Interview Question: What Do Your Parents Do?

This question was asked during a hedge fund interview. It took me completely by surprise. Moreover, is this even legit to ask something private like this? Totally weirded me out.

Did anyone ever experience this?

 

Don't think they should've asked the question like that, maybe interviewer is inexperienced or just dumb. They should've asked how you learned about the hedge fund and what got you interested in finance, and leave it to the candidate to bring up their parents if they want to...

 
Best Response

I think it totally depends on your interviewer. if your interviewer is a WASP, came from HYP, spent summers at the cape flirting with tennis instructors, and then you say something like "my dad's an auto mechanic," not much opportunity for rapport building. I would think that interviewers click better with people they have similar interests/backgrounds as.

if your interviewer is a non-target who hustled his/her way into the job, they probably won't ask this question, unless they want to see if you've struggled to get to where you are. if you flip roles, let's say you're the yuppie and the interviewer grew up in a trailer, your parents' profession could hurt you.

I think it's a totally fine question with the right context. for example, let's say I got curious about finance because my dad was a banker. a perfectly natural question would be "where did your dad work?" which is much less invasive than "what do you parents do?"

for people who have successful parents and are proud of them, it's silly to think that this question could do harm, but for those on this forum who are a bit embarrassed by their parents or want to surpass them in wealth/career success, I hope you can see why this question feels out of bounds.

 

Fair enough, although I would assume most people hope to be wealthier than their parents (unless they're absolutely loaded) and I think it's sad to be embarrassed by what your parents do although I can see some instances where that's the case.

In the end it all comes down to context. I was asked if my parents were in the industry (commodities is a hotbed of nepotism) but it seemed natural enough.

 

Several partners asked this question in PE / HF recruiting. It was a bit more discrete along the lines of tell me about your upbringing so it's fairly open ended and less invasive. It was surprising but given the flow of the conversation wasn't terribly "weird or rude". Ultimately, they just wanted to get to know me as a person a bit more, how I came down my path, etc. It was more of an airport test.

 

I was asked something similar when interviewing for IBD. Definitely helped set me apart from other candidates at the time when you explain to the interviewer you're a first generation college student from a target school that doesn't sit around complaining about how the world is unfair and can hold a conversation. But, I could definitely see it hurting you if you come from an upper/upper middle class family since you're probably automatically labeled as a rich kid who doesn't deserve squat (as untrue as that may be for some). Such is life, I suppose.

 

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