Junior Risk Analyst Interview Questions

12,941 junior risk analyst interview questions shared by candidates

Mixed of personal and behavioral questions. Lots of questions pertaining to the role. The interview lasted 1 hour but it was not extremely difficult. I just felt they threw me in the bunch for statistics. Black sheep kinda deal. Lots of companies do this to meet the standard requirement of fair hiring; a.k.a having a mix of candidates in their resume and candidacy pull to show evidence of diversity; sad. I basically knew and felt through the interview I was not so much a fit for them based on some questions asked. Don’t remember the questions exactly, but it basically rubbed me the wrong way, especially when the position is “remote” That’s how I knew this interview was just a waste of my time because the questions were so irrelevant, the interviewer was looking for any reason to cross me out and he got it. At a point, I was just over the interview and just answered with no effort. Sent my “thank you” email following the interview because of having good morals. I showed respect to them for considering me as a candidate. I’m grateful for the experience regardless. As companies consider you as a candidate, you should also consider the company as a candidate because interviews are a two way street. Choose who chooses you, don’t be desperate. Every candidate has a position and a company somewhere with their name written on it; you will fit somewhere and be the perfect candidate they desire.
Apr 1, 2022

Mixed of personal and behavioral questions. Lots of questions pertaining to the role. The interview lasted 1 hour but it was not extremely difficult. I just felt they threw me in the bunch for statistics. Black sheep kinda deal. Lots of companies do this to meet the standard requirement of fair hiring; a.k.a having a mix of candidates in their resume and candidacy pull to show evidence of diversity; sad. I basically knew and felt through the interview I was not so much a fit for them based on some questions asked. Don’t remember the questions exactly, but it basically rubbed me the wrong way, especially when the position is “remote” That’s how I knew this interview was just a waste of my time because the questions were so irrelevant, the interviewer was looking for any reason to cross me out and he got it. At a point, I was just over the interview and just answered with no effort. Sent my “thank you” email following the interview because of having good morals. I showed respect to them for considering me as a candidate. I’m grateful for the experience regardless. As companies consider you as a candidate, you should also consider the company as a candidate because interviews are a two way street. Choose who chooses you, don’t be desperate. Every candidate has a position and a company somewhere with their name written on it; you will fit somewhere and be the perfect candidate they desire.

The toughest question was a logic problem. It went like this: An eccentric billionaire has 10 paintings. Each painting has a dollar value attached to it, and no two paintings have the same value. This man offers you the chance to play a game where you guess the highest value painting. If you do so correctly you win 10 million dollars. There is no second place, you must guess either the highest valued painting or lose. The game goes like this: You select one painting. The man reveals its value. You choose to continue the game or stop at that painting. If you stop, you win if the painting is the highest valued painting. You lose if it's not. If you continue, you draw another painting and again see the new value. You must again make the choice to stop on that one or continue the game. This keeps going until you choose to stop.
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Risk Analyst

Interviewed at Risk Management Solutions

3.9
Nov 11, 2013

The toughest question was a logic problem. It went like this: An eccentric billionaire has 10 paintings. Each painting has a dollar value attached to it, and no two paintings have the same value. This man offers you the chance to play a game where you guess the highest value painting. If you do so correctly you win 10 million dollars. There is no second place, you must guess either the highest valued painting or lose. The game goes like this: You select one painting. The man reveals its value. You choose to continue the game or stop at that painting. If you stop, you win if the painting is the highest valued painting. You lose if it's not. If you continue, you draw another painting and again see the new value. You must again make the choice to stop on that one or continue the game. This keeps going until you choose to stop.

I was not expecting them to ask me if i ever got any tickets (speeding, parking, etc,) considering i was applying for a desk job, but there is room to move around in the company, because there is cross training, so that's pretty cool
avatar

Risk Dpt Corp

Interviewed at E-Z Rent-A-Car

2.4
Sep 29, 2014

I was not expecting them to ask me if i ever got any tickets (speeding, parking, etc,) considering i was applying for a desk job, but there is room to move around in the company, because there is cross training, so that's pretty cool

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