How to Answer "What's Your Greatest Weakness?"

You got the call and you have an interview set up for your dream job! Congrats! Yay!...But...wait. Now you have to prepare for the interview. Here's one question that trips up a lot of candidates, but is one you can nail if you are prepared. Nurses Career Support Knowledge

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What's Your Greatest Weakness?

This question most assuredly will be asked. It's dreaded by most people, because it raises a fear of vulnerability and besides, who wants to reveal their weaknesses?

The key is to take control and turn it around into a positive.

Here's how to turn it into an interview win for you.

They Don't Want to Know Your Weakness

The first thing to understand is- they don't really want the truth!

They definitely don't want to know your personal weaknesses (you binge on ice cream, you're insecure, you get jealous). You won't get points for candidly coming clean and telling them you forget your mother's birthday.

It's designed to see if you demonstrate self-awareness and are committed to professional growth and improvement. Show them that and you will be an outstanding candidate.

Don't Give These Answers to "What's Your Weakness?"

Do not say "I'm a perfectionist" or "I work too hard" The interviewers have heard these too many times, and it's disingenuous on your part.

Do not say "I panic when I get overwhelmed" or "I can't do math calculations" because math skills and stress management are both core skill sets needed for the job.

Do not say "I'm not good at public speaking" or "I struggle with Excel formulas" because these are not skills required for the job and it will be seen as a copout.

Guidelines for Composing Your Answer

  • When talking about a negative, be brief and matter of fact (de-emphasize the negative)
  • Spend one quarter of your answer on your weakness and three quarters on how you are improving (re-focus)
  • Frame your weakness as an opportunity you've identified for professional improvement and growth (self-awareness)
  • Speak to your action plan (initiative)
  • Avoid using negative words such as weakness or failure (positive focus)
  • Use positive words such as challenge and area for growth (positive focus)
  • Describe the progress you've made in a story or example (stories are memorable)
  • Close on a positive note (leave positive impression)

In this way, you have skillfully turned a weakness into a positive while still owning it.

Choosing Your Weakness

When choosing the weakness you are going to use for your interview, pick something work-related and fixable. Make sure that it's not something critical to the job, but that it is something germane to the job.

Your goal is to present a genuine weakness that does not damage your potential for the position.

Answer Examples

"English is my second language. I read and write well, but I want to be more comfortable with idiomatic English. I'm taking an English as Second Language course at the community college."

" I don't always delegate as much as I should, because I always want to do everything myself! I've come to see that delegating is important in order to work as a team and get everything done. Every shift on my last rotation, I made it a point to delegate more each day. It's still out of my comfort zone, but I'm improving daily."

"I'm working on my time management skills. I'm learning to batch my tasks whenever possible, and to carry enough needed supplies with me. When I anticipate what my patients might need, I'm better prepared and save time."

Reheorifice Your Answer

Reheorifice out loud with another person until you feel comfortable with your delivery. Each time it should be a little bit different while still including all your talking points. Do not memorize your answer.

Tip: Be prepared with two answers, as they may listen to your first answer and then say "That's great, thank you! Now can you tell us about another weakness?"

Good luck! I think you got this!

Related articles:

How to Prepare for Your Inteview

How To Answer The Most Common Nursing Interview Questions

Why You Need an Elevator Speech

Uncensored Thoughts of a Nurse Interviewer

Job Interview: What are your strengths and weaknesses?

Specializes in Peds, Neuro, Orthopedics.

I'm having a hard time coming up with honest answers to this one. The truth is that I'm quiet and not much of a chit-chatter. I'm trying to think of how to spin that in a positive way, but in these days of patient satisfaction scores, I'm thinking no one wants to hire a someone like me. I've googled some answers I can give, but they'd be lies. Any ideas?

Specializes in PCT, RN.
Beagle62 said:
I'm having a hard time coming up with honest answers to this one. The truth is that I'm quiet and not much of a chit-chatter. I'm trying to think of how to spin that in a positive way, but in these days of patient satisfaction scores, I'm thinking no one wants to hire a someone like me. I've googled some answers I can give, but they'd be lies. Any ideas?

Just say that you're quiet and aren't big into participating in small-talk but that makes you an excellent listener and cuts down on time you spend talking, which gives you more time to get your work done.

IMO!

Specializes in Emergency/Cath Lab.

That is what I told my wife when she was interviewing. You have to take your weakness and put a positive spin on it. You first have to have some humility and admit you know your flaws, but more important what are you doing to fix it. I don't care if you have something wrong, we all do, but what are you doing to better yourself after your self realization.

I, unlike many of my nursing peers, do not have a type-A personality. I'm more reserved, and some people might interpret this as a lack of confidence. But that has given me the opportunity to be a good listener for my patients and has allowed me to hone in on my assessment skills since I am always listening rather than speaking (I used this at an interview and got the job. And it's 100% true).

Specializes in Postpartum, Med Surg, Home Health.

This is a great post, thanks everyone

I just interviewed last week and was really struggling with this question, knowing that they would ask me. Of course I wanted to be honest as well. I do think they are just looking for self reflection. I ended up saying that I have a tendency to allow more experienced staff to talk down to me. I learned that I can pull the staff member aside off the unit and tell them I didn't appreciate the way I was being spoken to, and maybe next time they could address me differently. In the end, sometimes the rude person is embarrassed or didn't realize how they were coming off. My interviewer seemed to agree that this was important because we discussed that one person can have the ability to affect the whole vibe on a unit with negativity. Obviously this question is only one question in what was a very long interview, but I was offered the position.

Specializes in Med-Surg, Emergency.

As a new grad, I always said that I knew time management would be a weakness of mine but that I was working on it. It seemed to work well and I was definitely telling the truth!

I always say something to the effect........"My weakness is remembering to explain to the patient/family exactly what I'm doing when I'm providing a procedure. I sometimes forget that whether the task is simple or difficult, not everyone is on the same level as me."

That answers their question, it's quick, and simple. Plus....it makes you look super confident in your abilities and shows you care about the patient/family.

I've been a nurse for 40 years and am amazed that this question still gets asked in the format presented. It's really lame and is one of my marks of a lazy or inexperienced interviewer. Better ways of asking this are in the format of the suggestions you gave, specifically, "What is one thing that you are trying to improve on in your work?" Sounds less threatening.

Specializes in ED, ICU, PSYCH, PP, CEN.

I say that everyday when I get off work I go over my shift and reflect on what went well, and what I could have done better.

Specializes in Med-Surg.

Here's one I always struggle with, "Tell me about a time you've had a conflict with a coworker". I hate being on the spot and in some interviews I've quickly answered that I get along well with everyone and I am laid back, and honesty haven't had any conflicts. Truth be told though, in my nursing career I've had a conflict with one nurse when I was new, and she really did pick on me. I went to my manager about it and now we work together as a team when needed but we do not speak on a personal level or cut up like I do with the other nurses. But we do get along for work-sake. Would this be a bad response? I never know if they truly want to hear of conflicts or if they're looking to hear that you don't have any because you get along well with others.

Specializes in Leadership, Psych, HomeCare, Amb. Care.

Tooimpatient, As a manager, I get suspicious if someone's never had a conflict, or if they can rattle off a grocery list of complaints. If you deny ever having a conflict with anyone, I wonder if you aren't being truthful, or if you let people walk all over you. Your example is excellent.

Its fine to say, "I usually don't have conflicts, but there was this one time..." You addressed it, resolved it, and now you two interact in a professional manner.