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    It's a Job, Not a Jail: How to Break Your Shackles When You Can't Afford to Quit

    Setting Yourself Up for Success in the Interview Process

    Posted: 8/31/2004 1:53:44 PM

    html:

    Most people are familiar with the traditional interviewing advice and tips -

    make eye contact, arrive on time, give a firm handshake, etc. These cardinal

    rules of interviewing proliferate job search information. While this advice is

    crucial, it is important to ask, is it really enough to get you a job in the

    current climate? Does arriving 10 minutes early really make you feel as though

    you have aced the interview? Does following these rules really set you apart

    from the rest of the candidates? Do they lower your overall anxiety and make you

    feel calm and confident? No, no, and no? Then, what are you to do?

    Effective interviewing results not only from heeding the traditional advice,

    but also from taking control of the situation. You can do this by

    Interviewing from Multiple Perspectives.

    This approach requires you to analyze the situation from multiple

    perspectives before, during, and after the actual interview. It encourages

    strategic thinking and a confident presentation. This approach also allows you

    to differentiate yourself from other candidates and reduce your overall anxiety

    about the interview process. It will enable you to feel more confident, more in

    control, and more prepared.

    The goal is to conduct the interview that you want to have. You need to

    determine what you want the interviewer to know about you and then make

    sure that they know it. Additionally, you need to ensure that you learn what

    you want to about the company and position. This can only be accomplished if

    you are in control and act like your strong, strategic, savvy, and sure self!

    Interviewing from Multiple Perspectives includes five key strategies,

    which encourage you to be deliberate and thoughtful through out the entire

    interview process: before, during, and after. Keep in mind that this approach

    will not alleviate all of your anxiety (as interviews are intended to be

    stressful situations), but it can prevent anxiety paralysis by increasing your

    level of preparedness. The more work that you do up front, the more prepared,

    confident, and successful you will be!

    BEFORE THE INTERVIEW:

    1. Take a Walk in the Interviewer’s Shoes –

      Identify the interviewer’s pressures, concerns, and needs and plan to address

      them throughout the interview. You can gain this understanding through

      thorough research of the company, its competitive landscape, and other

      pertinent external influences. Is the company just coming off the heels of a

      merger? If so, the interviewer may need someone who can help bring all

      different types of people together around a common agenda. You will want to

      highlight examples of when you have done exactly that in past jobs. Speaking

      to someone who works at the target company is a great way to supplement the

      knowledge you will gain from Internet research.

    2. Anticipate and Address Possible Concerns -

      Review the typical questions an interviewer will likely ask and consider them

      from the employer’s perspective. Try to think about what concerns about the

      future underlie the question and/or what they are looking to hear. Also, try

      to think about what aspects of your background may raise flags for them and

      plan to address these aspects directly in an upfront manner (e.g., if there

      are big gaps in your job history you will want to prepare in advance how you

      are going to address them so that you remain in control of the discussion). In

      addition, it is important to consider what stereotypes might walk in the room

      with you and how you can subtly dispel them with your behaviors and words.

      These stereotypes may derive from demographic characteristics, social

      identities, previous employment history, career path, nature of educational

      institutions and training, etc.

    3. Make Yourself Part of the Solution - Start

      with the job description of the position you are interviewing for and break it

      down into its component parts. Then map your strengths, skills, and experience

      to as many of the employer’s needs as you can. Think of specific examples from

      your experience that you can use as supporting evidence. Make sure that you

      emphasize these matches during the interview and that you are very comfortable

      talking about them. To practice, put each point of emphasis and the supporting

      examples on an index card. Say each of these points aloud - on videotape, in

      front of a mirror, or with someone who you trust. Do not forget to bring the

      cards with you to review before the interview.


    DURING THE INTERVIEW:

    1. Put Yourself in the Driver’s Seat - Approach the

      interview from a position of strength and communicate with confidence and

      competence. How can you do this?

      There are two key aspects:

     a)     

    Make it a two-way dialogue. Both you and the interviewer should be

    evaluating whether the job is a good match for you. Prepare specific questions

    to help you to determine if you will: fit into the organization, be set up to

    succeed and want to do the job. The questions should come from the criteria

    you have deemed important to you, as well as what you learn from your network

    and, of course, from thorough research of the company.

    b)    

    Act as if you already have (and are successful in) the job you

    want. How would you greet someone? Carry yourself? Dress? Communicate? Use this

    as a guide to how you should present yourself. First impressions do

    matter. Fake it ‘til you make it if necessary!!

    AFTER THE INTERVIEW:

    1. Look at Your Performance from an Outsiders Point of

      View – As soon as you leave the interview conduct an objective review of

      your performance. Identify what you did well and what could have been

      improved. Reflect on the parts of the interview that you feel could have gone

      better and generate multiple hypotheses to explain how/why they went wrong.

      Until you have sufficient data to validate one of the hypotheses, do not

      assume that you are the problem. Women tend to internalize negative messages.

      Do not let yourself fall into the trap of self-blame when a bad interview

      could have just as easily been a product of a very bad day on the

      interviewer’s part.

      Make sure to write your thoughts down immediately

      following the interview, while they are still fresh in your mind. Then, within

      24 hours, write a letter or send an email that incorporates both a recap of

      your points of emphasis and adds whatever information you wished you had

      communicated during the interview.

    Using this approach certainly requires a lot more work than ‘winging it’.

    However, your in-depth preparation will pay off by allowing you to feel more

    confident and in control of the process. Interviewing from Multiple

    Perspectives will better equip you to conduct the interview that you want to

    have!

    Article courtesy of Berkman Fives.

    Email Link  |  Vault


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