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How to Master
the Art of Interviewing
The Other Fundamentals
Basic Interviewing Strategy
Don't Talk Yourself Out of a Job
The Prudent Use of Questions
Give it Some Thought
Money, Money, Money
Questions You Can Count On
Wrapping it Up
To a large
degree, the success of your interview will depend on
your ability to discover needs and empathize with the
interviewer.
You can do this by asking questions that verify
your understanding of what the interviewer has just
said, without editorializing or expressing an opinion.
By establishing empathy in this manner, you’ll be
in a better position to freely exchange ideas, and
demonstrate your suitability for the job.
In
addition to empathy, there are four other intangible
fundamentals to a successful interview.
These intangibles will influence the way your
personality is perceived, and will affect the degree of
rapport, or personal chemistry you’ll share with
employer.
1)
Enthusiasm -- Leave no doubt as to your level of
interest in
the job.
You may think it’s unnecessary to do this, but
employers often choose the more enthusiastic candidate
in
the case of a two-way tie.
Besides, it’s best to keep your
options open -- wouldn’t you rather be in a position to
turn
down an offer, than have a prospective job evaporate
from
your gasp by giving a lethargic interview?
2) Technical interest -- Employers look for people
who love
what they do, and get excited by the prospect of
tearing into
the nitty-gritty of the job.
3) Confidence -- No one likes a braggart, but the
candidate
who’s sure of his or her abilities will almost
certainly be
more favorably received.
4) Intensity -- The last thing you want to do is
come across as
“flat” in your interview.
There’s nothing inherently wrong
with being a laid back person; but sleepwalkers rarely
get
hired.
By the
way, most employers are aware of how stressful it can be
to interview for a new position, and will do everything
they can to put you at ease.
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The Other Fundamentals
Since interviewing also involves the exchange of
tangible information, make sure to:
Present your background in a thorough and
accurate manner;
Gather data concerning the company, the industry, the
position, and the specific opportunity;
Link your abilities with the company needs in the mind
of the employer; and
Build a strong case for why the company should hire you,
based on the discoveries you make from building rapport
and asking the right questions.
Both
for your sake and the employer’s, never leave an
interview without exchanging fundamental information.
The more you know about each other, the more
potential you’ll have for establishing rapport, and
making an informed decision.
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Basic Interviewing
Strategy
There
are two ways to answer interview questions:
the short version and the long version.
When a question is open-ended, I always suggest
to candidates that they say, “Let me give you the short
version. If
we need to explore some aspect of the answer more fully,
I’d be happy to go into greater depth, and give you the
long version.”
The reason you should respond this way is because it’s
often difficult to know what type of answer each
question will need.
A question like, “What was you most difficult
assignment?” might take anywhere from thirty minutes to
answer, depending on the detail you choose to give.
Therefore, you must always
remember that the interviewer’s the one who asked the
question.
So you should tailor your answer to what he or she needs
to know, without a lot of extraneous rambling or
superfluous explanation.
Why waste time and create a negative impression
by giving a sermon when a short prayer would do just
fine?
Let’s suppose you were interviewing for a sales
management position, and the interviewer asked you,
“What sort of sales experience have you had in the
past?”
Well,
that’s exactly the sort of question that can get you
into trouble if you don’t use the short version/long
version method.
Most people would just start rattling off
everything in their memory that relates to their sales
experience.
Though the information might be useful to the
interviewer, your answer could get pretty complicated
and long-winded unless it’s neatly packaged.
One way to answer the question might be, “I’ve held
sales positions with three different consumer product
companies over a nine-year period.
Where would you like me to start?”
Or, you might
simply say, “Let me give you the short version first,
and you can tell me where you want to go into more
depth. I’ve
had nine years experience in consumer product sales with
three different companies, and held the titles of
district, regional, and national sales manager.
What aspect of my background would you like to
concentrate on?”
By
using this method, you telegraph to the interviewer that
your thoughts are well organized, and that you want to
understand the intent of the question before you travel
too far in a direction neither of you wants to go.
After you get the green light, you can spend your
interviewing time discussing in detail the things that
are important, not whatever happens to pop into your
mind.
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Don’t Talk Yourself
Out of a Job
I’ve
got a friend who’s the hiring manager of an electronics
company. He
told me once that he brought a candidate into his office
to make him a job offer.
An hour later, the candidate left.
I asked my friend if he had hired the candidate.
“No,”
he said. “I
tried. But
the candidate wouldn’t stop talking long enough for me
to make him an offer.”
Don’t
misinterpret me.
I’m not suggesting that an interview should
consist of a series of monosyllabic grunts.
It’s just that nothing turns off an employer
faster than a windbag candidate.
By
using the short version/long version method to answer
questions, you’ll never talk yourself out of a job.
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The Prudent Use of Questions
Beware:
An interview will quickly disintegrate into an
interrogation or monologue unless you ask some high
quality questions of your own.
Candidate questions are the lifeblood of any
successful interview, because they:
Create
dialogue, which will not only enable the two of you to
learn more about each other, but will help you visualize
what it’ll be like working together once you’ve been
hired;
Clarify
your understanding of the company and the position
responsibilities;
Indicate your grasp of the fundamental issues discussed
so far;
-
Reveal your ability to probe beyond the superficial;
and
-
Challenge the employer to reveal his or her own
depth
of knowledge, or commitment to the job.
Your
questions should always be slanted in such a way as to
show empathy, interest, or understanding of the
employer’s needs.
After all, the reason you’re interviewing is
because the employer’s company has some piece of work
which needs to be completed, or a problem that needs
correcting.
Here are some questions that have proven to be very
effective:
What’s the
most important issue facing your department?
How can I help you accomplish this objective?
How
long has it been since you first identified this need?
How
long have you been trying to correct it?
Have
you tried using your present staff to get the job done?
What was the result?
What
other means have you used?
For example, have you brought in independent
contractors, or temporary help, or employees borrowed
from other departments?
Or have you recently hired people who haven’t
worked out?
Is
there any particular skill or attitude you feel is
critical to getting the job done?
Is
there a unique aspect of my background that you’d like
to exploit in order to help accomplish your objectives?
Questions like these will not only you a sense of the
company’s goals and priorities, they’ll indicate to the
interviewer your concern for satisfying the company’s
objectives.
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Give It Some Thought
Here
are seven of the most commonly asked interviewing
questions.
Do yourself and the prospective employer a favor, and
give them some thought before the interview occurs.
1) Why do you want this job?
2)
Why do you want to leave you
present company?
3)
Where do you see yourself in five years?
4)
What are your personal goals?
5)
What are your strengths?
Weaknesses?
6)
What do you like most about your current company?
7)
What do you like least about your current company?
The
last question is probably the hardest to answer:
What do you like least about your present
company?
I’ve
found that rather than pointing out the faults of other
people (“I can’t stand the office politics,” or, “I
don’t get along with my boss”), it’s best to place the
burden on yourself (‘I feel I’m ready to exercise a new
set of professional muscles,” or, “The type of
technology I’m interested in isn’t available to me
now”).
By
answering in this manner, you’ll avoid pointing the
finger at someone else, or coming across as a whiner or
complainer.
It does no good to speak negatively about others.
I
suggest you think through the answers to the above
questions for two reasons.
First,
it won’t help your chances any to hem and haw over
fundamental issues such as these.
(The answers you give to these types of questions
should be no-brainers.)
And
secondly, the questions will help you evaluate your
career choices before spending time and energy on an
interview. If
you don’t feel comfortable with the answers you come up
with, maybe the new job isn’t right for you.
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Money, Money, Money
There’s
a good chance you’ll be asked about your current and
expected level of compensation.
Here’s the way to handle the following questions:
1) What are you currently earning?
Answer: “My compensation, including bonus, is in
the high-forties.
I’m expecting my annual
review next month, and that
should put me in the low-fifties.”
2)
What sort of money could you need in order to come to
work for our company?
Answer: “I
feel that the opportunity is the most important issue,
not salary.
If we decide to work
together, I’m sure you’ll
make me a fair offer.”
Notice
the way a range was given as the answer to question one,
not a specific dollar figure.
However, if the interviewer presses for an exact
answer, then by all means, be precise, in terms of
salary, bonus, benefits, expected increase, and so
forth.
In
answer to question two, if the interviewer tries to zero
in on your expected compensation, you should also
suggest a range, as in, “I would need something in the
low- to mid- fifties.”
Getting locked in to an exact figure may work
against you later, in one of two ways:
either the number you give is lower than you
really want to accept; or the number appears too high or
too low to the employer, and an offer never comes.
By using a range, you can keep your options open.
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Some Questions You Can
Count On
There
are four types of questions that interviewers like to
ask.
First,
there are the resume questions.
These relate to your past experience, skills, job
responsibilities, education, upbringing, personal
interests, and so forth.
Resume
questions require accurate, objective answers, since
your resume consists of facts which tend to be
quantifiable (and verifiable).
Try to avoid answers which exaggerate your
achievements, or appear to be opinionated, vague, or
egocentric.
Second,
interviewers will usually want you to comment on your
abilities, or asses your past performance.
They’ll ask self-appraisal questions like, “What
do you think is your greatest asset?” or, “Can you tell
me something you’ve done that was very creative?”
Third,
interviewers like to know how you respond to different
stimuli.
Situation questions ask you to explain certain actions
you took in the past, or require that you explore
hypothetical scenarios that may occur in the future.
“How would you stay profitable during a
recession?” or, “How would you go about laying off 1300
employees?” or, “How would you handle customer
complaints if the company drastically raised its
prices?” are typical situation questions.
And
lastly, some employers like to test your mettle with
stress questions such as, “After you die, what would you
like your epitaph to read?” or, “If you were to compare
yourself to any U.S. president, who would it be?” or,
“It’s obvious your background makes you totally
unqualified for this position.
Why should we even waste our time talking?”
Stress
questions are designed to evaluate your emotional
reflexes, creativity, or attitude while you’re under
pressure.
Since off-the-wall or confrontational questions tend to
jolt your equilibrium, or put you in a defensive
posture, the best way to handle them is to stay calm and
give carefully considered answers.
Whenever I hear a stress question, I immediately think
of the Miss Universe beauty pageant.
The finalists (usually sheltered teenagers from
places like Zambia or Uruguay) are asked before a live
television audience of three and a half billion people
to give heartfelt and earnest responses to incongruous
questions like, “What would you tell the leaders of all
the countries on earth to do to promote world peace?”
Of
course, your sense of humor will come in handy during
the entire interviewing process, just so long as you
don’t go over the edge.
I heard of a candidate once who, when asked to
describe his ideal job, replied, “To have beautiful
women rub my back with hot oil.”
Needless to say, he wasn’t hired.
Even if
it were possible to anticipate every interview question,
memorizing dozens of stock answers would be impractical,
to say the least.
The best policy is to review your background,
your priorities, and your reasons for considering a new
position; and to handle the interview as honestly as you
can. If you
don’t know the answer to a question, just say so, or ask
for a moment to think about your response.
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Wrapping it up
At the
conclusion of your interview, you can wrap up any
unfinished business you failed to cover so far, and
begin to explore the future of your candidacy.
During
your interview wrap-up, it’s a good practice to make the
interviewer aware of other opportunities your exploring,
as long as they’re genuine, and their timing has some
bearing on your own decision making.
The
fact that you’re actively exploring other opportunities
may affect the speed with which the company makes its
hiring decision.
It may even positively influence the eventual
outcome, since the company may want to act quickly so as
not to lose you.
However, your other activity should be presented in the
spirit of assistance to the interviewer, not as a thinly
veiled threat or negotiating tactic.
I’d advise you to play it straight with the
interviewer.
And
remember to maintain a positive attitude.
In today’s job market, you’d be surprised how
often victory is snatched from the jaws of defeat.
The
better your interviewing skills, the greater your
chances of getting the job.
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