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Wayfair Mock Interview

Question 12 of 40 for our Wayfair Mock Interview

Wayfair was updated by on June 23rd, 2023. Learn more here.

Question 12 of 40

In the last year, what ideas of yours benefited your current or former employer?

"I'm a creator by nature and constantly thinking up new ways to benefit the organization and improve processes. Most recently, I saw a gap in the new hire training and created a practice to teach new team members the information they need to be equipped and successful on the job. We continue to build upon it with training materials and incorporation of top talent into the program as mentors."

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How to Answer: In the last year, what ideas of yours benefited your current or former employer?

Advice and answer examples written specifically for a Wayfair job interview.

  • 12. In the last year, what ideas of yours benefited your current or former employer?

      What You Need to Know

      Innovation, change, involvement, and team collaboration are all characteristics important to Wayfair as they make their hiring decisions. The interviewer would like to know if your creative side has benefitted your employer in any way. Talk to the interviewer about a recent time when you have helped your employer through your creative thinking. This type of involvement also shows that you are highly engaged when it comes to your work.

      Written by Rachelle Enns on January 31st, 2019

      1st Answer Example

      "I'm a creator by nature and constantly thinking up new ways to benefit the organization and improve processes. Most recently, I saw a gap in the new hire training and created a practice to teach new team members the information they need to be equipped and successful on the job. We continue to build upon it with training materials and incorporation of top talent into the program as mentors."

      Written by Rachelle Enns on January 31st, 2019

      2nd Answer Example

      "I genuinely appreciate working for a company that values my opinion when it comes to process streamlining and operations. This year, I made a couple of recommendations for planning and organizational apps that we have recently incorporated. Most notable was the use of Google Docs and Trello."

      Written by Rachelle Enns on January 31st, 2019

      Anonymous Interview Answers with Professional Feedback

      Anonymous Answer

      "I'm an ideas person by nature and constantly think up new ways to benefit the organization and improve processes and key metrics. Most recently, I brought in a dedicated UI/UX designer to conduct 5-day product design sprints to help create product specs, reducing average completion time from 4.5 weeks down to 1, cutting overall software development delivery by a healthy margin."

      Rachelle's Feedback

      This example showcases your analytical thinking very well. You are telling the interviewer that you are creative, innovative, and keep company resources top of mind.
      Show More Answers
  • About the Author

    Interviewing and hiring someone is a huge responsibility. You not only need to find someone with the right skills and qualifications but someone who will get along with everyone else on the team and will be able to represent the company and its core values. That hire needs to be diligent and trustworthy while following the standards and processes everyone else adheres to. They need to perform with consistency, be emotionally intelligent, and be respectful of the needs and concerns of the others on the team. They need to seek out proactively a deeper understanding of the nature of the company and their teammates. That’s a tall order to determine when interviewing anyone. But it’s all part of the recruiter’s job.

    If the team doesn’t get along with that hire, or that hire introduces an unwelcome attitude to the workplace. One person’s consistent attendance issues can impact the job satisfaction of everyone else on the team, lower productivity, and negatively impact the performance of the company as a whole on either a micro or macro scale. So when an interviewer decides to hire any person, they are putting their reputation on the line.

    Looking for the perfect hire requires strong attention to detail. So there were a variety of things I would look for. I’d examine their cover letter, resume, or application for inconsistencies, from formatting to punctuation. I would scrutinize the consistency of their answers from one question to the next. But, I would first and foremost evaluate why they wanted to work for us. If they were playing the numbers game trying to find a job anywhere, it was pretty evident.

    But, it was those applicants who seemed to have an inside view, or inherent understanding, of the real qualifications of the job that I’d put at the top of the pile. They understood the job expectations and the culture and already seemed like they were one of the team. So much of this comes through in one simple thing: their enthusiasm. They had an energy that fit right in. This is something that can rarely be faked.

    If you invest the time to gain a behind-the-scenes glimpse of what life is like working somewhere, and when the more you learn, the more you get emotionally invested in that opportunity, the better your chances will be for winning that job. For the interviewer, when it comes to identifying how consistent a candidate’s work performance would be, the truest test is determining how well they understand the job and how enthusiastic they are to work there, even after everything they learned. That alone suggests they’ll consistently do whatever it takes to win the job and, once hired, go the extra mile for the team.

    Learn more about Kevin Downey