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🍫 The Hershey Company Interview Prep

Practice The Hershey Company Interview Questions

Securing a role at The Hershey Company requires strong performance across behavioral interviews, assessments, and stakeholder conversations. Each stage is an opportunity to demonstrate your skills, judgement, and motivation.

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How The Hershey Company interviews work

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Online tests

Many structured programmes include numerical reasoning, verbal reasoning, or situational judgement tests as an early filter before interviews. Scores must meet a minimum threshold — strong CVs don't compensate for weak test results.

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Competency interview

A behavioral interview using structured questions to assess how you've performed in past situations. Preparation of 6–8 strong STAR stories covering key competencies is essential for this stage.

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Assessment centre or final interview

A final-stage assessment covering individual and sometimes group exercises, plus senior-level interviews assessing your cultural fit and readiness for the role.

What The Hershey Company looks for

Each competency below is actively assessed across multiple stages of the The Hershey Company interview process.

Initiative and drive

Proactively identifying and acting on opportunities or problems without waiting to be directed.

Motivation and cultural fit

A clear, specific reason for applying to this organisation over its alternatives.

Problem-solving

Applying structured thinking to identify root causes and develop practical, well-reasoned solutions.

Teamwork

Contributing effectively to shared goals, adapting your working style to different team dynamics.

Adaptability

Adjusting effectively when priorities shift, new information arrives, or situations change unexpectedly.

Communication

Conveying ideas and information clearly across different audiences, formats, and levels of seniority.

Common The Hershey Company interview questions

These represent the types of questions you'll face at The Hershey Company. ScreenReady generates realistic variations of these for each mock session.

Tips for your The Hershey Company interview

1
Prepare a specific and genuine "Why The Hershey Company?" answer

Vague answers about growth opportunities or culture are forgettable. Be specific about what attracted you to this organisation over its closest competitors — something in their strategy, recent work, values, or team you've spoken with.

2
Prepare 6–8 strong behavioral stories

Most competency-based interviews draw from the same 5–10 themes: leadership, teamwork, problem-solving, failure, initiative, and conflict. A library of 6–8 well-prepared STAR stories covers most questions you'll face across any role or stage.

3
Send a specific thank-you follow-up

A brief, specific email after the interview reinforces your interest and professionalism. Reference something specific from the conversation — a topic you found particularly interesting, a question that prompted useful reflection. Most candidates skip this. It's worth doing.

4
STAR-structure every answer

Situation, Task, Action, Result — in that order. Set the context briefly, describe your specific responsibility, focus on what you personally did, and close with a concrete and ideally measurable result. Missing any element makes the answer feel incomplete.

5
Practice on camera before any video interview

Most candidates significantly underestimate how different on-camera delivery feels from in-person. Practice recording yourself answering behavioral questions without notes until you can maintain eye contact with the camera, stay within time, and answer with genuine fluency.

6
Quantify your results wherever possible

"I improved customer satisfaction" is vague. "I reduced complaint resolution time from five days to two, improving our NPS score by 12 points" is specific and credible. Numbers make results real and memorable — use them whenever you legitimately have them.

What a strong answer looks like

A well-structured STAR answer for a common The Hershey Company interview question, showing exactly how to frame situation, task, action, and result.

Question

Describe a time you had to manage competing priorities and deliver on all of them.

Situation

In my final semester, I was completing a dissertation, working 16 hours a week in a part-time role, and serving as treasurer for a student society planning its largest annual event.

Task

All three had significant deadlines falling within the same three-week window.

Action

I mapped out every deliverable and deadline across all three, identified which tasks had fixed deadlines versus flexible ones, and built a week-by-week schedule. I front-loaded the society event planning by two weeks so I could focus exclusively on my dissertation in the final stretch. I communicated proactively with my manager at work to shift two of my shifts earlier in the month, and I delegated the venue coordination to a society committee member with a clear brief.

Result

I submitted my dissertation on time and received a first-class mark. The society event ran successfully with 280 attendees — our highest ever turnout. I received positive feedback from my manager for how I handled the schedule change.

Frequently asked questions

What should I do if I can't think of a relevant example?

Take a moment to think — interviewers expect this. If you genuinely don't have a direct example, adapt a related one and be transparent: "The closest example I have is..." This is preferable to giving a vague or fabricated answer. Strong examples from academic or volunteer contexts are fully acceptable.

Should I research the interviewer before the interview?

Yes. A brief review of your interviewer's professional background helps you understand their perspective and can shape how you frame relevant experience. It also helps you prepare a specific, genuine question for them.

What do interviewers assess beyond the content of my answers?

Delivery — confidence, clarity, pace, composure, and eye contact on camera — all contribute to the impression you make. Interviewers also assess engagement: do you seem genuinely interested in the role and company? Do you ask thoughtful questions? Are you well-prepared?

What is the STAR method for interviews?

STAR stands for Situation, Task, Action, Result. It's the standard framework for answering behavioral interview questions. Situation: set the context briefly. Task: describe your specific responsibility. Action: explain what you personally did — this should be the longest section. Result: share the outcome, ideally with measurable impact.

What are the most common reasons candidates fail at this stage?

Vague or hypothetical answers (not enough specific examples), missing structure (no clear STAR format), insufficient knowledge of the company or role, and weak on-camera delivery under pressure. ScreenReady addresses all four through timed, on-camera practice with AI feedback on each answer.

Ready to practice?

Practice The Hershey Company-style behavioral interviews on camera with ScreenReady. Timed, no retakes, AI-scored — exactly the conditions you'll face in the real assessment. Free to try.

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