2006-11-02

Java Interview Tips:

Tip #1

Be honest to answer technical questions, you are not expected to remember everything (for example you might know a few design patterns but not all of them). If you have not used a design pattern in question, request the interviewer, if you could describe a different design pattern.

Tip #2

Every body is nervous for interviews and being a little nervous is natural. But if you are too nervous then you can overcome this by preparing for your interviews and by treating each interview as a free technical/behavioural training course. Have an attitude that even if you are not going to get the job, you are going to learn something good out of it. If you go with this attitude you will put yourself in a win/win situation and you might really get the offer. If you take this attitude you can learn a lot from your interviews. Also never think that you have to answer all the questions correctly. Do not get put off by a tricky or a difficult question. What really earns you a job is the combination of your knowledge + experience + attitude

Tip #3

Where possible briefly demonstrate how you applied your skills/knowledge in the key areas like design concepts, transactional issues, performance issues, memory leaks, best practices etc as described in the book Java/J2EE Job Interview Companion along with your business skills and interpersonal skills. Find the right time to raise questions and answer those questions to show your strength in the technical key areas, business and interpersonal skills.

Tip #4

Tell me about yourself or about some of the recent projects you have worked with? What do you consider your most significant achievement? Why do you think you are qualified for this position?

Above mentioned interview questions are very common and the interviewer will be mainly looking for 4 qualities:

1. Passion.
2. Ability to understand potential failures (transactional issues, concurrency issues, design issues etc).
3. Ability to see things at a high level as well as drill down when required.
4. Ability to think dynamically to deliver solutions to complex problems and ability to analyse “what if ” scenarios (What if I want to support a non Web client?, What if I want to support other types of products? etc).

Tip #5

What was the last Java related technical book or article you read? Which Java related website(s) or resource(s) do you use to keep your knowledge up to date beyond Google? What do you think of some of the emerging technologies/frameworks like AOP, IOC, Spring, Tapestry etc? What recent technology trends are important to enterprise development?

The interviewer will be mainly looking for your:

Curiosity to learn: How eager you are to learn new things and keep up to date with the technology.

6 comments:

sree said...

fundastic arul really a great job.will be blessed for this real help.

thanks

Arulkumaran K. said...

Thanks and all the best.

Chandrashekar R. Gaajula said...

Hello Arul,

I bought your Interview Guide from lulu as I was looking to change jobs.

What I learned from your guide helped me immensely in the interview not as much as in the knowledge I gained as the confidence I gained in brushing up the basics effectively.

It was a real great help.

Thanks for putting it together.

I will be interested in learning about what else you have in store.

Best regards,
Chandra

Rama said...

hi arul,
i m rama.i m mca fresher looking for job in based on java platform.
thanks for giving some more angles of java interviews n i hope u will add some other information .
rama.achanta85@gmail.com

santy said...

hi!!!!!
thanks for provide the information related to java.....
sir i want to provide me more >>>>

sir give me books links that give me help on making project through struts.............


thanksssss...

klm said...

Hello Arul,

I found your Interview Guide is a well organized and highly useful book for many java developers. Great work! Thanks a lot.

May God bless you.

Sarma Kolluru