Sunday, May 24, 2020
Can YOU Control the Interview - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Can YOU Control the Interview - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Think what the interview is all about. Sorry, but itâs not about you. Itâs about the interviewerâs perception regarding your fit into the organizationâs culture combined with your ability to perform the job very well. No interviewer is looking for Mr. Average. So, what does the word perception include here? Primarily two issues: the image you create in the interviewerâs mind and the facts you bring as evidence based on the organizationâs specific circumstances or problems it needs solutions to. Your image This subject is complex. It incorporates the interviewerâs personal biases, cultural perceptions, and personal likes and dislikes as well as age and gender and all the rest of the items covered in anti-discrimination laws vis-Ã -vis the organizationâs culture. The candidate will get evaluated on appearance, looks, attire, passion, excitement, body language, smile, tone of voice, accent, and many other factors combined. The facts The interviewer knows that the candidate came to the interview to impress and sell himself to the potential buyer. Thatâs why the interviewer is selective and suspicious. Itâs because of having to evaluate whether the candidateâs answers represent opinions or facts. The first impression When meeting an interviewer for the first time, the job seeker is creating an image. If the impression is a good one, it carries throughout the interview. If the impression is unfavorable, the candidate has to fight a probably losing battleâ"often without knowing it. The interview An interview most often starts with chit-chat or a warm-up period consisting of a few easy-talk sentences. Then, once the interviewer feels comfortable, he signals the beginning of the interview. There are several common interview questions, and candidates must be prepared for them with the right answers. How many of you have had interviews that didnât have a starting lead-in such as, Tell me about yourself, or a starting question such as, What are your strengths or accomplishments? Preparation for the interview must include great answers to such basic questions. The candidateâs objective here has to be to engage the interviewer to the point that the interviewer becomes willing to tell the candidate the specific problems heâs looking for the right candidate to resolve. In answering, the candidate must select the right words, give pertinent answers, use positive phraseology, and not be long-winded. Lack of preparation for that opener or showing nervousness and lack of enthusiasm is a sign of weakness. The interviewer is also expecting the candidate to look in his eyes. Nowadays, some companies are using whatâs called situational, behavioral, or, sometimes, case-study-type questions. The thinking behind this concept is that if in the past one behaved a certain way, then this personality trait will likely be continued. Most of these types of questions start with such wording as, Tell me about a time when, or, What was your strongest, toughest, etc. [fill in the blank], or, Can you cite an example that . . . ? Many candidates are not properly prepared to answer such questions or in fact do not have a rich repertoire of such experiences. With some preparation and guidance, though, anyone can excelâ"even in the face of such difficult questions.
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