March 11, 2010


Very young and very unprepared interviewer with snappy comeback

Hi guys,

My name is Ian and I’m the author of an innovative ebook called Impress your Interviewers. If you guys have been reading the news, it seems that the job market is only going to get worse. I’m here to try to help as many people as possible.

I’ve been trying to learn all the techniques for giving the best job interviews for the last 2 years. I’ve built relationships with HR managers and the professors at the Haas School of Business and I want to share 2 important techniques/tips that I have used to get more successful job interviews.

1. Connecting with people vs. Being serious and business-like (ie. Really really professional) at the job interview

Well guys, what’s the intuitive thing to do? That’s right, try to be serious and really professional and answer questions in a “business” manner. While it’s good to have a professional dress and a professional manner of speaking, it’s not always good to put on the business-like persona at a job interview.

Remember when your mom said “Be yourself?” Well she was right for the most part. I recently interviewed a high-level Marketing professor at the Haas School of Business who’s worked for big companies with Mattel and Clorox. She told me that what she looks for is “chemistry”, ie connection with the other person when she was conducting a job interview.

So, when you guys in a job interview, are you trying to be serious, or are you trying to make a real connection? Is there a smile on your face? Are you speaking enthusiastically about the position and about your past work experience? Are you using your hands to express yourself? Or… Are you being stiff and trying not to move and being real emotionless.

I’m currently in the job market myself and a goal I like to use nowadays is “how can I make this recruiter not only want to hire me, but like me enough want to be my friend?” I’m into building relationships for the long-term. I suggest you keep the same goal in mind.

2. Resume Line-by-line technique for job interviews

You’ve parked your car. You walk out of the car, fixing your attire in the little left hand mirror of the car. You make sure you have all your papers. Then you go into the building and up the escalator. You can feel the nervousness creep up on you, and you haven’t even reached the office yet.

Finally you’re there and now you’re waiting to go into the job interview room. What the one thought going through your head? Oh God, I hope I don’t answer any question wrong! You can see the result if you do answer any question though. You picture the job interviewer saying “hmm” in a confused “that has nothing to do with what I asked” manner and jotting down the “death” notes. You’re finished. “NEXT!”

How do you avoid this? Well, you can’t always know every question a job interviewer can ask no matter how many “common questions and answers” are listed online, but I’m confident that you can have most (if not all) the answers. There’s a good way to do this and it starts way before the wait to go into the interview room.

Here’s what you can do. The day before the job interview, pull up two screens on your computer: 1. The job description and 2. Your resume. Now read the job description twice and then go to your resume. Then line-by-line, go through your resume and relate it to the job description. Keep asking yourself, how does this relate to the job?

Take as long as it takes! Take notes if you have to. If you rack your brain long enough, you can always find a way to link the two. This is true even if you have switched careers. The knowledge you gained and the lessons you learned should still apply to the job interview.

I hope you’ve gotten a lot of value out of these ideas. I invite you to come take a look at my website at http://impressyourinterviewers.com where I have even more great free tips. I also I have a job interview ebook that will teach you the techniques and the tasty stuff to maximize your successful job interviews that will give you the incredible advantages over the competition, which is great considering the job market we’re going into.

Thanks for reading guys,

Ian

http://impressyourinterviewers.com

Previous Student at Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley

Spent 2 years building relationships with HR managers and Business School Professors to learn inside tips for hiring people.

Starting your resume can seem like a daunting knowledge but it doesn’t have to be. Remember that you can make deviations to it once you get something on paper and can rework it as you see fit. When you are designing your resume you want to make it the most vigorous statement that you can about yourself. Sure you want to write a resume to strengthen the importance of your strong points that make your resume stand out from the most others.


So, you want to know how to write a resume? Here is a step-by-step chaperon to get you answer of this question now. You can use a worksheet or just a paper piece to resume writing. Be sure to assemble your own particular key shards of facts. First, gather the info that you’ll need to begin. This include work history (including dates), schooling, skills, proficiency, qualifications, offices you belong to and any special successes or encouragements you has been awarded that speak about to the job. Build with as much information as feasible.


As you write your resume you’ll filter out what items you don’t need. When you have gaps in your employment history you can use a setup that is less fixated on dates and more persistent on achievements. It is always best to start with as much knowledge as achievable. Decide the format that you want to use. If you have pint-sized or no work experience you’ll want to specify on your learning and your skills. If you have a lot of work practice you’ll want to use just the applicable material.


Write a resume with a list of at least four and no more than ten of your abysmal requirements for the job. These can be occurrence interconnected or flair interrelated or accomplishment linked. Write clean true statements about yourself to sum up your qualifications.


When you cogitate what your characteristics are first write all of them. Then, change them to include the unique qualifications that many most other people wouldn’t have.


No matter what you are don’t know how to write a resume. We can teach you! No matter what you conclude you’ll want to keep your resume down to one page and only one page. This is easy for some and thorny for others. Think about why you would make a good applicant for this employer and then write that into one or two sentences. This can be put near after header of the resume. The job real should include a compelling on-sentence statement about the special job for which you are applying.


Don’t write high-school education in a resume. If you have specific technological studing or courses that pertain to your posture write them here. If you have won any prizes or distinct honors you should write a resume with them as well. As a usual rule you can add a report that says you will deliver references on invitation. Don’t write them on your resume as they take up too much room and aren’t crucial. Arrange the items in a nice structure.


Write a resume including your previous occupation along with job title and key skills for each attitude. Always write the most recent position first. If you have many years of stances you can drop off no matter what oldest than about 10 years old which can be roofed in the interview. Next, how to write your educational credentials to a resume? Simple include the name of the college, the site, the extent obtained and (voluntary) the year.


You can use particular resume template software or just use your own document. Choose one easy to read font and switch to it for the entire resume. Keep the whole thing formatted to the left of the page to build an easy to read document. Use bold for the main names as well as for your own name at the top. Be sure to include your address and phone number as well as email address.

Oleg Savchenko is the author of the eBook “Expert Resume Writing” and the site How to Write a Resume”. He is expert in the theory and practice of resume writing and he can teach You – just visit How to Write a Resume and subscribe to eMail Course. It’s Absolutely Free!

Coach

Latest Bad Interview Auctions

Hey, check out these auctions:

DAVID WILCOX - RARE INTERVIEW LP BAD REPUTATION promo
US $4.99 (0 Bid)
End Date: Sunday Mar-14-2010 21:26:06 PDT
Bid now | Add to watch list
HEART Bad Animals Music & Interview LP Promo Only
US $25.00
End Date: Tuesday Mar-23-2010 20:13:28 PDT
Buy It Now for only: US $25.00
Buy it now | Add to watch list

Cool, arent they?

Next »

Powered by Yahoo! Answers