I worked for Geek Squad for a number of years during college.
Words of wisdom:
It takes a lot of flak from the gearheads here, but if you're good at IT-related stuff, it's an absolutely spectacular environment to learn how to fix virtually any PC problem. It's just the sheer volume and variety of computers you work on that really cinches it as a great place to build your skills. Contrarily, if you are disinterested and just looking for a place that pays well, which is the case with about 70% of agents, you will come to represent everything everyone hates about GS. You also can't be afraid to offer someone a $300 service, especially when you know you could do it privately for $60. I always cringed at our pricing, but it is what it is.
If you don't have passion for IT, good manners, and fairly thick skin, ditch the idea while you still can because you will hate it and customers will hate you. Otherwise, it will be a very rewarding experience and your knowledge of IT will impress the hell out of companies you interview for in the future. (I just interviewed for a help desk job and was offered the Network Admin spot. I impressed the hell out of them and I attribute it to my time spent at GS.)
THAT SAID:
You should start by applying at an in-store kiosk instead of the website. During my time there I heard HR say a few times that internet applications are occasionally lost, which would be bad for you. See if you can find the store manager or HR controller while you're in the store. (Don't be afraid to ask a GS agent to speak with the manager or HR person, they won't care.) Just tell them you've applied to work for the store precinct and if there's a spot open you'd love to come in and speak with them. Leave an impression and be charismatic; that is a good half of the job you're applying for.
During the interview:
You should know how to respond to scenario questions, like "What would you do if a machine wasn't booting?" And you need specifics; what diagnostic tool you would use and perhaps an anecdotal story to back up your knowledge. Do what you can to demonstrate intuition.
When they ask what you do in your free time, play the role. Say you read Slashdot and post on tech support forums. Do NOT say you just like to play around on your computer; that's the answer we heard from everyone whose knowledge was rudimentary at best. (That didn't stop the stupid store manager from hiring them though :P)
Ask what software utilities they use, and ask questions about them. Ask if they use a preinstallation environment. (They do; it's called MRI PE.) Engage your interviewer. If you need to develop familiarity before the interview, here's a quick list of GS-approved utilities:
Hard Drive diagnostic: WD Data Lifeguard, Hitachi DFT, Seagate Seatools
Spyware: HJT, Spybot, Spysweeper, Ad-Aware
Antivirus: McAfee Command-Line, F-Prot, Trend Micro Command-Line, Ewido
Memory: Memtest86
Other: PC-CHECK (tests all hardware)
Develop a familiarity with those, so when the interviewer asks if you're familiar with them you can say "damn straight"
Hope that helps!
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Last edited by RedHelix : 01-Apr-2008 03:50 PM.
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