Every step in the job search process is aimed at obtaining interviews. It is at that point, a potential hiring manager decides if you are right for the job, and, just as important, it is your time to evaluate whether the job is right for you.
Most interviews follow a predictable format, with steps that both the interviewer and applicant follow to decide if both will benefit from working together. The best interviews are ones in which both participants are equal and can have a mutually beneficial, interactive conversation regarding the opportunity at hand.
This Week’s Session, Thursday, June 6th… Closing The Deal I: Interview STRATEGIES, including MoneySpeak and PRE-Offer Negotiation
Think of an interview as the natural extension, the successful result of your effective networking. Many networking conversations actually become screening interviews, where influential contacts are assessing your qualifications, skill sets and experience relative to an opportunity at hand. “Perfect practice” of the basics builds the confidence necessary to perform well in formal job interviews.
Let’s break down the basics into four areas…
- pre-contact preparation/ research, our FIRST 10 steps!
- greeting and rapport,
- questions/answers, and …
- meeting closure. Get the offer, or awareness of next steps!
All four stages are equally important and deserve your consideration and preparation.
** A Career TIP from CareerDFW
The Three Phases of Every Interview
There are three things that must be discussed in every good interview: First, the Candidate, a discussion usually conducted in the past tense to assess experience, knowledge, and skills… do they meet the potential employer’s REQUIREMENTS?
Second, the job itself. Beyond meeting requirements, each Candidate must be judged for their potential to meet EXPECTATIONS. As important, will the Candidate “fit in” on the team and Company culture? This discussion occurs in the future tense… very obvious transition in a “good” interview.
Last, but certainly not least, is the quality of FIT. While this is the most subjective and dysfunctional part of the process, it is where both sides must come together for a desired outcome. This is where the job seeker can mitigate the risk of a BAD decision. When both sides like and find the other to be attractive, a “right” employment opportunity can result. This is also where the QandA can become more defensive in nature.
Three CRITICAL Interviewing Skills
- Asking “the right” questions… and knowing when to ask them. The best communication happens when triggered by a question… it brings focus to the interaction that must occur.
- Answering questions effectively… and knowing when to STOP talking.
- MoneySpeak… why do THEY ask and are YOU prepared to answer?
This topic represents what most people call ‘active job search, but, as you can learn, the HOW –TO is what creates your success in networking. It professes strategies and tactics that will generate more effective networking.
You’ll be the first to know when you’re ready for ‘wave 3’ of networking… which, simply put, is networking your way in to attractive opportunities.
Why is it that even though “networking” stacks the deck in the favor of a job seeker, there seems to be this 500# GORILLA that stands in the way?
Those who don’t fully understand the process, who use people for information and never build the relationship, or return the favor, give networking a bad name and lose credibility in the eyes of others. Networking is about building trust and respect, not tearing away at it!
Personal accountability, it seems, is something nearly everyone would like to have—and which many of us think we could benefit from working on. In active job search, it would help a job seeker in identifying and maintaining focus on appropriate tasks and activities that generate success. And from the more strategic career focus, it will create the confidence to be aware of, and act on, appropriate next steps along one’s career path.
The other end of the spectrum is becoming a “job search-aholic.” For many of us, our identity is tied up tightly in our career, while others need a job right away just to make ends meet. No matter how great the need or desire for a new position, conducting a job search 24/7 non-stop can actually be a detriment to a successful campaign.
Too many times, we fall victim to distractions from the job search. The trap of sleeping late, watching TV, and playing on the Web can ensnare us. With no one but ourselves to hold us accountable for our job-search goals and plans, time can just slip away. It’s so easy to lose balance between personal needs and wants and our job search.
Once burnout sets in and enthusiasm begins to wane, how can you be at your best when you interview or even network? The buddy system is an ideal way to protect against burnout while keeping on track!
As a NEW job-seeker, especially one that has enjoyed long tenure with a “good Company,” or succession of terrific jobs within a “cookin’ Industry, it is quite easy to be overwhelmed by the prospects of the jobsearch, or career transition, ahead. There’s all those swirling emotions to deal with, the changes in job search strategies, and, most challenging of all: replacing that comfortable, confident “vibe” that you’ve enjoyed in prior years of employment!
Find out about CareerDFW & CareerUSA.org and how to use it! 
Your work in Achieving CareerFIT led you to the determination of your career objective, exactly what is the best next step for you in your career transition? It also suggested strongly that you set your straw-man offer criteria to guide you in moving forward…Knowing what your next right employment is.
Many people talk about “information overload” and “decision fatigue” when it comes to how to conduct your job search, or write your resume, or develop your LinkedIn Profile…or answer those challenging interview questions.
First and foremost, understand that your ‘core personality,’ defined by your unique strengths, skills, interests, preferences, and values (Step#1: ASSESSMENT), drives your “gut feel” on matters of choice. TRUST that!
Creating visibility for yourself through posted “white papers” or blogging can be very useful if you’re looking for work. On the LinkedIn platform, such ‘activity’ will contribute to your serach page rank. Blogging can give you that edge over other candidates…without taking any of the original fun out of it!
Embracing The OTHER Job Market
With the hiring authority, you have an opportunity to talk about what really matters, whatever NEED the job requisition was designed to alleviate, when you’re talking directly with the person who’s actually losing sleep over the budget shortfall or the customer exodus or whatever is rotten in Denmark.