This document provides resources for nursing interview preparation, including common interview questions, tips, and examples. It lists top nursing interview questions and answers on experience, challenges, work weeks, weaknesses, reasons for hiring, salaries, and questions to ask. Useful materials are also listed on situational, behavioral, phone, competency-based, and technical interview questions as well as thank you letters, applications, practices, and more. The extensive list aims to help applicants prepare for and succeed in nursing job interviews.
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Top 10 nursing interview questions and answers
1. Top 10 nursing interview questions and
answers
In this file, you can ref interview materials for nursing such as types of interview
questions, nursing situational interview, nursing behavioral interview
Other useful materials for nursing interview:
topinterviewquestions.info/free-ebook-80-interview-questions-and-answers
topinterviewquestions.info/top-18-secrets-to-win-every-job-interviews
topinterviewquestions.info/13-types-of-interview-questions-and-how-to-face-them
topinterviewquestions.info/job-interview-checklist-40-points
topinterviewquestions.info/top-8-interview-thank-you-letter-samples
topinterviewquestions.info/free-21-cover-letter-samples
topinterviewquestions.info/free-24-resume-samples
topinterviewquestions.info/top-15-ways-to-search-new-jobs
2. What experience do you have in this nursing field?
This is the time during a job interview to tell the
interviewer about any experience you might have
that is relevant to the position and makes you the
ideal candidate for the job. You want to be specific
here. Talk about school, previous jobs you may
have held, or any prior life experience that has
prepared you for the position. As always, keep all
experiences and opinions professional and positive.
After youve talked about general ideas, try talking
about an assignment you had in class or a project
you had at work that challenged you and you were
able to overcome. This lets the employer know that
you take pride in what you do and arent afraid to
share meaningful experiences with others.
Showing reserve during the hiring process may
point to a sign of weakness and will limit your
chances for employment. Therefore, if you tailor
your answers to the position, you should have no
problem coming up with meaningful examples to
talk about if asked this question.
3. What challenges are you looking for in this nursing position?
A typical interview question to determine what you
are looking for your in next job, and whether you
would be a good fit for the position being hired for,
is "What challenges are you looking for in a
position?"
The best way to answer questions about the
challenges you are seeking is to discuss how you
would like to be able to effectively utilize your
skills and experience if you were hired for the job.
You can also mention that you are motivated by
challenges, have the ability to effectively meet
challenges, and have the flexibility and skills
necessary to handle a challenging job.
You can continue by describing specific examples
of challenges you have met and goals you have
achieved in the past.
4. Describe a typical work week for nursing position?
Interviewers expect a candidate for employment to
discuss what they do while they are working in
detail. Before you answer, consider the position
you are applying for and how your current or past
positions relate to it. The more you can connect
your past experience with the job opening, the
more successful you will be at answering the
questions.
It should be obvious that it's not a good idea talk
about non-work related activities that you do on
company time, but, I've had applicants tell me how
they are often late because they have to drive a
child to school or like to take a long lunch break to
work at the gym.
Keep your answers focused on work and show the
interviewer that you're organized ("The first thing I
do on Monday morning is check my voicemail and
email, then I prioritize my activities for the week.")
and efficient.
5. What is your biggest weakness?
No one likes to answer this question because it
requires a very delicate balance. You simply cant
lie and say you dont have one; you cant trick the
interviewer by offering up a personal weakness
that is really a strength (Sometimes, I work too
much and dont maintain a work-life balance.);
and you shouldnt be so honest that you throw
yourself under the bus (Im not a morning person
so Im working on getting to the office on time.)
Think of a small flaw like I sometimes get
sidetracked by small details, I am occasionally
not as patient as I should be with subordinates or
co-workers who do not understand my ideas, or I
am still somewhat nervous and uncomfortable with
my public-speaking skills and would like to give
more presentations and talk in front of others or in
meetings. Add that you are aware of the problem
and you are doing your best to correct it by taking
a course of action.
6. Why should the we hire you as
nursing position?
This is the part where you link your skills,
experience, education and your personality to the
job itself. This is why you need to be utterly
familiar with the job description as well as the
company culture. Remember though, its best to
back them up with actual examples of say, how
you are a good team player.
It is possible that you may not have as much skills,
experience or qualifications as the other
candidates. What then, will set you apart from
the rest? Energy and passion might. People are
attracted to someone who is charismatic, who
show immense amount of energy when they talk,
and who love what it is that they do. As you
explain your compatibility with the job and
company, be sure to portray yourself as that
motivated, confident and energetic person, ever-
ready to commit to the cause of the company.
7. What do you know about our company?
Follow these three easy research tips before your next
job interview:
1) Visit the company website; look in the about us
section and careers sections
2) Visit the companys LinkedIn page (note, you must
have a LinkedIn account its free to sign up) to view
information about the company
3) Google a keyword search phrase like press releases
followed by the company name; youll find the most
recent news stories shared by the company
Remember, just because you have done your
homework, it does not mean you need to share ALL of
it during the interview! Reciting every fact youve
learned is almost as much of a turn off as not knowing
anything at all! At a minimum, you should include the
following in your answer:
1. What type of product or service the company sells
2. How long the company has been in business
3. What the company culture is like OR what the
company mission statement is, and how the culture
and/or mission relate to your values or personality
8. Why do you want to work with us?
More likely than not, the interviewer wishes to see
how much you know about the company culture,
and whether you can identify with the
organizations values and vision. Every
organization has its strong points, and these are the
ones that you should highlight in your answer. For
example, if the company emphasizes on integrity
with customers, then you mention that you would
like to be in such a team because you yourself
believe in integrity.
It doesnt have to be a lie. In the case that your
values are not in line with the ones by the
company, ask yourself if you would be happy
working there. If you have no issue with that, go
ahead. But if you are aware of the company culture
and realize that there is some dilemma you might
be facing, you ought to think twice. The best
policy is to be honest with yourself, and be honest
with the interviewer with what is it in the company
culture that motivates you.
9. What kind of salary do you need?
A loaded question. A nasty little game that you
will probably lose if you answer first. So, do not
answer it. Instead, say something like, Thats a
tough question. Can you tell me the range for
this position?
In most cases, the interviewer, taken off guard,
will tell you. If not, say that it can depend on the
details of the job. Then give a wide range.
10. Do you have any questions to ask us?
Never ask Salary, perks, leave, place of posting,
etc. regarded questions.
Try to ask more about the company to show how
early you can make a contribution to your
organization like
Sir, with your kind permission I would like to
know more about induction and developmental
programs?
OR
Sir, I would like to have my feedback, so that I
can analyze and improve my strengths and rectify
my shortcomings.
11. Useful materials for nursing interview:
topinterviewquestions.info/top-36-situational-interview-questions
topinterviewquestions.info/440-behavioral-interview-questions-ebook-pdf-
download
topinterviewquestions.info/top-40-second-interview-questions
topinterviewquestions.info/95-management-interview-questions-and-answers-
ebook-pdf-download
topinterviewquestions.info/top-30-phone-interview-questions
topinterviewquestions.info/290-competency-based-interview-questions
topinterviewquestions.info/45-internship-interview-questions
topinterviewquestions.info/15-tips-for-job-interview-attire (dress code,
clothes, what to wear)
topinterviewquestions.info/top-15-written-test-examples
topinterviewquestions.info/top-15-closing-statements
topinterviewquestions.info/20-case- study-examples for job interview
15. Other interview tips for nursing interview
1. Practice types of job interview such as screening
interview, phone interview, second interview,
situational interview, behavioral interview
(competency based), technical interview, group
interview
2. Send interview thank you letter to employers
after finishing the job interview: first interview,
follow-up interview, final interview.
3. If you want more interview questions for entry-
level, internship, freshers, experienced candidates,
you can ref free ebook: 75 interview questions and
answers.
4. Prepare list of questions in order to ask the
employer during job interview.
5. Note: This file is available for free download.
16. Fields related to nursing career:
The above job description can be used for fields as:
Construction, manufacturing, healthcare, non profit, advertising, agile, architecture, automotive,
agency, budget, building, business development, consulting, communication, clinical research,
design, software development, product development, interior design, web development,
engineering, education, events, electrical, exhibition, energy, ngo, finance, fashion, green card, oil
gas, hospital, it, marketing, media, mining, nhs, non technical, oil and gas, offshore,
pharmaceutical, real estate, retail, research, human resources, telecommunications, technology,
technical, senior, digital, software, web, clinical, hr, infrastructure, business, erp, creative, ict,
hvac, sales, quality management, uk, implementation, network, operations, architectural,
environmental, crm, website, interactive, security, supply chain, logistics, training, project
management, administrative management
The above interview questions also can be used for job title levels: entry level nursing, junior
nursing, senior nursing, nursing assistant, nursing associate, nursing administrator, nursing clerk,
nursing coordinator, nursing consultant, nursing controller, nursing director, nursing engineer,
nursing executive, nursing leader, nursing manager, nursing officer, nursing specialist, nursing
supervisor, VP nursing