Former editor in chief of Vogue Australia Kirstie Clements shares her advice on how to work magic in a job interview.
During my time as editor in chief of Vogue Australia, I conducted countless interviews with applicants eager to snare their dream job.
The prospect of working at a high fashion magazine was the holy grail for so many, we were constantly inundated with enquiries. The deputy editor Leigh Ann had the task of culling the enormous amounts of CVs that arrived each week, just to get them to a manageable pile.
“I finally realised what it is that annoys me” she said, placing a couple of applications on my desk that she had actually deemed possibilities. “They all mention what Vogue could do for them – indulge their passion for fashion, magazines, travel. They hardly ever mention what skills they could bring to Vogue.”
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In my new book, Impressive How to Have A Stylish Career (MUP) I tackle the subject of how to ace a job interview, gleaning advice from more than thirty colleagues and professionals who are all top of their game in the fashion and media industries. Here’s my top list of what not to do.
1). Don’t be underprepared.
Take the time to learn about the company you are asking to join, what their business is and does, what campaigns etc they are currently producing, what awards/wins they have had. They will be impressed that you took the time and did the research.
2) Don’t apply for one position actually wanting another one.
Ambition is natural and important , but an employer doesn’t want to know about your fashion styling capabilities if the job they want filling is clerical. Do the job you are supposed to do, and raise your ambitions later. Much later. After you have aced the first role.
Top Comments
I find it hard to believe that anyone with half a brain doesn't already comply with this list... Seems like Grade 8 Social Studies to me...
I have worked in HR. You would be surprised at how many people forget these fundamental points. And your comment lacks any actual insight, it just comes across as condescending.
Don’t talk money first? I wish! Over the last while, I and my friends applying for jobs have noticed application systems that force you to name your price in a field when you submit your CV, otherwise you are asked straight out about salary by recruiters in screening phone calls before you ever see an interview. This is a recent development in the last 18 months or so. Anyone else notice this? How to avoid it?!
Easy way if you are applying through seek, or most other job search sites is to make use of the salary search filter, that way you at least know the ball-park figure of what they are paying and you can respond accordingly :)
They probably just want to screen out applicants that want too much money before they bother interviewing. You could check out the fair work website to see what award rates would apply for that job, and just use that as a ballpark figure.