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It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O
Dress appropriate.
Correct any possible hygene issues.
Sound confident but not cocky.
Act like you actually want the job.
Try to get the interviewer to talk/brag about themselves. (studies have shown that this helps because the interviewer will have a positive memory from the interview)
It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O
Get them talking about themselves for starters, and play the conversation from there: "Really? 40% cost reduction? I'm impressed! How'd you manage that?", that sort of stuff. If you know what you are doing, you can actually take control of large portions of the interview - and the best way to take control is to get people talking about themselves on subjects you want them to talk about. It's pretty damned slick.
Yep, JohnT has the right idea. If they don't give you verbal clues, look at their desk or other personal items in their office. 90% of the time it will be obvious.
All family pictures. (ask about their family)
Sports trophies. (no brainer)
College degrees.
Professional designations.
Industry trade or training materials.
Hobbies.
Certificates of Job excellence or for quality.
Simple comments on any of the above items is usually enough to get them talking. Just pretend you're interested. (most men that have been married for awhile are quite good at this)
It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O
Originally posted by Provost Harrison
Is idle chit-chat really suitable for an interview though?
It's not "idle chit-chat" it's "building a relationship" and is the key to all business deals. There is an art form to it, and it takes practice and confidence - and even after steering a conversation to whatever ends I want it to go, I still feel like a complete dork whom nobody is going to take seriously. Go figure.
For example, you are walking into an interviewers office. You notice a picture of an 8 year old boy in a baseball uniform. Do you:
1. Ignore the photo, dismissing the brat as irrelevant to your life, preferring to jump in to why you're the best candidate out of 40 others for job X?
2. Grunt out the phrase "cute kid" while obviously checking out his wife?
3. Ask what position his son plays in, and what team/league, being willing to continue on the subject if the interviewer is willing to talk about it?
Hopefully you chose answer 3 and hopefully the interviewer waxed rhaposodic about his kids ability as a pitcher - that pleased feeling he gets thinking about his kid gets transfered to you: use it.
If you're really smart you'll remember to say your goodbyes with well-wishes for the kids baseball season. If you can identify something about the interviewers personality, open and close the interview with positive references to something the interviewer enjoys outside the office.
That's only part of a successful interview, but a demonstration of an interest in his life is a far better interviewing technique than just dumbly saying "I'm a people person - I get along with everybody." You have no idea how many people I interviewed for call center positions would spew such bland crap without once asking me about the pix of my wife and daughter, or the Atlanta Braves memorabilia in my office.
Don't forget that you are also interviewing the company - you might want to ask him a couple of the following questions:
1. What will an average work day entail?
2. What successes has this department/company achieved in the past 5 years?
3. Who will you report to and who will report to you?
4. Ask him to describe the corporate culture, or a "good worker."
5. Ask about your predecessor - why is s/he leaving, what were their strengths and weaknesses, etc. Of course, you can only do this if your predecessor is not helping with the interview process.
If you can find out anything about a company before going in that will be great. I would hesitate to walk into an interview with almost any company and not know who the president is, no matter how small, and I wouldn't want to walk into an interview with a public company and not have a look at the most recent annual financial reports. If you can throw out that you know the division spun off $35 million in cash last year, the more power to you. Chance favors the prepared mind, and it favors the prepared candidate. Do your homework.
1. Don't lie. I repeat, don't lie. You don't have to bring bad stuff up, but do... not... ever... lie. Your professional reputation depends upon it.
2. If you don't know, say "I don't know." Or, better, "could you please rephrase the question?"
3. Thank you cards. Nice blank ones, with a personalized one or two-sentence hand written message to every person who attended the interview. Hopefully, if you're lucky, an upper level guy will pop in, looking for the interviewer. If you get introduced, DEFINITELY send the upper level guy a thank you note for his time. Make sure that each message is different from the others, because these people will compare - you might want to bring up a different aspect of the interview to each:
"Dear Linda,
Thank you for taking your time with me on Monday, September 2nd, 2001. Your description of the IBM project was fascinating and is the sort of project my education and experience at ABC has prepared me for. Thanks again, and good luck in your future endeavors at XYZ Inc."
"Dear Tim,
I truly appreciated the time you spent with me during out meeting* on Monday. The problem-solving, challenge filled corporate culture at XYZ Inc sounds exciting, and the ability to develop relationships with Fortune 500 companies complements well with my years' experience at ABC.
Thanks again, and may things continue to go well for you and your team at XYZ Inc!"
See? It's easy if you do it.
*I like not using the word interview. That's just me, though.
Originally posted by The Mad Monk
Temping. It's a great foot-in-the-door.
Good advice. My other general advice would be don't sit on your arse whilst unemployed - do volunteer work, sports, be active in your community, make new friends and use the opportunity to improve your employment skills. The contacts you make can lead to jobs but it also makes you more employable if you show you are a well rounded individual.
That's probably old fashioned advice but it works. Most jobs are never advertised. Its the guy you play tennis with who gives you a job lead and puts in a good word.
Any views I may express here are personal and certainly do not in any way reflect the views of my employer. Tis the rising of the moon..
Originally posted by rah
Just pretend you're interested. (most men that have been married for awhile are quite good at this)
My wife is quite good at this too.
"And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man." -- JFK Inaugural, 1961
"Extremism in the defense of liberty is not a vice." -- Barry Goldwater, 1964 GOP Nomination acceptance speech (not George W. Bush 40 years later...)
2004 Presidential Candidate
2008 Presidential Candidate (for what its worth)
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