Interview or free consultation?

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Soldato
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This isn't a situation I find myself in currently however it did happen to me a couple of years ago and I'd be keen to seek other opinions if only for the purpose of discussion rather than for any tangible reason.

Two years I interviewed for a role for a large UK company seeking an "Email technical specialist" - Think SPF, DMARC, DKIM, Email Feedback Loops and you get the idea. I work and had worked up to this point, in relatively specialised IT security roles so the subject matter was no stranger to me.

As with any interview, I was fully expecting some simple technical questions to ensure I'd not walked in off the streets so when they threw "What ports does SMTP use" and "What is port 143" used for I knew what they were trying to achieve.

After about 50 minutes the interview seemed to be reaching its natural climax and one of the "techies" left the room. We, one of the mangers and I, were just standing up to leave when another stakeholder entered the room, apologised for being late and seemed very keen to repeat the interview process. He explained how crucial emails were to their business, how they'd historically had problems delivering emails to certain ISPs and what my experience to date was with such issues.

I discussed, from a high-level point, why they might be having some of the issues they were facing but he seemed very keen on specific examples and what I'd do "on day one" to fix the issues. At this point, I was conscious that there's a distinction between 'prove you know the subject matter' and 'tell us how to fix the issues for free'. If memory serves me correctly I think I said something along of the lines of being more than happy to suggest solutions but not in so much detail as to render the position and therefore interview null and void.

So has anyone else taken part in interviews which have blurred the lines between standard questions and free consultation for the company concerned?
 
That is was the result of a conversation in an interview with an additional interviewer who had turned up late... the 15 mins isn’t important just that it was a problem you solved in an interview off the top of your head.

Talk about making no sense.

I even used the word "issues" (plural) three times in one paragraph but your take away is they had one problem easily solved in 15 minutes... OK?!?!? I didn't realise you were also present at the time.

@Quartz atleast you grasp the concept of some light hearted chat on the subject matter.
 
Talk about digging yourself a hole. You're the one who mentioned "15 minutes" and "one problem" but when challenged you're found wanting.

I knew it was somewhat ambitious to expect a sensible conversation on here and I was prepared for that one self-rightious arse who has to be right about everything to slither out I just didn't expect it in the first reply.
 
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