imported_Section8
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- Aug 1, 2006
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Thank you for helping me to decide not to work for your company.  This interview is over, good day.
			
			Originally posted by: ironwing
Do you trim the crusts off before or after assembling the sandwich?
Originally posted by: TheKub
Originally posted by: demenion
List the steps you would take to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
Remove 2 slices of whole wheat bread. Insert bread into and power up toaster. Ready PB and Jelly. Remove the now toast. Layer PB on one and Jelly on the other. Assemble. Enjoy. Ponder how I my improve the manufacturing process for future PB&J challenges.
Originally posted by: ironwing
I was on the interview committee for our first IT manager. Yes, three clods who didn't know a router from a rooter got to pick the person to design and build a network from scratch. Anyway, the question I asked was "Could you install Doom on the network so employees could play against each other?" One guy said "Sure, if you want it." Another candidate waxed poetic on IT security, network control, and how he would monitor to make sure this type of abuse wouldn't happen. We hired the guy who said "sure". Our rationale was that we wanted a network admin who understood that our business was not running a network; that the network was simply a tool to get our business done, and that the network admin's job was to serve the needs of our company, not control folks. Worked out great.
First confirm that you have all necessary ingredients so you don't get started only to find that you can't complete the project. You will need 2 standard slices of bread, about 1 cubic inch of peanut butter, 1 cubic inch of jelly. More peanut butter and/or jelly can be added to suit your personal needs. Once you have located all ingredients you can move on. If you cannot locate the ingredients, please ask for assistance.
Preparation:
Find a clean surface to prepare your sandwich. Some ideas include a plate, a cutting board, or the kitchen counter. Preparing the sandwich in your hands is not recommended as it may cause sticky hands, loss of materials or personal injury.
Be sure to wash your hands thoroughly. Preparing foods with unclean hands can lead to ingestion of bacteria and dirt.
Obtain a knife and a spoon. CAUTION: Knives are sharp. Be careful while using them to avoid injury.
Once you have the required ingredients and taken note of the safety precautions you are ready to begin assembly.
- Lay the two slices of bread side by side on your clean surface.
- Hold the knife by the handle and use it to remove approximately 1 cubic inch of peanut butter from the peanut butter jar. Apply the peanut butter to ONLY one side of of one of the slices of bread. Use the knife to spread it evenly. More peanut butter may be applied if desired.
- Hold the spoon by the handle and use it to scoop approximately 1 cubic inch of jelly from the jelly jar. Apply the jelly to ONLY one side of the slice of bread that does NOT have the peanut butter on it. Use the rounded back of the spoon to spread the jelly evenly on the face of the bread.
- To complete the sandwich, hold the slice of bread containing the peanut butter by the edges so you do not put your fingers in the peanut butter and place it on top of the slice of bread containing the jelly so that the peanut butter and jelly are facing each other.
You should now have a complete peanut butter and jelly sandwich. You are ready to consume it. Be sure to properly clean your preparation area when you are finished and wash the knife, spoon, and any other dishes you may have used in the process.
Originally posted by: darkswordsman17
I'd probably start by asking if the person interviewing me seriously believes how I answer this question will give them any real insight into how I would fit in working for them. Aside from a position as their peanut butter jelly sandwich maker, I'd have to say that its pointless. If they answer yes, I'd probably stand up, thank them for their time and leave. If they say no, I'd then ask if we could move on to the real part of the interview.
Originally posted by: Ness
Depends on the position. I've seen a training session where someone asked this question, followed their steps closely but without common sense and some ended up with a peanut butter sandwich with jelly on top... with not too much jelly and a WHOLE lot of peanut butter. spread ALL OVER the bread. Some people acted frustrated because they didn't know they were supposed to get the jelly and bread out of the fridge and the peanut butter out of the cupboard. (Which was a bit extreme for the exercise, but the point was taken.) If it's for a help desk job or something, they probably want to see how thorough you can be so as not to lose the average user in jargon and such. Some people really do need things spelled out. As such, here's what I'd say for such a position:
First confirm that you have all necessary ingredients so you don't get started only to find that you can't complete the project. You will need 2 standard slices of bread, about 1 cubic inch of peanut butter, 1 cubic inch of jelly. More peanut butter and/or jelly can be added to suit your personal needs. Once you have located all ingredients you can move on. If you cannot locate the ingredients, please ask for assistance.
Preparation:
Find a clean surface to prepare your sandwich. Some ideas include a plate, a cutting board, or the kitchen counter. Preparing the sandwich in your hands is not recommended as it may cause sticky hands, loss of materials or personal injury.
Be sure to wash your hands thoroughly. Preparing foods with unclean hands can lead to ingestion of bacteria and dirt.
Obtain a knife and a spoon. CAUTION: Knives are sharp. Be careful while using them to avoid injury.
Once you have the required ingredients and taken note of the safety precautions you are ready to begin assembly.
- Lay the two slices of bread side by side on your clean surface.
- Hold the knife by the handle and use it to remove approximately 1 cubic inch of peanut butter from the peanut butter jar. Apply the peanut butter to ONLY one side of of one of the slices of bread. Use the knife to spread it evenly. More peanut butter may be applied if desired.
- Hold the spoon by the handle and use it to scoop approximately 1 cubic inch of jelly from the jelly jar. Apply the jelly to ONLY one side of the slice of bread that does NOT have the peanut butter on it. Use the rounded back of the spoon to spread the jelly evenly on the face of the bread.
- To complete the sandwich, hold the slice of bread containing the peanut butter by the edges so you do not put your fingers in the peanut butter and place it on top of the slice of bread containing the jelly so that the peanut butter and jelly are facing each other.
You should now have a complete peanut butter and jelly sandwich. You are ready to consume it. Be sure to properly clean your preparation area when you are finished and wash the knife, spoon, and any other dishes you may have used in the process.
Could probably be perfected a bit, but you get the idea of how thorough they want someone to be.
Originally posted by: jjones
Why make one when it can be outsourced for cheaper?
Originally posted by: Capt Caveman
Also, the answer may vary based on who the interviewer is. They may want you to first ask if there is a SOP or Work Instruction for this procedure. For a position that interfaces with mgmt, they want someone who doesn't go into the details (or get too technical). The opposite for someone that needs to interface with developers, researchers, engineers.
Originally posted by: BlackTigers91
1) Break into Song and Dance
Originally posted by: demenion
List the steps you would take to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
Originally posted by: Skyclad1uhm1
And regarding the PB&J sandwich: Only Americans eat that combination, so I would not make it in the first place.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Pretty ingenious way of the interviewer to gauge your strength in this area.
Originally posted by: rasczak
:thumbsup: Did you guys get to play Doom?
Originally posted by: PokerGuy
See? You just proved it's a very good question to ask. Your argumentative and irritated response would be a clear indicator to me that you are inflexible and generally a pain in the butt, so I'd have my answer: do not hire.Originally posted by: darkswordsman17
I'd probably start by asking if the person interviewing me seriously believes how I answer this question will give them any real insight into how I would fit in working for them. Aside from a position as their peanut butter jelly sandwich maker, I'd have to say that its pointless. If they answer yes, I'd probably stand up, thank them for their time and leave. If they say no, I'd then ask if we could move on to the real part of the interview.
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: spidey07
Pretty ingenious way of the interviewer to gauge your strength in this area.
Don't give the interviewer too much credit, he got the question out of a book or off the Internet.

 
				
		