Friday, July 24, 2020
Banish the Job Search Crap. Youre Being Watched!
Banish the Job Search Crap. Youâre Being Watched! Banish the Job Search Crap â" Youâre Being Watched! Did you know that every move you make is being observed? Did you know that the interviewer is examining if the skills you display during that one meeting (phone or face-to-face) are good enough to be a future employee? Here are some stories the interviewer is telling himself/herself while they are watching and listening: If you are late, you will be late for work days or important business meetings. If you ask generic questions like âWhat do you do?â or âWhat does your company do?â than you did not prepare for this interview. Therefore, you will not be prepared for on-the-job meetings. If you donât present your skills in a relevant way to the interviewer, then you wonât make your work relevant to the company while on the job. If you look disheveled or sloppy, then thatâs how you will come to work. My goal is to help you âCut the Crap, Get a Jobâ. And âcrapâ comes in two forms: the mistakes you are making that sabotage your odds and, two, the excuses you make for yourself along the way. So, here are two rules to apply when you are conducting any type of job search meeting. Rule #1: This is Your BEST Day. A touch point with anybody, either via phone, e-mail or face-to-face is supposed to be your BEST DAY. That means there is no room for âcrapâ of any kind. Unfortunately, during the last 30+ years of hiring, recruiting, interviewing and helping thousands of people, the errors and excuses are getting worse, not better. In todayâs age of texting, social media, multi-tasking, and economic pressure, candidates are sloppier and less prepared. Frankly, they are lazier with their job search. Virtually gone are the days of proofing every sentence, clearing all grammatical and typo errors, asking someone else to give you feedback on your cover letter AND, worst of all, the days of mock interviews to practice. You will stand out if you are making a touch point a positive experience. Rule #2: You Are Always Interviewing. John arrived at Barbaraâs office for an âinformational interviewâ. An informational interview is probably the best form of networking as it gives you the opportunity to meet with someone closely connected to a job you want without formally interviewing. It is an exploratory, fact-finding meeting only and can be very effective to secure more insights about a posted position, get names of other contacts, learn the company jargon, get leads for other jobs and much more. John asked for the appropriate 30 minutes and arrived on time. What John forgot was that he truly was being interviewed in the sense that Barbara was observing and building a perception about John throughout the meeting. She happened to have some jobs opening up soon and she knew of other positions at her company, as well. John didnât know that. Where John displayed âcrapâ in the form of mistakes and excuses: He didnât come in prepared with a minimum of 3 good questions. He didnât have a pen and paper to take notes with or a copy of his resume, which Barbara asked him for. Johnâs excuse was âI thought this wasnât an interview.â John let his guard down. When Barbara asked why he is looking for a new role, he said âWell, off the record, my current boss and I donât see eye-to-eye. Heâs stubborn and wonât let me innovate as much as I want toâ. Oops. If John treated this meeting like an interview, he would have had a top notch interview answer. John just kept asking questions without watching the clock. Barbara was generous by giving him thirty minutes and John needs to run a tight meeting. I recommend the âlaw of 3sââ¦no more than 3 main questions, no more than 3 answers to one question, then stop talking. No follow up. John thought well, that was just an informational meeting, so Iâll thank Barbara if something comes out of the information she provided. Big miss and bad form. As a result, Barbara did not invite him to interview for her positions and made a note in the online human resources system that he was not a candidate for their company. Come on, job seekers! Cut the Crap, Get a Job! Raise the bar, be your best at all times, and, as a result, you will be amazed what good things happen.
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