I've interviewed hundreds of job applicants in my career. This is how you nail a job interview.
Christina Ioannidou
People & Culture Director | Career Strategy & Leadership Development Coach | LI Top Voice
Let's face it: job #interviews can be time consuming, nerve-racking and downright stressful.
Your application goes through the initial screening stage and then the games really begin.
You will spend on average 4 to 6 hours going through the different stages of the evaluation process which typically includes conversations with a team of people you will potentially be working with, should you get the job.
And by conversations I mean a series of questions designed to assess not only if you're right for the role you've applied for but also if your work style matches the company's #wayofworking .
But it's unfair to perceive job interviews as a one-way evaluation street. During the course of these conversations, you have a chance to assess whether the job (with everything that it includes and entails) is also the right fit for you.
Therefore, it's not enough to just be able to show that you can do the job. You have to be prepared to demonstrate how you work while making sure that you gather all the information that you need from your interviewers in order to decide if you would say yes to a potential offer.
If it sounds like a lot of work, it's because it really is!
However, after having interviewed hundreds of job #applicants for probably hundreds of roles that I've hired for, I have discovered that there is a basic structure that applies to almost all interviews.
This interview preparation break-down will help you:
Interview Part 1: What you can do
This is what I like to call "the factual part" of the interview. You will be describing your past experience by using examples and specifics such as data and success metrics.
How to prepare for Part 1:
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Interview Part 2: Who you are
You are so much more than just your job. Along with your #experience, #skills and #capabilities you also bring to the table your #personality, #viewpoint and #values. This is the part of you that should truly remain uncompromised during the evaluation process and it is incredibly important for your future employer: whether you are a good fit for the particular environment could mean how productive and engaged you will be while working there.
How to prepare for Part 2:
Interview Part 3: Where you thrive
Company culture will create the environment where you will thrive and perform at your best or the dreaded place you want to escape from every morning when you wake up to go to work. Hence why it is so important to have a clear understanding of the type of work environment you are prepared to enter.
This is the part of the interview where you should really focus most of your questions on and be the most mindful of.
How to prepare for Part 3:
Final take-aways:
Now you're ready to nail your next interview! Good luck!