We just went through the process of hiring someone here who, as part of their job description, will have similar responsibilities. My 3 biggest pieces of blanket advice are:
-
Never ask a question that gives away the answer.
-
Follow open ended questions with pointed, direct questions about the details of the answer they just gave.
-
As much as you can, decipher what they know by asking them what they've done. (Applied knowledge.) And contrary to what many will tell you, this SHOULDN'T be limited to work experience. Everyone has unlocked career potential.
A lot of our questions aren't necessarily direct, but rather reveal personality traits and thought processes that will either align or go against the task-type they'll be doing every day. A smattering of some favorites that should apply to the position above:
-
What things do you not like to do?
-
In your own words, what’s the difference between strategic & tactical planning? Follow-up: Which are you better at and why?
-
Describe a time when you developed a creative solution to a problem.
-
Tell me how you typically schedule your work week.
-
What new technologies are available that you would like to use in your career and why?
-
Describe a time when you had to communicate something unpleasant to a supervisor.
I hope the sorts of insights you'd get from these questions are apparent. Good luck!