You Just Don’t Get It! – How Job Interviews Are Lost
You Just Don¡¯t Get It! ¨C How Job Interviews Are Lost
? Copyright 2005 Joel Vance
Most companies have business hours. They expect their
employees to be there between those hours. And if they set an
interview for a potential employee at a certain hour, they expect
them to be there. It's a well-worn saying, but time really is
money, and putting an interviewer behind in their schedule,
could cost you the job, despite your qualifications. Walking in
late to an interview is the equivalent of saying, "Hey, Mr.
Interviewer, you and this stupid job aren't important enough to
me to get here on time!"
Right behind punctuality on an interviewer's list of requirements
is confidence. Not bravado, and bragging about
accomplishments, but answering questions about your
experience, or potential to learn new things, with directness,
honesty, and good eye contact. When you're sure of yourself,
an interviewer finds it easier to be sure you're the right choice
for the job. That doesn't mean that they won't allow for a
certain amount of interview apprehension. But squirming,
wandering eyes, checking your watch, and lackluster responses
to questions, are all indications that an applicant is feeling less
than comfortable, which can be seen as a drawback if the job
requires someone who has the self-assurance to make
decisions and accept responsibility for them.
Remember too, that an interviewer is sitting behind the desk,
looking at you. Someone who shows up in casual or wrinkled
clothes, with hair blown about by the wind, can give the
impression that you either didn't care about your appearance,
or that you're unable to manage your time so there are a few
spare minutes to touch it up.
Even when you are dressed nicely, and have a pleasant smile,
all of that is ruined, if you can't communicate properly. That
includes ummming and ahhhing while answering questions,
evading direct answers, and mumbling. This is particularly bad
when the job interview is for a position dealing with the public.
Nothing, and we mean absolutely nothing, can kill your chances
to nail an interview faster than aggressiveness. Confidence is
one thing, rushing in with unasked for opinions, or taking the
conversational lead from the interviewer without being given
the appropriate opening, is brassy, forward, and considered
arrogant. Many an applicant has found to their chagrin, that
premature inquiries about salary, or other personally focused
questions, have conveyed the impression of self-interest over
the company's interests.
Stop and think about it??you're selling yourself to the
interviewer. Polish those points before you start off for the
appointment. When in doubt, leave it out. You want to get your
foot in the door, not in your mouth.
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