Maybe you haven’t watched enough videos then. A lot of her tips are fantastic. I was required to take a class in high school called “jobs for graduates” where they teach you a lot of these things. It’s a national organization, and the things they teach are widely accepted as extremely helpful. Just like this lady here.
Interviewer: "Why do you wanna work here?" Me: "Money" Erin, whispering: "Pssst. Don't focus on the "why" focus on the "here"!" Me, whispering back: "Ok, thanks!" Me, at the Interviewer: "This place is offering the most money." Interviewer: "Out."
Answers like that are why this is basically the only important question in the interview If someone told me that when I used to hire people I'd respond with something like You've applied for a front end position the only skill we are likely to teach you there is making coffee and we do send our baristas away for courses however if your looking for a long term job I can offer you a job as an apprentice chef if that's a career path you'd like to pursue if that's not for you we may not be the right fit
I hate the fakeness of job interviews 😂 like I know that you know and you know that I know that the answer is money and that I'm not passionate about Wal-Mart but for some reason we have to play by this stupid little code and pretend like that's not the truth Edit: Since people are GOING OFF in the replies, I'm talking about when you're forced to interview for a job that is not your dream job in order to survive. I'm being painted as shallow here for some reason, but yes I have a degree that I'm passionate about. People are acting like money isn't the thing that pays for your bills, food, etc. and as if it's a choice to work and as if I have all these options around me to be super selective in where I work. You don't know where I live, what my degree is in, and what the market is like for my field of study. If you can find passion in customer service, good on you, but if the only jobs in your field are further away than you can afford to move right now and you need to make money to live in the meantime, you are allowed to take what job you can get and not be passionate about it. It's unrealistic to expect everyone interviewing for Chipotle to be like "I'm a big foodie, I love preparing for for people, Chipotle is the best restaurant in the world, I'm so passionate about this business, and I love interacting with customers all day". It's perfectly reasonable to work there because you need a job and your dream job isn't feasible right now.
I know. It honestly ruins my day having to do interviews because you have to pretend your perfect. Any inkling you give them that you aren’t perfect and they aren’t interested. Like can we just have a normal conversation please ☠️
Id call it gatekeeping to have a standard. Imagine you ask your coworker teammate to do one part of the project. But they lack any passion for the project. Says "ughhh if it wasnt for the money, I would not be here". Everyone knows everyone would rather have margaritas on the beach than be at work. But if you are at work, have the stability and personal drive to smile and be engaged, not all "uh, idk, i dont care, whatevs, as long as it works, im here for the money" attitude. The standard for any interviewer giving a thumbs up for a candidate or recommending for a role is "would I want to work with them on a project?" In addition to whether their background meets the requirements.
You have to be wanting to work for more than just money. Passion has to be involved somewhere in there. Supposedly you got your degree. I would hope you didn’t spend a crap ton of money for something you aren’t actually passionate about. Be passionate about what your doing. Same goes for fast food btw. When I have a cashier that looks annoyed the last thing I want to do is order from them
Yeah maybe u have to understand the thing that companies exist not to hire everyone. They try to look for people who would love to work here or at least wouldn't hate the job so much he leaves in a month.
@@BenRangel bro I dont think even the CEO of the company is interested in the brand and the industry, the company itself is interested in MONEY, that's literally why they exist, they're a business, and business want to make a profit however they can lmfao
@@s4vetheworldBut both the interviewer and the interviewee know that the interviewee is lying straight out of their ass so they can land a job and pay their rent, so what’s the point?
During my last interview, they started by making sure I could work nights. I said no. As we were about to wrap things up, the manager asked me if I were comfortable answering a couple of questions about my current position, including my wage, as they were entering the market in my country. I was cool about it and answered it honestly. He said they were offering double that, to which I answered I'd gladly work nights for that pay. Long story short, I got the job. I was honest, the hiring manager was honest, it worked. Not every interview is the same.
Maybe management should stop asking that question because everyone would love to not work for money and do so for personal fulfillment. If working was optional Chipotle would have 0 staff. The answer is always money
@@user-K8T I didn’t say working shouldn’t be a thing. I said people would only do fulfilling work if money wasn’t an object. Building safety based careers pay exceptionally well and is respected. Chipotle doesn’t and isn’t.
@@alize0623 honestly, anything can be soul sucking if you aren't into it. I've had well respected jobs that just were just not it. And my number to stay was far higher than anything they'd ever consider paying me because they were cheap af. Honestly, I would have probably found Chipotle more fulfilling. At least some people would be happy to get my product rather than frustrated because I'm doing my job. But Chipotle won't pay the bills, soooo... And, now, neither would that job, honestly, with the garbage raises they gave. Just because you see something as well respected, doesn't mean it's fulfilling. And the safety people are not generally the ones who are appreciated in any project.
They just want to know if you are going to get bored by talking to people all day. Which happens for many people. We all work for money, but also have things that we prefer to do. Listen to the short again.
@@arakwar it’s a dumb question. I love working with and talking to people. I wouldn’t apply to chipotle if I didn’t need money. You watch the video again and reread what I said; because you missed the point of both
I once told a job that I like acquiring useless knowledge and that's why I wanted to work there. The smile instantly leg their face and they cut the interview short lmao
I used to hire people and that was always a great answer because I know that this job has something you really appreciate about it vs other jobs now I know when my competitor a few miles away that you probably also applied to and offers the same money you won't take his job because our job is better suited to what you like
I’ve never actually wanted to work at any place I interviewed at - I just needed a job so badly that I applied EVERYWHERE that I saw a sign. And companies know that people are desperate.
Remember the interview to my current job - came, was asked if I fulfill the education requirements, which I did. Then my boss basically went "this is the salary for the position, these are the hours, this is the training you will go through. Does that work for you?" (Government job, but still) If I were to ever start a business this would be how I would conduct the interviews, people find a job to make money, anything else is irrelevant to the employer
Everything Vet assistant Road works Apprenticeships Cafes Roof cleaning Offices Factories Warehouses Childcare Cleaning Fast food You're applying in all jobs for every industry Or are you prefering some over others
I've applied to 26 jobs (only counting the ones I applied to on one job board). 7 places have called me, but 5 of them gave me an interview. Life's hard 😮💨
The reason it's not a good answer is because they don't ask you Why do you need a job They ask Why did you apply for this job It's not the same question
@@monicabelladonna4626 no they don't and this weak and lazy attitude that tries to force them into having the same answer doesn't hurt me or the one who made this video or the guy that doesn't hire you It only hurts yourself When you are deciding between 2 minimum wage jobs you aren't deciding based off money its as simple as that and if you are going to choose to not understand that then you will probably never have any success
I hate interviews for one reason, NO SHIT WE'RE THERE FOR THE MONEY. THATS THE ONLY REASON TO GET A JOB (unless you're also doing it because its your dream job)
@@The_Yukki I understand, being passionate is easier for creative jobs like a journalist or designer than a fast food worker. But doesn't have to be over the top - you can just say you like their food and would prefer working in the food industry rather than at a factory - or whatever
That's a good one. I did answer with 'money' on my 2nd job's interview. I got the 'we are like family' talk and i think you can guess how it was. I worked with that GM for maybe 6 months before she was gone and maybe 3 or 4 others after her until i quit about 3 years later.
My dad always tells us this story from when he was young and his mom wanted him to get a job. So she signed him up for a job interview at some fast food place, and when they asked him the, why do you wanna work here question, he just said “I don’t know, i need money and my mom told me to come, needless to say, he didn’t get that job
I love how this is a service job example too. Not a specialized job where theres more stuff you could play up and reherse, but a place or job type most have had at some point but surface might be harder to say "I want this".
All jobs pay money so it doesnt make sense as an answer to why you are there when you could be anywhere else and also get money If you're answer is you pay more than elsewhere that's a good answer but just money is shit
as an HR professional i would never progress a candidate who says this. too risky when there are more talented folks out there with a real interest in the business. you're showing your ass if you do this
@@nottheone582are you not paying attention to the type of job? You can spin that about journalism or law or design but having this attitude hiring for fast food work and people are just trying to put food on the table, nobody's gonna be passionate about the art of cashiering.
THANK YOU! I will hopefully be getting an interview for my first job and this interview question has been puzzling me. NOW it makes sense. I want to work at the place I applied to because I see it as a good jumping off point to get some experience, and to improve my skills in customer service. THAT is what I'll model my answer on.
When my interviewer asked that question I focused on my connection to the company. I went there all the time as a kid for cleats and soccer balls and basketballs. I just said that and I wanted to give back to a place that gave me that much. If you can bring up an emotional connection to the place do it.
Bro my algorithm couldn't have shown me this like 4 days ago?? Literally had an interview and although it was pretty good i feel like this wouldve helped😅😅
The main thing is you want longevity In your career and this job gives you that. It always has room for progression and that’s what you want to be able to grow and progress that’s all I say. I do recruitment so I learn the sales tricks over the years
when i applied for my first job (at an ice cream place after freshman year) and the owner asked me this, i was sneaky about it lol. first i said that i wanted the experience and then i said “now that i’m in high school, it would be nice to have my own income.” the owner was pretty understanding about it; this place was pretty common for first jobs so i’m sure he heard that kind of answer a lot
I left a minimum wage retail job to interview for a grocery store my friend worked at because she told me the pay was $12.50/hr (back in 2017). When the interviewer asked why I wanted to work there I just said my friend told me it's a great place to work. But it was really about the money.
"So why do you want to work here?" Stunted me when I first started learning about job interviews in my eighth grade speech class. It's easy to answer when you're applying for your dream job or at least a job that you studied in college to actually do, but for a job in retail or at a fast food restaurant that you're just getting at 16 to make a few bucks, it's harder to answer without sounding like you're full of shit.
How is retail hard you can give the same answer to every retail store you apply to It's easy to travel to Flexibility around xxx responsibility I want to work with customers I want a job with room to move up I like this store I shop here all the time I want a job with reliable hours My friend recommended here I'm interested in xxx merchandise I really just wanted to staff discount You pay $2ph more than other shops I'm used to this type of work There a thousand reasons and you only need to rationalise one of them that actually works for you
@@scottb9997 Almost every one of those answers is a lie or exaggerated, except a few. In my case I hate dealing with people, so I don't apply to jobs that require any type of customer interaction or social atmosphere. I like physical labor...I actually DO like it. So when they ask me the question it's easy for me.
Chipotle works it’s majority minor staff like animals lol, they also been caught a few time breaking child labor laws. It happened regularly at the one I worked at for like 3 months, a 16 year old worked like 45 hours a week
My daughter applied at my friend's bakery. When asked that question, he told me that she said, "because you guys pay a lot and my mom told me to." 🤦🏽♀️ I told her when they ask that question, make them feel good about where they work. The next place she applied to, Starbucks, hired her.
I usually just ignore the Shorts advice type videos but WOW that’s actually so helpful. I have a lot of trouble with questions like these and that helps me out a ton.
The reason why I want to work here is I can see myself growing professionally in this position, I enjoy chipotle, talking to other people and have the menu memorized. I admire the work the staff provide and I know my background in customer service has prepared me for this role. I look forward to becoming a valued member of the team.
I'm trying to find a job with very low social interaction, as I find socializing with people I don't know fun, but extremely exhausting. I just can't do it for 8 hours at a time. How do you say, "because I can't socialize properly " in a way that makes them want to hire you?
In the beginning I was already rolling my eys but by the end, this is actually a very sound advice! Not just for interviews, but also to be introspective of why you're choosing this job. Thank you!
yes ! when applying to a local grocery store, which is pretty big in size, I mentioned that I know the layout and that I shop there personally, I definitely think it helped as I got a special offer! always personalize answers.
I’m lucky my current manager is so understanding about the need for money. When applying, I asked for a higher hourly rate than I thought he’d offer, because he’d try matching in the middle to keep me. He asked me why I requested a higher pay than what my experience shows, and I told him that exact thing. He said, and I quote “that’s actually really smart, welcome to the team.”
why would i lie. we both know its money. i dont wanna work there cause the business is so fun and people are so nice and i just love not being home for hours. its money. just like every other person there i want money
I hear this a lot, in regards to people only working somewhere for money and I never understood why that would ever be their answer. It's clear that the interviewer does not want to know your overall motives, but rather, what decision making lead you to the position you're currently interviewing for.
One thing I learned from applying to jobs is they really only care of you follow the job interview social expectations. They know you're feeding them lies but as long as you answer the expected way they're more likely to hire you. It happened in a supermarket interview once where I'd prepared but due to a misunderstanding they thought I hadn't read the website (I was trying to sound quizzicle by asking for more information on stuff I'd read). As a result I didn't get the job. The next day I went to a job fair and happened to meet my interviewers. We chatted and she could see I was actually serious about wanting a job, so she told me they were still hiring in other places and to reapply. At this point my failure hadn't even been formalised to me, it was just clear that at the time the lady had already made her mind up about giving me the job even though now she could see I would attend a job fair and start a conversation with her, proving I was serious about the job. Two months later I had an interview at a different supermarket I'd been unsuccessful at before, I got the job because I didn't botch the interview. One of my first jobs I was successful at the interviewer even called me eager because I read the whole website (also for a supermarket) and said I was so impressed by this company. She knew I was lying but because I fulfilled the job expectations I got the job.
At my Job interview I said that I am the most honest person you ever met. I am here for money, If I was a Millionaire I wouldn’t apply. I still got the Job
I'm glad I'm not the only person that simply CANNOT be fake when asked these questions lol. "Cuz I need a job and you called me in for an interview" I'm sorry but I can't pretend to be passionate for a job I'm just going to work at until something I actually want pops up 😅.
In 6th grade I took a class where we learned about businesses and then at the end we would apply for "jobs" at a whole-day business simulation for middle schoolers. I applied for the Arby's drink manager position (because it was by far the easiest and a lot of people were applying for it) and when they asked me why I wanted the job, I said, "Because I like to fill up drinks." I got the job. Unfortunately, though, a bunch of kids got sick the week before, and so they needed a CEO of a natural gas company, so they got rid of the "useless" position of Arby's drink manager and asked me to be the CEO. I enjoyed that because I got to write the commercials and make gas jokes that got played on the "radio." 😂
Yeah, always look into the company youre applying to (if you're not familiar with them) to see where their priorities lie or what they advertise themselves as. I applied to my current job because I just needed a job, but I did a bit of research prior on glass ceiling. The company I work for (and have been with 6 years) is very involved with Pride and supporting BIPOC-owned businesses, and everyone who reviewed the company on glass ceiling praised the community there. So when I was interviewing and that question was asked, the hiring manager nodded approvingly. I wasn't hired on the spot, but I was called back within half an hour
@@Jackieyeet1 so the issue with saying money is that all jobs pay money it doesn't explain why you are at that job Your reason for picking one job over another doesn't need(but it can be) to be anything like passion or building a career or skill set You just need to say why you'd rather be at this job over something else Things like the job is easy to get to/I can walk there I like to help customers/ I won't have customers I would like to know how to make good coffee I like teamwork/independent work It's indoors with air conditioning/it's outdoors I want flexible/late night/early morning/long shifts because i have uni or sports Or want stable fulltime shifts This job is related to the field I want to get into This job will be fast paced so I don't get bored I want to work for commisions/tips If you can't find an answer to this question you are basically admitting you are going to hate this job and want to quit before you even started and if you lie about your answer chances are you'll end up somewhere you hate and eat your soul away The only time you ever want to say money is if the place is actually offering an exceptional amount of money My current job pays $80ph so many people who apply there will say money because it's actually something that separates my job from others and that it makes sense that you picked that job for that reason but if it's just your regular $15-30 ph it doesn't make sense to say the reason you are there is for something you could get anywhere else
Follow me on Instagram 👉 @AdviceWithErin instagram.com/advicewitherin/
Same name!
Ngl this sounds like the only good tip I've ever heard on one of these shorts
Ikr!
fr
Y e s
I'm 100% using this
Maybe you haven’t watched enough videos then. A lot of her tips are fantastic. I was required to take a class in high school called “jobs for graduates” where they teach you a lot of these things. It’s a national organization, and the things they teach are widely accepted as extremely helpful. Just like this lady here.
Frrr
"I applied 10 other places. You are the only one who called for an interview"
The truth most don't want to hear, sadly.
You probably did but I bet there was 100 places you didn't apply for so why did this place make that top 10 cut
@@scottb9997 "It was one of the ones I found that paid a somewhat livable wage and wasn't more than 30 minutes away"
@@Rainbow_Neos1 thats the answer then
It's easy to get to and should have plenty of shifts
@@scottb9997 I mean... "You happened to be one that called back" is a valid reason to want to work there.
Interviewer: "Why do you wanna work here?"
Me: "Money"
Erin, whispering: "Pssst. Don't focus on the "why" focus on the "here"!"
Me, whispering back: "Ok, thanks!"
Me, at the Interviewer: "This place is offering the most money."
Interviewer: "Out."
Bruh... The comment's underrated
too underrated...
You two are absolutely way too kind! Thank you both so much!
This comment is totally underrated this deserves more like
The truest of answers to this question. 😂
"I'm looking for a company to invest my time and effort into that will invest their time and effort into me."
Great summary.
Answers like that are why this is basically the only important question in the interview
If someone told me that when I used to hire people I'd respond with something like
You've applied for a front end position the only skill we are likely to teach you there is making coffee and we do send our baristas away for courses however if your looking for a long term job I can offer you a job as an apprentice chef if that's a career path you'd like to pursue if that's not for you we may not be the right fit
Yo that's fire 🔥
I have a job interview next week, using this thanks bro
@@reeeew_222 Best of luck!
I hate the fakeness of job interviews 😂 like I know that you know and you know that I know that the answer is money and that I'm not passionate about Wal-Mart but for some reason we have to play by this stupid little code and pretend like that's not the truth
Edit: Since people are GOING OFF in the replies, I'm talking about when you're forced to interview for a job that is not your dream job in order to survive. I'm being painted as shallow here for some reason, but yes I have a degree that I'm passionate about. People are acting like money isn't the thing that pays for your bills, food, etc. and as if it's a choice to work and as if I have all these options around me to be super selective in where I work. You don't know where I live, what my degree is in, and what the market is like for my field of study. If you can find passion in customer service, good on you, but if the only jobs in your field are further away than you can afford to move right now and you need to make money to live in the meantime, you are allowed to take what job you can get and not be passionate about it. It's unrealistic to expect everyone interviewing for Chipotle to be like "I'm a big foodie, I love preparing for for people, Chipotle is the best restaurant in the world, I'm so passionate about this business, and I love interacting with customers all day". It's perfectly reasonable to work there because you need a job and your dream job isn't feasible right now.
I know. It honestly ruins my day having to do interviews because you have to pretend your perfect. Any inkling you give them that you aren’t perfect and they aren’t interested. Like can we just have a normal conversation please ☠️
Id call it gatekeeping to have a standard. Imagine you ask your coworker teammate to do one part of the project. But they lack any passion for the project. Says "ughhh if it wasnt for the money, I would not be here".
Everyone knows everyone would rather have margaritas on the beach than be at work. But if you are at work, have the stability and personal drive to smile and be engaged, not all "uh, idk, i dont care, whatevs, as long as it works, im here for the money" attitude.
The standard for any interviewer giving a thumbs up for a candidate or recommending for a role is "would I want to work with them on a project?" In addition to whether their background meets the requirements.
You have to be wanting to work for more than just money. Passion has to be involved somewhere in there. Supposedly you got your degree. I would hope you didn’t spend a crap ton of money for something you aren’t actually passionate about. Be passionate about what your doing. Same goes for fast food btw. When I have a cashier that looks annoyed the last thing I want to do is order from them
@natalina8593 this video is about a Chipotle interview ma'am. No one is passionate about working fast food.
Why not be selective in where you work? That way you can be honest. I enjoy working retail because of the interaction wih the customers 😁
Good advice, but i think it is bullshit that we have to bullshit to get a job.
That's the thing it's not bullshit for some people. And those are the people they are looking to hire
Yeah maybe u have to understand the thing that companies exist not to hire everyone. They try to look for people who would love to work here or at least wouldn't hate the job so much he leaves in a month.
It is bs. But when companies have tons of applicants of course they prefer someone who says they're interested in the brand and the industry
@@BenRangel bro I dont think even the CEO of the company is interested in the brand and the industry, the company itself is interested in MONEY, that's literally why they exist, they're a business, and business want to make a profit however they can lmfao
@@s4vetheworldBut both the interviewer and the interviewee know that the interviewee is lying straight out of their ass so they can land a job and pay their rent, so what’s the point?
During my last interview, they started by making sure I could work nights. I said no. As we were about to wrap things up, the manager asked me if I were comfortable answering a couple of questions about my current position, including my wage, as they were entering the market in my country. I was cool about it and answered it honestly. He said they were offering double that, to which I answered I'd gladly work nights for that pay. Long story short, I got the job. I was honest, the hiring manager was honest, it worked. Not every interview is the same.
I got that in an interview today. "Why do you want to work here?" "I'm unemployed and you're hiring." I didn't really say that, but I thought it.
What did you say instead? Did you get hired? (Not to be invasive you can ignore me if you’d prefer)
did you get the job? :)
I don't really remember what I said. I did not get that job, but I did recently get another one from a company that never asked me that question. Lol
I did say this and got tbe job
@aliyah2850 Someone said this in my work lol and they got the job because we're extremely understaffed.
Maybe management should stop asking that question because everyone would love to not work for money and do so for personal fulfillment. If working was optional Chipotle would have 0 staff. The answer is always money
If you stop paying, I stop showing up. I don't do this for my love of *squints* implicit building safety.
@@user-K8T I didn’t say working shouldn’t be a thing. I said people would only do fulfilling work if money wasn’t an object. Building safety based careers pay exceptionally well and is respected. Chipotle doesn’t and isn’t.
@@alize0623 honestly, anything can be soul sucking if you aren't into it. I've had well respected jobs that just were just not it. And my number to stay was far higher than anything they'd ever consider paying me because they were cheap af. Honestly, I would have probably found Chipotle more fulfilling. At least some people would be happy to get my product rather than frustrated because I'm doing my job. But Chipotle won't pay the bills, soooo... And, now, neither would that job, honestly, with the garbage raises they gave. Just because you see something as well respected, doesn't mean it's fulfilling. And the safety people are not generally the ones who are appreciated in any project.
They just want to know if you are going to get bored by talking to people all day. Which happens for many people. We all work for money, but also have things that we prefer to do.
Listen to the short again.
@@arakwar it’s a dumb question. I love working with and talking to people. I wouldn’t apply to chipotle if I didn’t need money. You watch the video again and reread what I said; because you missed the point of both
my friend said "i'm applying because subway rejected me" LMAOO
"I dont wanna starve" is valid af
My immediate thought was "...they have air conditioning and a bathroom?"
I normally read the website of the company and just rephrase what they said about working there on the careers part of the website.
"Because the mowing lawns guy didn't reply"
I actually did say money at my previous job and manager thought it was funny and she liked my honesty so she hired me
I work at Chipotle. I'm a store manager. RUN
I heard your comment in that meme voice. RUN
Agree!
Agreed. Had a friend that worked the grill and eventually had store manager. He ended up sueing them for wage theft and a bunch of other things 🙃
@@liliespetals19 I could definitely sue them for wage theft. It was horrible. They owe me money.
@@liliespetals19 I stole his wage, tell him I said sorry
The money is still the answer
I once told a job that I like acquiring useless knowledge and that's why I wanted to work there. The smile instantly leg their face and they cut the interview short lmao
" Ton of free tac- "
gets fired
"It's within comfortable walking range and I hate driving"
I used to hire people and that was always a great answer because I know that this job has something you really appreciate about it vs other jobs now I know when my competitor a few miles away that you probably also applied to and offers the same money you won't take his job because our job is better suited to what you like
I’ve never actually wanted to work at any place I interviewed at - I just needed a job so badly that I applied EVERYWHERE that I saw a sign.
And companies know that people are desperate.
“why do you want to work HERE instead of mowing lawns?” cuz it was hiring?
What I took away from this video is that Erin wants free stuff from anyone she helps to land a job 😂
Remember the interview to my current job - came, was asked if I fulfill the education requirements, which I did. Then my boss basically went "this is the salary for the position, these are the hours, this is the training you will go through. Does that work for you?" (Government job, but still)
If I were to ever start a business this would be how I would conduct the interviews, people find a job to make money, anything else is irrelevant to the employer
I mean even following this advice my honest answer would still be I'm applying anywhere and I'll take whatever I can get. 😂
Everything
Vet assistant
Road works
Apprenticeships
Cafes
Roof cleaning
Offices
Factories
Warehouses
Childcare
Cleaning
Fast food
You're applying in all jobs for every industry
Or are you prefering some over others
actually that question is something i’ve always been confused by but you explained it really well, thank you
I've applied to 26 jobs (only counting the ones I applied to on one job board). 7 places have called me, but 5 of them gave me an interview. Life's hard 😮💨
Nope.
"I'm here for the money" needs to be normalised as an answer, I'm not gonna support the opposite.
I agree but many corporates are not willing to change. “It’s worked for years so why change?” Is their thought process.
The reason it's not a good answer is because they don't ask you
Why do you need a job
They ask
Why did you apply for this job
It's not the same question
@@brooklynbound0 if people won't speak they'll never change.
@@scottb9997 yet both of this questions have the same answer
@@monicabelladonna4626 no they don't and this weak and lazy attitude that tries to force them into having the same answer doesn't hurt me or the one who made this video or the guy that doesn't hire you
It only hurts yourself
When you are deciding between 2 minimum wage jobs you aren't deciding based off money its as simple as that and if you are going to choose to not understand that then you will probably never have any success
They seem pretty happy...(Cause that's literaly their job and they want to keep it.)
The fact that at first she asked who are you and at last she suddenly knew her name and was like thx erin😂
nah bro ppl love honest ppl
I hate interviews for one reason, NO SHIT WE'RE THERE FOR THE MONEY. THATS THE ONLY REASON TO GET A JOB (unless you're also doing it because its your dream job)
I’ve never seen a happy chipotle worker
This really works. At my job we've had recruiters push for candidates because they showed interest in the brand and the industry
Chipotle trully is my greatest passion 😂
@@The_Yukki I understand, being passionate is easier for creative jobs like a journalist or designer than a fast food worker.
But doesn't have to be over the top - you can just say you like their food and would prefer working in the food industry rather than at a factory - or whatever
That's a good one. I did answer with 'money' on my 2nd job's interview. I got the 'we are like family' talk and i think you can guess how it was. I worked with that GM for maybe 6 months before she was gone and maybe 3 or 4 others after her until i quit about 3 years later.
I said money and they hired me almost right away 😂
She: Who are you?
Also she: Thanks Erin.
Don’t let them fool you: it’s always money, you just have to lie.
No you are just confusing why do you need a job for why this job
It's not the same question
My dad always tells us this story from when he was young and his mom wanted him to get a job. So she signed him up for a job interview at some fast food place, and when they asked him the, why do you wanna work here question, he just said “I don’t know, i need money and my mom told me to come, needless to say, he didn’t get that job
I love how this is a service job example too. Not a specialized job where theres more stuff you could play up and reherse, but a place or job type most have had at some point but surface might be harder to say "I want this".
Money is the only reason anyone works. Never be afraid to say money is your motivation.😊
All jobs pay money so it doesnt make sense as an answer to why you are there when you could be anywhere else and also get money
If you're answer is you pay more than elsewhere that's a good answer but just money is shit
as an HR professional i would never progress a candidate who says this. too risky when there are more talented folks out there with a real interest in the business. you're showing your ass if you do this
@@nottheone582are you not paying attention to the type of job? You can spin that about journalism or law or design but having this attitude hiring for fast food work and people are just trying to put food on the table, nobody's gonna be passionate about the art of cashiering.
What great advice, and well put!
It's really cool of Daenerys to give such good job hunting advice 😊
THANK YOU! I will hopefully be getting an interview for my first job and this interview question has been puzzling me. NOW it makes sense. I want to work at the place I applied to because I see it as a good jumping off point to get some experience, and to improve my skills in customer service. THAT is what I'll model my answer on.
When my interviewer asked that question I focused on my connection to the company. I went there all the time as a kid for cleats and soccer balls and basketballs. I just said that and I wanted to give back to a place that gave me that
much. If you can bring up an emotional connection to the place do it.
Bro my algorithm couldn't have shown me this like 4 days ago?? Literally had an interview and although it was pretty good i feel like this wouldve helped😅😅
The main thing is you want longevity In your career and this job gives you that. It always has room for progression and that’s what you want to be able to grow and progress that’s all I say. I do recruitment so I learn the sales tricks over the years
thanks!
when i applied for my first job (at an ice cream place after freshman year) and the owner asked me this, i was sneaky about it lol. first i said that i wanted the experience and then i said “now that i’m in high school, it would be nice to have my own income.” the owner was pretty understanding about it; this place was pretty common for first jobs so i’m sure he heard that kind of answer a lot
I left a minimum wage retail job to interview for a grocery store my friend worked at because she told me the pay was $12.50/hr (back in 2017). When the interviewer asked why I wanted to work there I just said my friend told me it's a great place to work. But it was really about the money.
"So why do you want to work here?" Stunted me when I first started learning about job interviews in my eighth grade speech class. It's easy to answer when you're applying for your dream job or at least a job that you studied in college to actually do, but for a job in retail or at a fast food restaurant that you're just getting at 16 to make a few bucks, it's harder to answer without sounding like you're full of shit.
How is retail hard you can give the same answer to every retail store you apply to
It's easy to travel to
Flexibility around xxx responsibility
I want to work with customers
I want a job with room to move up
I like this store I shop here all the time
I want a job with reliable hours
My friend recommended here
I'm interested in xxx merchandise
I really just wanted to staff discount
You pay $2ph more than other shops
I'm used to this type of work
There a thousand reasons and you only need to rationalise one of them that actually works for you
@@scottb9997 Almost every one of those answers is a lie or exaggerated, except a few. In my case I hate dealing with people, so I don't apply to jobs that require any type of customer interaction or social atmosphere. I like physical labor...I actually DO like it. So when they ask me the question it's easy for me.
Chipotle works it’s majority minor staff like animals lol, they also been caught a few time breaking child labor laws. It happened regularly at the one I worked at for like 3 months, a 16 year old worked like 45 hours a week
As someone who worked in hiring.
"I need a job and you're paying what I'm looking for" was definitely a better answer than the people blowing smoke.
And thats how to get free tacos😅😅😅
My daughter applied at my friend's bakery. When asked that question, he told me that she said, "because you guys pay a lot and my mom told me to." 🤦🏽♀️ I told her when they ask that question, make them feel good about where they work. The next place she applied to, Starbucks, hired her.
That is very smart and I would never just say 'Money'
I'M SO GLAD I FOUND THIS CHANNEL BEFORE I NEEDED A JOB. I'm still a student but surely I apply for a part-time job one dayy. LIFE SAVER!
"I have a better question, why are you ALWAYS hiring?"
that was actually so helpful i hope i remember this forever
Guess my answer would still be "money" at the end!
Why here: there was a hiring ad...this is one of 10 other job interviews...
Moral of the story: lie lie lie lie lie
I usually just ignore the Shorts advice type videos but WOW that’s actually so helpful. I have a lot of trouble with questions like these and that helps me out a ton.
The reason why I want to work here is I can see myself growing professionally in this position, I enjoy chipotle, talking to other people and have the menu memorized. I admire the work the staff provide and I know my background in customer service has prepared me for this role. I look forward to becoming a valued member of the team.
Lol modern day job interviews are a joke, I’m so unimpressed by the people conducting the interview that I just match the same energy.
"Why do you want to work here?"
Well, you see, you're hiring.
that "Whaat?" expression was awesome!!
I'm trying to find a job with very low social interaction, as I find socializing with people I don't know fun, but extremely exhausting. I just can't do it for 8 hours at a time. How do you say, "because I can't socialize properly " in a way that makes them want to hire you?
"I love that this job would give me a lot of opportunity to work independently"
Maybe a warehouse job?
This is literally soooo much more helpful than any tips I’ve gotten
In the beginning I was already rolling my eys but by the end, this is actually a very sound advice!
Not just for interviews, but also to be introspective of why you're choosing this job.
Thank you!
I actually have 30 minutes until I have an interview and was scrolling through shorts and this is very helpful atm
yes ! when applying to a local grocery store, which is pretty big in size, I mentioned that I know the layout and that I shop there personally, I definitely think it helped as I got a special offer! always personalize answers.
Side note if you get tacos at Chipotle you deserve to be on watch list
I’m lucky my current manager is so understanding about the need for money. When applying, I asked for a higher hourly rate than I thought he’d offer, because he’d try matching in the middle to keep me. He asked me why I requested a higher pay than what my experience shows, and I told him that exact thing. He said, and I quote “that’s actually really smart, welcome to the team.”
You: Thanks Erin! I'm gonna give you a ton of free tacos!
Interviewer: what?
i loved how she said MOneY while smiling
ok that's actually very helpful to me, because when I hear the question, my first thought is always this. :P
Woah.. thats an actually really good tip? From a youtube short?? Dang. I'm impressed. I'll keep this in mind if I need it but hopefully not lol
Meanwhile my current employer straight up told me “if it’s because of money it’s okay you can just say that”
why would i lie. we both know its money. i dont wanna work there cause the business is so fun and people are so nice and i just love not being home for hours. its money. just like every other person there i want money
Josh Otusanya lookin different these days..
I hear this a lot, in regards to people only working somewhere for money and I never understood why that would ever be their answer. It's clear that the interviewer does not want to know your overall motives, but rather, what decision making lead you to the position you're currently interviewing for.
You are great Erin!!!
She BEAUTIFUL as hell!!!
This is what they should teach kids in school
One thing I learned from applying to jobs is they really only care of you follow the job interview social expectations. They know you're feeding them lies but as long as you answer the expected way they're more likely to hire you. It happened in a supermarket interview once where I'd prepared but due to a misunderstanding they thought I hadn't read the website (I was trying to sound quizzicle by asking for more information on stuff I'd read). As a result I didn't get the job. The next day I went to a job fair and happened to meet my interviewers. We chatted and she could see I was actually serious about wanting a job, so she told me they were still hiring in other places and to reapply. At this point my failure hadn't even been formalised to me, it was just clear that at the time the lady had already made her mind up about giving me the job even though now she could see I would attend a job fair and start a conversation with her, proving I was serious about the job. Two months later I had an interview at a different supermarket I'd been unsuccessful at before, I got the job because I didn't botch the interview. One of my first jobs I was successful at the interviewer even called me eager because I read the whole website (also for a supermarket) and said I was so impressed by this company. She knew I was lying but because I fulfilled the job expectations I got the job.
At my Job interview I said that I am the most honest person you ever met. I am here for money, If I was a Millionaire I wouldn’t apply. I still got the Job
I'm glad I'm not the only person that simply CANNOT be fake when asked these questions lol. "Cuz I need a job and you called me in for an interview" I'm sorry but I can't pretend to be passionate for a job I'm just going to work at until something I actually want pops up 😅.
In 6th grade I took a class where we learned about businesses and then at the end we would apply for "jobs" at a whole-day business simulation for middle schoolers. I applied for the Arby's drink manager position (because it was by far the easiest and a lot of people were applying for it) and when they asked me why I wanted the job, I said, "Because I like to fill up drinks." I got the job. Unfortunately, though, a bunch of kids got sick the week before, and so they needed a CEO of a natural gas company, so they got rid of the "useless" position of Arby's drink manager and asked me to be the CEO. I enjoyed that because I got to write the commercials and make gas jokes that got played on the "radio." 😂
Finally, a short about financial advice where you don't annoy the person you're talking to
Erin’s in it for the tacos 😂😂😂
Yeah, always look into the company youre applying to (if you're not familiar with them) to see where their priorities lie or what they advertise themselves as. I applied to my current job because I just needed a job, but I did a bit of research prior on glass ceiling. The company I work for (and have been with 6 years) is very involved with Pride and supporting BIPOC-owned businesses, and everyone who reviewed the company on glass ceiling praised the community there. So when I was interviewing and that question was asked, the hiring manager nodded approvingly. I wasn't hired on the spot, but I was called back within half an hour
This is soooo helpful for me because I struggle with this question so much like idk I need that paper yk 😂😂
"Why do you want to work here?"
"I'm very passionate about not starving to death."
that "what 😃" 😭😭😭
once I legit answered "money", and got the job
This is actually really helpful tf 😭😭
That’s crazy how that works. Every time I’m asked this question I always say for money 😂 now I know why I’m not getting hired to most places 🤣
You've basically confused you did you apply for this job with why do you need a job
It's not the same question
@@scottb9997 please rephrase that because I’m not understanding
@@Jackieyeet1 so the issue with saying money is that all jobs pay money it doesn't explain why you are at that job
Your reason for picking one job over another doesn't need(but it can be) to be anything like passion or building a career or skill set
You just need to say why you'd rather be at this job over something else
Things like the job is easy to get to/I can walk there
I like to help customers/ I won't have customers
I would like to know how to make good coffee
I like teamwork/independent work
It's indoors with air conditioning/it's outdoors
I want flexible/late night/early morning/long shifts because i have uni or sports
Or want stable fulltime shifts
This job is related to the field I want to get into
This job will be fast paced so I don't get bored
I want to work for commisions/tips
If you can't find an answer to this question you are basically admitting you are going to hate this job and want to quit before you even started and if you lie about your answer chances are you'll end up somewhere you hate and eat your soul away
The only time you ever want to say money is if the place is actually offering an exceptional amount of money
My current job pays $80ph so many people who apply there will say money because it's actually something that separates my job from others and that it makes sense that you picked that job for that reason
but if it's just your regular $15-30 ph it doesn't make sense to say the reason you are there is for something you could get anywhere else
This is actually good
that's such a great tip, just by looking at it a different way! thanks :)
"When I get this job, I'm gonna give you a ton of free tacos!"
Interviewer: "Yeah... don't call us, we'll call you!"