Respuesta de referencia
This classic behavioral question targets your past experiences in program management. This question, and others like it, made up nearly 11% of the 500+ questions we collected.
Here, interviewers are trying to get an idea of your working style and the impact you've made in past positions.
Below is a high-level example of how a candidate could answer this question, using IGotAnOffer's signature SPSIL framework (Situation, Problem, Solution, Impact, Lessons) for answering behavioral questions.
Sample answer for “Tell me about a past project you've managed.”
- Situation:
“In my past position, I was the lead TPM working on a new feature for a ride-share app, with which users would be able to share the profile and license plate number of their driver, as well as their live location, with a friend for safety."
- Problem:
"This was a key feature, as we had begun to receive reports of some users feeling unsafe using the app. We needed to act fast, both to make sure our users were safe and to get ahead of any PR issues."
- Solution:
"Our goal was to roll out the feature in a month and a half. We had never developed a feature that quickly before. So I put together four teams (IOS, Android, back-end, and editorial/design) and briefed them on the urgency.
I implemented an agile methodology to move things along, encouraging the engineering teams to shorten their development cycles, from 2-week sprints down to 1-week sprints, continuously checking in and giving feedback.
I also aimed to motivate the teams by constantly passing along the user reports we were receiving, appealing to their concern for and attention to the customer to encourage their best and fastest work."
- Impact:
"We ended up rolling out the feature in 45 working days. Our customer complaints went down by 20%, and the feature was actually lauded in a popular tech magazine as an important step toward rideshare safety. After the article, our signups went up by about 15% month over month."
- Lessons:
"This experience really cemented for me that just because something hasn't been done before at a company (like a 1.5-month release), that doesn't mean it's not possible. It also helped me understand Agile and implement it better in the future."