If you read other
books on job interviews, you'll notice they feed you lists of interview
questions and answers to memorize. An interview is not an interrogation,
however it's a conversation. To make it that way you need to come armed
with a multitude of small stories about both your business and personal
lives. 
When you go into
an interview, you need to leave your nerves at the door. The best way
to prepare is to be yourself. The best way to be yourself is to tell
your own story (or stories).
This is especially
great for the competency-based interview being used more today.
A competency-based
interviewer will spend about half the interview on your job skills,
and about half on your behavioral competencies which include questions
about your character and personal attributes that can determine whether
you fit their corporate culture. He or she will be looking for evidence
of how you have acted in real situations in the past.
An employer
wants to find out:
- Are you an asset
or liability? In other words, will you make money or save money for
the company?
- Are you a team
player? Will you fit into the corporate hierarchy or be like sand
in the gears? Can you take and give (if appropriate) orders?
- Will you fit
into the company culture? They don't want prima donnas.
The best way to
show these traits is to take the initiative and have several personal
stories that you can tell, taking maybe 30 to 90 seconds each.
You may want to
start by developing your stories around these seven areas:
-
Times where
you either made money or saved money for your current or previous
company.
-
A crisis in
your life or job and how you responded or recovered from it.
-
A time where
you functioned as part of a team and what your contribution was.
-
A time in your
career or job where you had to overcome stress.
-
A time in your
job where you provided successful leadership or a sense of direction.
-
A failure that
occurred in your job and how you overcame it.
-
Any seminal
events which happened during your career to cause you to change
direction and how that worked out for you.
I want to emphasize
that an interview should not be an interrogation. It should be a conversation
between two equals. When you accomplish this you come away a step closer
to your goal of landing the job you really want, because...
It's the conversation
that wins an interview, and it's the conversation that wins the job
To have a conversation,
have your stories ready.
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