I had no idea how bad it was until my co-workers gasped when I told them.
Job interviews are a tricky game to master.
You need to be confident, but not cocky.
Eager to please, but not desperate.
Not over-dressed, nor under-dressed.
Most aspiring professionals have a reasonable idea of how to conduct themselves in an interview. But you don’t want to be blindsided by mistakes you didn’t realise you were making.
Here are some such examples:
1. Overdressing
Dress for the job you want, right? Wrong.
“Presentation” plays a bigger role than most employers — and certainly, job seekers — would care to admit.
This doesn’t mean you need to dress for a black tie gala.
Top Comments
Bear in mind that no matter how well you prepare, you mightn't get the job because you just don't 'fit' with the panel's idea of a work colleague - a lot of unquantifiables crop up in job interviews. And if that is the case, just think of it as a lucky escape. And find your work 'tribe' elsewhere.
So how do you deal with the question issue when they answer the 10 questions you had prepared. This drives me insane!!
Tell them, "I did have some questions, but you've answered them all already." They then feel they've done a good job conducting the interview while recognising that you had thought about things you'd like to know :)
Ask them why they enjoy working there. It lets them talk about themselves and the organisation and makes you sound keen to understand the place. It is an awesome question.
Recently someone I interviewed asked if there was anything that would make us not want to hire him or anything we were unsure which gave us a chance to raise that he had slightly less experience than we wanted and he could talk about how he had ambitions. It was one of the best questions I've ever heard