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13 Avoidable Job Interview Mistakes
13 Avoidable Job Interview Mistakes
Now get this........The wrong moves can cost you the job!
You've worked hard to get to the interview stage.
You passed the cover letter and resume screening process...maybe even a
few telephone interviews.
Now its time for the face to face interview with the employer itself.
Any number of items can go wrong but you have to be in control and must have
confidence. Go into an interview with the feeling that you are going to impress
them so much that they will have to make you an offer.
The interview is the most stressful part of the job hunt for many people
because now they can't hide behind the cover letter and resume. The real face
to face human connection between possible employer and job candidate takes
place. But for starters if you simply follow these 13 tips below, you are on
your way to interviews with results.
A big part of a successful interview is avoiding simple mistakes.
Mistakes are deadly to the job seeker and easy to avoid if you are prepared.
These are the most common interview mistakes - and their antidotes.
1. Arriving late
Get directions from the interviewer -
or a map. Wear a watch and leave home early. If the worst happens and you can't
make it on time, call the interviewer and arrange to reschedule.
2. Wrong Dressing
You make your greatest impact on the
interviewer in the first 17 seconds - an impression you want to make powerfully
positive. Dress right in a conservative suit, subdued colours, little jewellery
(but real gold, or silver, or pearls), low heels (polished) and everything
clean and neat. Hygiene includes combed hair, brushed teeth, deodorant and
low-key scent. Check everything the night before, again before walking out the
door and once again in the restroom just before the interview.
3. Play zombie
OK, it’s normal you're nervous. But you
can still smile, right? And make eye contact, yes? Sit up, focus on the
interviewer, and start responding. Enthusiasm is what the interviewer wants to
see.
4. No smoking, no gum,
no drinking
This might all be comfort stuff for
you, but none of it helps you here. Employers are more likely to hire
non-smokers. At a lunch or dinner interview, others may order drinks. You best
not.
5. Research failure
The interview is not the time for
research. Find out the company's products and services, annual sales, structure
and other key information from the Internet, the public library, professional
magazines or from former employees. Show that you are interested in working for
the prospective employer by demonstrating knowledge about the company.
6. Can't articulate your
own strengths and weaknesses
Only you can recognize your most
valuable strengths and most hurtful weaknesses. Be able to specify your major
strengths. Your weaknesses, if such must come up, should only be turned around
to positives.
7. Winging the interview
Practice! Get a friend, a list of
interview questions and a tape recorder and conduct an interview rehearsal.
Include a presentation or demonstration if that will be part of the real
interview. Start with introducing yourself and go all through an interview to
saying good-bye. Write out any answers you have difficulty with, and practice
until your delivery is smooth (but not slick).
8. Talk, Talk, Talk
Rambling, interrupting the interviewer
and answering to a simple question with a fifteen-minute reply - all of these
can be avoided if you've thought through and practiced what you want to
communicate. Good answers are to the point and usually shorter.
9. Failure to connect
yourself to the job offered
The job description details the
company's needs - you connect your experiences, your talents and your strengths
to the description. It answers the essential reasons for the interview -
"How my education/experience/talents/strengths fit your needs and why I
can do this job for you."
10. Not asking questions
- and asking too many
Use your research to develop a set of
questions that will tell you whether this is the job and the company for you.
This will help you limit and focus your questions. But don't overpower the interviewer
with questions about details that really won't count in the long run.
11. Bad-mouth anyone
Not just your present employer, or
former employer, or the competition. You don't want to look like a complainer.
12. Asking about
compensation and /or benefits too soon
Wait for the interviewer to bring up
these issues - after the discussion of your qualifications and the company's
needs and wants.
13. Failure to ask for
the job
When the interviewer indicates the
interview is over, convey your interest in the job and ask what the next step
is.
Wishing you all the best in your interviews
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About Admin
IKAWO OLORUNWA EMMANUEL is the CED @ ACTIONASE POINT. He is a Researcher, Biochemist/Pharmacologist, Author, Self Help Author, Motivational Speaker, Home Business Trainer, Marketing, Sales and Management Expert. This blog was inspired by My Intension to Positively affect as many lives as possible all over the world. My dream is to ensure you Live your dreams by taking Positive steps each day to make it a reality.
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