Prom Prep
A Closer Look At Two Interview Questions
By: Judi Perkins
A job interview is stressful. The person who hasn't made a lot
of changes isn't practiced at what is involved (nor should they
want to be), and the person who has made a lot of changes
doesn't have any idea as to what's involved either, or they
wouldn't be making so many changes!
Preparing for the interview de-stresses the situation
considerably. Yet, 78% of all candidates - regardless of the
level for which they are interviewing - wing it! And frequently
cause themselves to be weeded out in the process.
Like so much of the interview, seemingly innocent questions can
trip you up. You think you are answering them in a way that puts
you in the best light, but you'd be surprised at how many people
completely miss the boat. Merely to hope an interview has a
positive result is not enough. That's basically forfeiting your
ability to drive up the percentage of a positive outcome.
For instance, in response to the question, "Why do you want to
work here?" some people will say things such as:
"I've worked in this industry for 15 years and been very
successful. I feel I can make a difference in your
organization. I have a proven track record of leadership. I've
read in the paper that your company is having some problems,
and with my experience as a Director of XXXXX, I can help
straighten those out."
That answer may sound good and appear to suffice, but on a
scale of 1 - 10, it ranks about a 4!
Why? The answer shows no research, no thought, no
consideration. It sounds stock and could suffice for any number
of companies. Overall, unimpressive.
In my experience as a recruiter, I've found that while mid
level management tends to UNDERanswer the question, upper level
management will often OVERanswer the question. One group doesn't
provide enough information because of a limited lack of
experience. The other group has been around, worked their way
up the ladder in more than one company, and in their attempt to
sound thoughtful, intelligent, and wise, end up saying very
little at all.
Let's look closer.
WHY DO YOU WANT TO WORK HERE?
Here's where you get to show off your research. Tell the
interviewer what you've learned about the company, and why it's
appealing to you. SPECIFICS are the key here.
Relate those specific examples from your experience to what
you've learned about the company, their focus, and their
market. Look to your personality and what motivates you and how
that relates to any details you learned from the ad, your
recruiter, your friend who referred you, or from where you
learned of this opportunity.
For instance, perhaps their ad stated that they were looking to
establish a marketing department from ground up. If you thrive
on growth, challenges, making things happen - there's your
answer - along with examples of how you have grown,
established, or done market research in a parallel situation.
And you might ask, "What if it's not a high profile company?
What if it's on the small side and local?" Right. Not every
company is the size of General Electric or even a regional
public powerhouse that you can look up in Dun & Bradstreet.
But most librarians are more than willing to help you find any
information that might be present in any of their research
books. Local newspapers may have done stories on the company,
and the library would have those too. And these days, most
companies have a website.
Share what you can do and why you feel you can make a
contribution and benefit the company. This question is about
how YOU can benefit the company, not how the company can
benefit YOU.
TELL ME ABOUT YOURSELF
Some interviews are lost right at this point. This is not an
invitation to go on ad nauseum about everything that has
happened to you since you were five years old or since your
first job out of college. Nor is it the time to shrug your
shoulders and give an unplanned, one-sentence answer.
Some people, especially those who haven't prepared and have a
tendency to talk when they get nervous, find themselves
rambling. Put together a nice little 2 - 3 minute verbal bio
about your career, your qualifications, and why you are
interested. Know what you're going to say in advance.
A FEW POINTS TO REMEMBER
In recruiting we used to say, "'A' candidates for 'A'
companies, 'B' candidates for 'B' companies and 'C' candidates
for 'C' companies," and a 'B' candidate is not only some one
who's talents and track record is only so-so, it's also an 'A'
candidate whose poor interviewing skills MAKE him a 'B.'
Knowing who you are, what you want, what you have to offer and
what you've accomplished - and having it all on the tip of your
tongue - can make or break you for a job offer - not just for
your perfect job, but sometimes for even finding ANY job.
Being able to sell yourself, your skills, how you can benefit a
potential company and then being able to close the deal
necessitates taking the time to research and learn the company.
It means knowing yourself well enough that you can apply aspects
of your capabilities to the individual facts and details of that
INDIVIDUAL company - and that you can do it smoothly without
groping for words or just winging it.
And last, but not least, the words of Peter Handal of Dale
Carnegie Training, echo the importance of interview
preparation, including what strikes most people as silly - role
playing. But as he said, "you only have one chance to make a
really good impression," and if you don't take it seriously
enough to study and thoroughly prepare, someone else will, and
that's the person who will get the job!
Do your homework before EVERY interview! There's no chance to
make a second good impression!
About The Author: Judi Perkins has been a contingency and
retained search consultant for 25 years, with a short stint in
the temporary and local permanent placement market. She has
owned her own firm and hired repeatedly by numerous repeat
clients. Learn how to attract a recruiter - and thousands of
other job tips at http://www.findtheperfectjob.com












