Job Strength Reading
Mental fear of the unidentified is often what produces the physical signs of nervousness. In adding to preparing yourself physically, you also need to get ready yourself psychologically. The most excellent technique to arrange mentally is to know what may be coming. Panic of the mysterious can only exist when there is an unknown. Take the moment to know some of the "standards" when it approaches to interviewing questions.
Imagine you are sitting in an office or conference room, face-to-face with the person you most want to impress - your future boss and he or she is asking you, "What is your biggest weakness?" How do you answer a question like that?
The excellent news is it's a job interview, not a confessional. No one expects you to demonize yourself in trusts of appearing direct. After all, you are promotion yourself and you want the interviewer to buy, not pass.
You possibly will try stalling - think hard for a moment or two and answer something to the effect of, "I can't really believe of any part of my personality that has compromised my act at work. All of my act reviews have been optimistic and I've never had any troubles with past employers." The problem with this approach, though, is that you run the risk of appearing smug.
A better loom to take with the fault question is to answer it truthfully in a way that makes you look positive. Try to come up with a problem or intricacy you had at work a long time ago - the beyond back, the better. Give details how that one minor flaw affected your routine in a way that enabled you to correct the problem and learn from it. This will show your boss how you have learned from a mistake.