509
Wotty wot wot.
Hi Everyone,
The company I work are looking at hiring a new technician to assist in support and on-site installation of our products, and I've been asked to sit in on the interview to help ascertain technical knowledge of the candidate. The candidate will be working directly with me, so essentially will be an equal peer if hired.
Rather than asking questions about random facts on the technology we focus on (MS SBS, MS SQL, IIS), I would rather determine the candidates problem solving ability, how quickly they can learn new concepts and whether they have the 'geek-gene' or not?
The reasoning is that we have TechNet, Google, man pages and the like to help find the information we need (when we don't know the solution), and there is no way any one person can remember everything about everything in particular with MS products anyway. I can't expect that.
Does anyone have some examples of questions that can be asked to help determine a persons problem solving skills, especially related to MS Windows, SQL, etc.
And with the 'geek-gene', what I mean is, the person is working in IT because they love IT and have have that knack of making it work in 2-3mins, despite others spending days trying to find a solution...
PS. If you live in Brisbane, Australia and are looking for a new job as a support technician, drop me a PM and I can discuss further.
The company I work are looking at hiring a new technician to assist in support and on-site installation of our products, and I've been asked to sit in on the interview to help ascertain technical knowledge of the candidate. The candidate will be working directly with me, so essentially will be an equal peer if hired.
Rather than asking questions about random facts on the technology we focus on (MS SBS, MS SQL, IIS), I would rather determine the candidates problem solving ability, how quickly they can learn new concepts and whether they have the 'geek-gene' or not?
The reasoning is that we have TechNet, Google, man pages and the like to help find the information we need (when we don't know the solution), and there is no way any one person can remember everything about everything in particular with MS products anyway. I can't expect that.
Does anyone have some examples of questions that can be asked to help determine a persons problem solving skills, especially related to MS Windows, SQL, etc.
And with the 'geek-gene', what I mean is, the person is working in IT because they love IT and have have that knack of making it work in 2-3mins, despite others spending days trying to find a solution...
PS. If you live in Brisbane, Australia and are looking for a new job as a support technician, drop me a PM and I can discuss further.