In a world where professionals are expected to show up polished, prepared, and perfect, sometimes the real test isn’t your technical skill — it’s how well you handle awkward or confrontational interviewers. One experienced candidate recently shared his bizarre encounter with a company that took things a little too far, and let’s just say… it didn’t end well.
The candidate, a senior-level professional with nearly a decade of experience, had been progressing smoothly through a job interview when the interviewer suddenly threw a curveball: “Give me two reasons why we shouldn’t hire you.”
The question, which is often seen as a clumsy cousin of the classic “What’s your biggest weakness?” threw him off guard. He admits it rattled his confidence, leading to a shaky response filled with what he describes as “random reasons” — the kind that probably cost him the offer. But the tables turned when it was his turn to ask a question.
“What’s the biggest reason I shouldn’t join your company if I get multiple other offers?” he asked. "Well, just stay at your current company if you prefer,” the interviewer snapped, visibly annoyed. He then dismissed the candidate with a chilly farewell, calling the question “strange” and ending the interview on a sour note. The candidate took to the internet to vent, saying, “I don’t even want your job anyway.”
His frustration resonated with many online, sparking a debate about toxic interview culture and the outdated power dynamics still embedded in hiring practices. As one commenter on Reddit put it: “If he's gonna keep playing hardball with everyone else, he's gotta expect it to occasionally get thrown back at him.”
Others pointed out that the interviewer’s question, while awkwardly phrased, was essentially a version of “What are your weaknesses?” — and that the candidate’s response, while bold, might have come off as combative. One felt that a more diplomatic way to answer could’ve been something like: "You should always choose the candidate whose experience and qualifications are the best fit for the position. In the unlikely event that is not me, you should hire someone else.”
The candidate, a senior-level professional with nearly a decade of experience, had been progressing smoothly through a job interview when the interviewer suddenly threw a curveball: “Give me two reasons why we shouldn’t hire you.”
The question, which is often seen as a clumsy cousin of the classic “What’s your biggest weakness?” threw him off guard. He admits it rattled his confidence, leading to a shaky response filled with what he describes as “random reasons” — the kind that probably cost him the offer. But the tables turned when it was his turn to ask a question.
“What’s the biggest reason I shouldn’t join your company if I get multiple other offers?” he asked. "Well, just stay at your current company if you prefer,” the interviewer snapped, visibly annoyed. He then dismissed the candidate with a chilly farewell, calling the question “strange” and ending the interview on a sour note. The candidate took to the internet to vent, saying, “I don’t even want your job anyway.”
His frustration resonated with many online, sparking a debate about toxic interview culture and the outdated power dynamics still embedded in hiring practices. As one commenter on Reddit put it: “If he's gonna keep playing hardball with everyone else, he's gotta expect it to occasionally get thrown back at him.”
Others pointed out that the interviewer’s question, while awkwardly phrased, was essentially a version of “What are your weaknesses?” — and that the candidate’s response, while bold, might have come off as combative. One felt that a more diplomatic way to answer could’ve been something like: "You should always choose the candidate whose experience and qualifications are the best fit for the position. In the unlikely event that is not me, you should hire someone else.”
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