Editor Interviews

Editor Interview Questions

"Responsible for reviewing and evaluating content, editors are highly attentive to detail, organized, and collaborative. In an interview, expect to be asked about how you work with deadlines, your toolbox of editing systems, and where you get your ideas for stories. Especially desirable are candidates with strong communication skills who can work well in teams."

Top Editor Interview Questions & How to Answer

Question 1

Question #1: What's your process to maintaining deadlines?

How to answer
How to answer: When working as an editor, you'll face deadlines when you must provide the work back to the writer or project manager. Highlight any tools you use to track and manage deadlines, such as a calendar or task management system. You can also use this question to describe your work ethic and situations in which you've faced and maintained tight deadlines for clients or team members. This question also works well to discuss your prioritization skills.
Question 2

Question #2: How do you maintain focus when handling the mundane aspects of editing?

How to answer
How to answer: Editors often face tedious and monotonous tasks, such as proofreading, checking sources, and fact-checking. When answering a question about maintaining your focus, talk about any processes you have in place to stay alert as you review other people's words. For example, if you read sentences aloud when assessing grammatical correctness or use a digital tool to check facts, describe these habits.
Question 3

Question #3: Describe your approach to offering constructive feedback.

How to answer
How to answer: An editor often has to provide constructive feedback to writers and content experts. They need to be able to do so in a way that benefits the other party while maintaining a professional and positive tone. Outline your communication skills and ability to provide feedback in a way that doesn't generate a negative or defensive response.

11,598 editor interview questions shared by candidates

Are you familiar with ProTools and Dub Synchro (a software that facilitates ADR and dubbing). Have you done this kind of work before? (They stress that things at the Montreal Technicolor studio are different from other places you may have worked, but this is not true.) Learning curve of the job itself is short, but the dynamics of the place are chaotic because many of your potential future colleagues remain hanging onto jobs that 1. they are unqualified for (they consider, wrongly, time on the job to mean qualification), or 2. jobs that are obsolete (middle management has a hard time to figure out an effective workflow).
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Sound Editor

Interviewed at Technicolor

3.2
Jan 16, 2018

Are you familiar with ProTools and Dub Synchro (a software that facilitates ADR and dubbing). Have you done this kind of work before? (They stress that things at the Montreal Technicolor studio are different from other places you may have worked, but this is not true.) Learning curve of the job itself is short, but the dynamics of the place are chaotic because many of your potential future colleagues remain hanging onto jobs that 1. they are unqualified for (they consider, wrongly, time on the job to mean qualification), or 2. jobs that are obsolete (middle management has a hard time to figure out an effective workflow).

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