Must Haves for Your Next Interview
After many years in the recruiting business, we’ve learned that candidates often lack preparation when facing a career transition or job change.
Here are five simple steps to take before an interview to help you land the job.
Prepare Your Story
Throughout your career, you may pursue different directions. Be prepared to discuss the reasons for which you’re taking your career in a certain direction.
Organize talking points that help you tell your story. It’s important to touch on reasons why you may have left a company without criticizing your former co–workers or supervisors. Explain with confidence the reason that you are making or have made a career change.
Remember that a lack of conversation reflects lack of interest. Be prepared to incorporate the storyline of your background into their organizational challenges.
Understand and Explain Your Value
You need to be able to address the value that you bring to the company. Be prepared to share your skills and accomplishments and discuss how they benefit the company. Articulate these accomplishments in a problem–action–results sequence.
- Problem – This will reflect the specific problem, challenge, or situation that you are faced with. You would describe the problem in the form of an overview or summary.
- Action – This represents the steps that you took to address the problem, challenge, or situation. Describe the methodology you followed to drive results and deliverables.
- Results – This is where you define the success or accomplishment of your action. Use this as an opportunity to share how you evaluate the end result
Discuss Your Preferred Management Style
Be prepared to share and discuss the environment or culture where you can be the most productive. Are you most effective in a chaotic, fast–paced, high–stressed environment? Do you bring a calming influence in a chaotic setting? Are you detail oriented, driven by reports in a micro–managed structure? Be prepared to describe your typical activity in a normal work day.
Calculate Your Compensation
Know the difference between your needs, your value to the company, and market trends. Your financial needs are of no importance to the hiring manager or the hiring company. They care about your success, but they are not accountable for your financial responsibilities.
Investigate the market trends for the position for which you’re interviewing. The compensation amount is usually defined by what the market will bear for your position. This information can be collected from a variety of websites and market research. Keep in mind that this will also depend on the company’s size, revenues, headcount, geographic location, talent strategy etc.
The value that you bring to the company is one that only you can define and present to your prospective employer. This will be based upon your demonstrated experience as determined by contributions you’ve made in previous roles. Capture and reflect on the revenues that you have generated, mention costs and expenses that you managed, and/or numbers of people or clients that you have supported.
Determine Your Willingness to Lead new Initiatives
This will usually depend on the position for which you’re applying. During the interview you will hear about some of the company’s challenges and various opportunities that exist. Your previous experiences in these areas could be highly leveraged and be considered as a true indicator of job fit. You should also carefully consider the impact of overselling and potentially under-delivering.
If you do your homework well, you will be extraordinarily successful in your interview. It will become easy for you to open new doors of opportunity: toward landing the job of your dreams!
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