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The
Telephone Interview / The
Personal Interview
PREPARING FOR AN INTERVIEW
A job interview is like a game. It
has rules, and the participants have roles to play.
What you can win is an offer. What the interviewer can
win is the proper person for the job.
Your role as an interviewer is to play
the confident applicant who can project talent, willingness,
and suitability for the opening. If you have done your
homework, you should have no problem.
What to do:
Spend time researching the company
via the internet (i.e. company's web site), in the library,
or talk with friends who know similar organizations.
Interview yourself on a tape recorder
until you hear confidence in your answers to questions.
Prepare positive answers to such potentially
difficult queries as "I'm a little worried about
your lack of experience" or "You've been out
of work a long time, haven't you?"
Interviewers play one of four general
roles:
The target-directed interviewer
is direct, businesslike, and a little impersonal. Respond
in kind.
The all-in-the-family interviewer
is warm, friendly, and company oriented. Emphasize your
team player attributes.
The thinking person's interviewer
is interested in how you did things or intend to
do things. Give logical, expanded answers about your
methods and theories.
The make-it-easy-for-me interviewer
is unpredictable and prone to snap judgments.
Be a responsive audience, and let the
interviewer keep center stage.
Source: Robert Half, president, Robert
Half International, Inc., New York, and author of The
Robert Half Way to Get Hired In Today's Job Market,
Rawson Wade. |