Interview test
-
Hi,
I asked a couple of weeks ago for some help with interview questions... I've now written these, but I have been asked to come up with some data with an anomaly for the interviewee to identify and explain what they'd do...
I'm thinking something to do with landing pages, but what?!
Any help would be most appreciated
Thanks again!
Amelia
-
I would do some things to look at user interaction to see if they can look past "attracting visits"
Maybe an example of a landing page attracting a lot of traffic but suffering from issues such as
- Large Bounce Rate
- Low time on page
- High exit rate
Give them stats showing a fairly new article page attracting visitors from a variety of closely related keywords, but put a couple of deliberate minor technical issues on there related to the keywords and see what they say.
Worst case: They miss everything
Mediocre: If they identify the minor technical SEO problems and small improvements
Best Case: They look past the technical SEO and realise that although you have traffic there must be an issue which could well result in a loss of ranking when google identifies users are not finding what they need.This would give you an indication of if they can look at the bigger picture and use some initiative or if they are a more "follow this formula" type. It also opens up room for discussion.
-
It sounds like technical SEO from your profile. One of the first questions I ask if they have heard of Moz/Rand ? If they say no...
On landing pages. I would show them a page and ask them the first 3 things they would check to determine if optimized for SEO. For me they:-
page loading speed
Title tag
H1
If they say the colour of the graphic... probably not as technical as you want! Some cannot even check source code..
Have some fun with it...
-
Hi there
You could do landing pages, or give them a service page and ask what issues they find with the page as well.
There are also test available on Smarterer.com you can take advantage of as well. There was a also a great article in Wired recently discussing (you guessed it) Google's interview process that had some great ideas and tips in it. Here's a great great article from Forbes:
"Others like to stretch the truth, a lot. How do you ensure someone has the skills they say they do? Test them. These can be written tests, role-plays, or simulations such as asking a PR candidate to write a press release for a make-believe product or asking a marketing candidate to explain the key components in a marketing plan. These tests don’t need to be elaborate, but they do need to be able to differentiate the candidates who have the necessary skills from those who don’t."
Whatever you do - you want your company culture to reflect in your test - don't stress the person out, don't make them feel cornered. New hires are more in tune now than ever with companies they want to apply for via social media and browsing websites, so you want to be as consistent and reflective as possible in your process. Have fun with it, because when if you do find someone you like who nailed your tests but they had issues with your process internally, that's not a good thing. Perception goes both ways.
Just some things to consider! Good luck!
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
How to do Google Multivariate Testing via Google Tag Manager with Universal Analytic?
Hello All, How to do Google Multivariate Testing via Google Tag Manager with Universal Analytic? Thanks!
Reporting & Analytics | | dsouzac0 -
A/B Testing Through Google Tag Manager
Hi I have just started working on Google Tag Manager and trying to implement all important tags through Tag Manager only. Can we also implement A/B Testing (Experiment in Analytics) through Google Tag manager.
Reporting & Analytics | | RuchiPardal0 -
How do you setup a test analytics account?
I have created a test view but that is not helping with skewed data. Do you all just create a total separate profile with a different GA account for a non-indexed domain? How can I test tag manager and other things without messing with our data? I have our IP filtered out so it doesn't show up in reports but other event tags from outsiders will.
Reporting & Analytics | | Sika220 -
Testing IP Exclusion Filters in Google Analytics
(I hope I haven't missed something simple 😉 I have add IP exclusion filters in Google Analytics. What I haven't been able to determine is how to test to see if it is working. I'd imagine there would be a dip in traffic but if a site is low volume it might not even register. Thanks!
Reporting & Analytics | | AUDigitalMarketing0 -
A/B Tests: How To Verify Difference In Average Order Value?
Hi there! When the data from an A/B test shows a difference in AOV between the variants, how do you determine if this difference is statistically probable or not? Best Regards, Martin
Reporting & Analytics | | TalkInThePark0 -
Can you re sit the Google analytics IQ test?
Damn I just failed the Google analytics IQ test with a score of 65% 😞 You need 80% to pass... My natural instinct is to resit but after 30 mins of googling around Ive got no answer to the following question: "Can you resit the Google Analytics IQ test for free or do you have to pay again". Any insights welcome...
Reporting & Analytics | | Nightwing0 -
Tracking SEO tests
Trying to get some best practices on testing SEO changes. We are going to make a bunch of changes on subsets of pages. Say testing about 5 different on-page changes. Originally we were going to submit separate Sitemaps to GWT and see if our test sets get indexed, how quickly, etc. But we noticed that GWT says some pages in our Sitemaps aren't indexed even though we know they are (what gives?). So we thought, for each test, let's put a unique code on the page so we can see how many get indexed by Google. But that doesn't solve the issue: how many people clicked on our test pages. So we are thinking of putting a tracking pixel on the test pages, specific for each test. But then I am thinking, why not just create a separate Google Analytics profile and place that code on the test pages (set up goals to track visits per test since we aren't going to change the actual URLs). and on and on This is where you come in. What kind of tracking do you implement when you set up tests? Advice appreciated! E
Reporting & Analytics | | ErinTM0