Excerpted from David Silverman’s Harvard Business Blog for the benefit of the WordPress community who read my blog posts. As David aptly puts it across
“… you need to listen and react to the person in the room with you, not slavishly follow any list of rules — I present to you my list of rules for interviewing:”
1. Dress appropriately. If you’re going to Amalgamated Ginormous Finance, Inc., a business suit is appropriate. If you’re a man, wear a tie. Even in California.
2. Shut up. Did I tell you about the time someone came and told me his life story for 45 minutes and then allowed me 10 minutes to explain the job? I think you know how that story ends.
3. Listen. The most useful skill in sales is listening — and in an interview, you’re selling yourself. If you say, “I think the best computers in the world are PCs and people who use Macs have more style than substance” after the interviewer mentions his iPhone, you could be left with your opinion and no paycheck.
4. Ask questions. You can avoid the problem above by responding to the question, “Do you think we should scrap all the PCs here and buy Macs?” by saying, “That depends on lots of factors. What would your requirements be?”
5. Show interest. This could also be called “sucking up.” When an interviewee doesn’t ask me anything about myself, she’s not just saying “I’ve got pride in my accomplishments and don’t need to pander to you.” She’s also showing me that she isn’t good at showing interest in other people. Which means she’s going to have a hard time politically in the company. And since that’s going to reflect badly on me…no job for her.
6. Do your research. Some people find being Googled creepy. But if you do it carefully, you can show the hiring manager that you took the time to learn something about them. Feel free to quote what they said in CIO Magazine about the challenges of technology in the office. Just don’t mention the size of their swimming pool as viewed through Google Earth.
7. Answer the question you wish they’d asked. Robert McNamara said that about dealing with the press, but it’s also very good advice for interviewees. How many times have you left an interview thinking, “I never got a chance to tell them about my Nobel Prize in possum research?” Don’t wait for the question. Answer “What did you do at your last job?” with “Actually, it was my work on possums two jobs ago that you might find most relevant.” (Well, maybe for you it wasn’t specifically a Nobel or about possums, but you get the idea.)
[...] of this is on the candidate with the interview ongoing. I have some compiled approaches to this in another blog post. I disagree with Susan Cain and would still try to keep the "estimation" with the interviewer and [...]
By: Negotiating your salary with an upper hand! « Doodling, Scribbling … and Thinking !! on July 12, 2009
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