News4 mins ago
What would you do?today
This question was used in a real jod interview.
You are driving down a street in a two seat car and come to a bus stop, at the bus stop stands an old friend that you havn't seen for ages that saved your life once, an old lady thats having a heart attack that needs to get to hospital and the women/man of your dreams.
What would you do?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by james_m246. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.On that basis, it seems pretty obvious which answer the employer would want.
The person of your dreams may well tell you to pee off...the old friend and you clearly haven't made much of an effort to keep in touch up until now, so a quick message is all he/she requires. The thing that needs to be dealt with now is clearly the sick old woman.
Dealing with her is immediate and selfless, dealing with the friend is of secondary importance and dealing with the dream-boat is of little or any importance.
J, "to co-ordinate parts or elements so as to form a systematic whole; to give a definite and orderly structure to; to arrange"...that's what TOED says about 'organise'. Both 'ordinate' and 'orderly' suggest the thing is 'in order' which implies 'sequence' in my view when one is dealing with three specific matters to be dealt with in a time-frame, as here.
Still, if you don't like 'organise' or 'arrange' what about 'sequence' itself? That's been around as a verb for longer than 'prioritise' has in British English usage.
I just don't like 'prioritise', a recent interloper. But what the hey...each to his own!