Thursday, July 23, 2020

Ask Dana How to ace these 3 awkward-yet-basic job interview questions

Ask Dana How to ace these 3 awkward-yet-basic job interview questions How to ace these 3 awkward-yet-basic job interview questions Question Im terrible at interviews! I get hung up on seemingly basic questions. What are the most awkward-yet-basic questions I need to be prepared for? And can you tell me how to answer them? Answer from Executive Job Coach Dana Manciagli Thats a hard question because so many people blow it on seemingly simple interview questions. Heres what Ill do: Ill pick three that are common-yet-challenging for most of my clients and readers. To give you more help, I dedicated two full chapters on interviewing in my book, Cut the Crap, Get a Job! A New Job Process for a New Era. 1. Tell me about yourself. Nine out of 10 candidates blow this common-but-awkward question. Its awkward for the candidate because it is SO big and broad. The secret to answering it â€" make three points then stop talking: First sentence: Summarize your education. Second sentence: Summarize your work history. Third sentence: Summarize why you are here today, interviewing for this position. Example: I have a Bachelor of Science degree from UCLA in economics from 1995. I have seven years of operations experience in Fortune 500s such as Boeing and five years of finance experience, with a successful track record of execution excellence. I am here today because you are looking for someone with solid performance in ________ and _______ (from their job description). 2. Why should I hire you over other candidates? This is another common-yet-awkward question because it triggers self-doubt and you dont know the other candidates. The secret to answer it â€" make three points then stop talking! Pull all three from THEIR job description. This question is not about YOU…its about THEM. First sentence: You are looking for someone who can do ___________. I have excelled in that for three years. Second sentence: You need someone who is ______________ and __________ and I can give specific examples where I have proven this is a core competency of mine. Third sentence: You are looking for someone who is passionate about your company, your industry and this particular job. I really want this job, and I know I can deliver superior results for you and work well as a team member. 3. Give me an example where you have failed. This is awkward because they use the word failed and you are supposed to tell a story. The secret to answer it: DONT tell a horrific story that throws yourself under the bus. A recent client of mine (an ex-CEO) shared a story about how I took a pilot into a nationwide expansion and missed the numbers, so I underperformed. The interview was over. The secret to answering: Give a middle example, but one that shows self-awareness AND what you learned: I lead a major cross-team initiative but learned later that two people werent fully on board. I should have met with each person individually, and I have done just that ever since. I had to analyze and synthesize tons of data into a report for senior executives. I spent so much time proofing my data and cross checking that I finished it at the last minute. Since then, I have enlisted an extra pair of eyes to review my work, and I complete things earlier. In sales, I called on a major prospective client for six months, continuing to work with the people responsible for making the buying decision. However, I should have also worked the executive suite, including the CFO, with a value proposition that appealed to them. I learned how to do both effectively.

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