Part IIII Exercises and Discussions
Answer the 10 most-asked questions mentioned in Part two by using guidelines provided in the article.
Tell the class an interview story of yours. Before you reveal the final result of this job-hunting experience, let other students criticize on your performance and give you a virtual offer/rejection. Compare it with the actual result.
Think of your best/worse interview experiences and share them with your class and instructor. Why do you think that you did a great/horrible job? If you can go through it all over again, what improvements can be made?
Part V Supplementary Notes
Tell Me About Yourself
It's one of the most frequently asked questions in an interview: Tell me about yourself. Your response to this request will set the tone for the rest of the interview. For some, this is the most challenging question to answer, as they wonder what the interviewer really wants to know and what information they should include.
Eleanor dreaded this question. When it was the first one asked at her interview, she fumbled her way through a vague answer, not focusing on what she could bring to the job.
"I'm happily married and originally from Denver," she began. "My husband was transferred here three months ago, and I've been getting us settled in our new home. I'm now ready to go back to work. I've worked in a variety of jobs, usually customer service-related. I'm looking for a company that offers growth opportunities."
The interview went downhill after that. She had started with personal information and gave the interviewer reason to doubt whether she was an employee who would stay for very long.
· She's married, and when her husband gets transferred that means she has to leave; she did it once and can do it again.
· She has some work experience with customers but didn't emphasize what she did.
· She is looking to grow. What about the job she is applying for? Will she stay content for long?
The secret to successfully responding to this free-form request is to focus, script and practice. You cannot afford to wing this answer, as it will affect the rest of the interview. Begin to think about what you want the interviewer to know about you.