Interviews can be stressful. Often you have less than an hour to
convince an interviewer that you are the best candidate for the job. That
interviewer is going to talk to others on the same day and have other things
that they are occupied with. How are you going to stand out?
Prepare. Know which stories you want to share.
Everyone knows that preparation is key, how you prepare is
extremely important. Many people come up with a list of questions that they may
get asked and prepare for these. This leads to some amount of panic when
they're thrown a curveball.
Start with the end in mind and work backwards. Research the company and role by reading up
about them and reaching out to people you know who work there. Understand what
they are looking for in terms of skills and cultural fit.
Assess yourself. What are you good at? And how does it match
what the company might be looking for? This process can give you a clear
picture of whether this company and role are actually a good fit for you.
Assuming they are, you now know exactly how you are a match. You also know
where you fall short.
Pick the situations from your past work experience that
highlight the attributes you've identified at the intersection of your skills
and the role's requirements. Also, find stories which showcase that you can
learn the things you might be lacking. Usually, the handful of stories that you
come up with can be re-purposed for any behavioral question.
Know your audience. Structure your answers.
Use STAR method: Situation (set the
scene), Task (what was required), Action (what exactly you did), Result (what happened).
Setting up the scene is critical. While you are intimately
familiar with what happened, the interviewer is not. Take the time to make sure
they can place themselves at the scene. If you don't do this, the rest of the
story will be lost on them.
Take the time to develop a shared understanding of the situation
with the interviewer so that you are working together to determine what needs
to be done.
Keep Calm. Remember this interview goes both
ways.
Take a deep breath and remember that this is a conversation. It
is important for the interviewer to evaluate you, but it's equally important
for you’re to evaluate the interviewer and make sure that this is a place you
want to be at.
Inspired and Extracted from, https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/article/20141002164029-1473578-how-to-win-an-interview-before-it-starts
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