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SEVEN KEYS TO
INTERVIEW PREPARATION
By Bill Radin

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It’s been said that Napoleon won
his battles in his tent; that is, he did all the planning the
night before the battle was joined, so that every contingency
could be adequately covered. Interview preparation is similar.
You never know exactly what will happen on the battlefield, but
by being ready, you can eliminate a lot of the uncertainty, and
know how to react to different scenarios.
Later, we’ll look at ways to
effectively conduct the interview itself; but for now, let’s
focus on the list, each item at a time.
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One: The Resume
Of course, bring a couple of copies,
and be sure to read your resume before the interview, so you’re
completely familiar with everything you’ve written. Nothing is
more embarrassing (or potentially fatal to your candidacy) than
being quizzed on some aspect of your background that appears on
the bottom of page two -- and not being able to remember the
details.
You might also bring materials which
would be particularly good at illustrating an important aspect
of your work, such as creative designs, writing samples, and so
forth. Just remember to use your better judgment.
I once interviewed an engineer who
brought with him a lawn and garden string trimmer made by his
current company, so he could show me the design improvements he’d
made on the product. It turns out his engineering efforts had
lowered the trimmer’s cost to manufacture, which resulted in
increased profits for his company. His version of "show and
tell" was a bit extreme (my whole office was buzzing for
weeks about my Weed Eater candidate), but at least his real-life
picture told me a thousand words.
Be careful, though, not to overdo it
with the props. College diplomas, letters of commendation, and
company bowling trophies should be left at home. When in doubt,
just bring your resume and your business card -- they’re the
most important props you’ll ever need.
It’s a good idea to carry a leather
folder or day runner with you so you can take notes or store
written materials the company might hand you during the course
of your interview. A briefcase is also fine, although I prefer a
folder, which is lighter to carry, and less cumbersome. Always
remember to bring a pen or pencil.
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Two: Appropriate Dress and
Appearance
Much as I find some aspects of the
New Dress for Success (Warner Books, 1988) formula as
espoused by author and wardrobe consultant John T. Molloy a bit
disheartening, there’s simply no practical excuse for dressing
any way other than the book suggests. Sure, we’d all like to
think that we’re being judged on our qualifications, skills,
and depth of character. But the truth is, when it comes to
interviewing, in most cases, clothes make the man. To think any
other way is to ignore reality.
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Three: Directions To the
Interview Location
Try to get directions at least a day
before your interview, so you don’t get lost and arrive late.
And here’s a tip: Always bring some cash to pay for parking.
Never ask an employer to validate your parking stub, or
reimburse you for parking. Not only is it impolite, you’ll
create a negative impression, since it’s considered common
courtesy to pay your own expenses for a local interview.
If you’re coming from out of town,
then it’s especially important to get directions. Naturally,
if the expenses for your interviewing trip are going to be
covered by the employer, wait until the interview has concluded
(or better yet, the next day) to settle up. Usually, the company
will prepay the air fare, or other major expenses, and will
reimburse you for the rest, such as your car rental, cab fare,
hotel room, and meals. It’s customary that you pick up certain
non-essential expenses, such as long distance phone calls from
your hotel room, or the bar tab from the lounge in the hotel
lobby.
A few years ago, a client company of
mine flew a candidate to Los Angeles for an interview. The
candidate, unfortunately, was unemployed at the time, and was in
pretty dire financial straits. He charged the phone calls he
made to his wife back in Wyoming and all his dry cleaning
expenses (he only brought one shirt with him for two days of
interviewing) to the company. When they got his expense voucher
a few days later, they got pretty upset -- they never expected
to pay for all these add-ons. It was too bad, too, because he
was generally well received when he interviewed. I’d hate to
think it was these little charges that were responsible for his
not getting a job he really wanted.
The best time to arrive for an
interview is precisely when you’re scheduled, not early or
late. It can irk an employer to be told that the candidate for a
2 o’clock appointment is waiting in the lobby at one
thirty-five. The employer will either become distracted knowing
there’s someone hanging around waiting to see him, or he’ll
scramble to rearrange his schedule to accommodate the candidate,
which disrupts the rest of his day. If your appointment is at
two, then arrive at two.
If for some reason you’re running
late, call ahead to ask if you can reschedule for later the same
day, or if not, later in the week. If something unexpected
happens that you have no control over, simply explain the
situation to the employer when you arrive.
I placed a candidate named Alan
recently, who was over an hour late to his first interview. He’d
been caught in a monstrous traffic jam and was unable to call
ahead; but fortunately, he handled the situation like a real
pro. When he arrived, he apologized for being late, and got
right down to the business of interviewing. He simply put all
the anxiety and frustration behind him, so that he could
concentrate on the reason he was there, not the reason he was
late.
If you’re ever caught in a
situation like Alan was, stay cool, take a deep breath, and
remove whatever misfortune befell you from your mind.
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Four: Name and Title of the
Interviewer(s)
When you arrange the interview, find out
who you’ll be talking to, and what their function is within
the company. Will you be speaking with the hiring manager? The
manager from another department? The personnel director? The
internal recruiter? A peer level employee or subordinate? A
staff industrial psychologist?
You might already know the person. If
that’s the case, you’re ahead of the game. If not, send out
feelers among your own contacts within your industry, or look in
your industry’s trade publications to see if the person you’re
going to be meeting is distinguished in any way.
It’s also helpful to find out
whether you and the person you’ll be meeting have any
commonalties or interconnecting points of interest, in the way
of origins ("Hey, you’re also from Wisconsin?"),
schools ("My brother went to Duke, too. How did you like
it?"), professional achievements ("My article appeared
in Ad Week a month after yours did."), or personal
interests ("I heard you were the Nebraska state ping pong
champion. We’ll have to get together sometime for a
match."). These tidbits can break the ice when an interview
begins, and create a bond with the interviewer.
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Five: Understanding the
Company’s Hiring Procedure
To correctly gauge the sequence of
events surrounding or following your first interview, ask these
questions:
• Can you describe to me, step by
step, the hiring procedure for this position?
This is important to ask, because you
want to find out if (and when) the company needs to schedule a
second or third level interview. Some companies will make hiring
decisions on the spot; others will take months of meetings and
endless signatures to process a simple request for a second
interview.
• Will I be asked to take any
tests?
And if so, what are they, and how
long will they take to administer? Proctor & Gamble, for
many of its professional positions, requires candidates to take
a one-hour math and abstract reasoning test. Some companies
require a full day of psychological, aptitude, technical skill,
and intelligence testing. With most companies, failure to pass
the tests means automatic elimination from consideration.
Most drug tests are simply referred
to as "physicals," and may take several days to
schedule and process. Often, you’ll have to use your own
doctor or clinic.
• How long will it take before
you reach a decision?
This will help you measure your
progress through the hiring process, and could spare you from
getting the jitters if you don’t hear something immediately.
I once got bent out of shape because
a new client company was taking a long time to make a decision
whether to bring back one of my candidates for a second
interview. Later, I found in my original notes that the company
was right on schedule; they’d told me up front that it would
take them several weeks to reach a decision. As it turns out, I
had no reason to complain.
• Do you currently have any
finalists?
This question lets you know if you’ve
entered the race late, and your interview with the company is
only a formality. In a situation like this, isn’t it best to
know where you stand?
• Who will be making the hiring
decision?
Find out if the decision will be made
by a committee. If it is, must the committee come to a unanimous
agreement? Or, will the decision be based on the recommendation
of a single person?
The more information you can dig up
about the hiring procedure, the better you’ll be able to give
a more confident, thoughtful interview. What’s more, arriving
at an interview armed with a bastion of facts will help you
shield yourself from the fear that occurs as a result of feeling
out of control.
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Six: Background Information On
the Company
While the amount of background
information you can gather about a company is practically
endless, it would be ludicrous to try to become a walking
encyclopedia of corporate trivia. However, knowing something in
each of these categories should significantly improve your odds
of getting hired:
• The company’s personnel --
who the major players are, who was recently hired or let go.
It’s also a good idea to know something of the history of
the company, and who the founders were. For example, if you
were interviewing for IBM, it might be considered a
faux
pas to look puzzled and ask, "Who?" at mention
of the name Thomas Watson, Sr.
• The company’s basic
structure -- what products or services they provide to which
customers, what the various divisions are, and whether they’re
privately or publicly held.
• The company’s vital signs
-- how the company is doing financially. Are they solvent or
struggling? Are they involved in a hostile takeover, or
merging with another company? How’s their stock faring?
You get the idea. Many of my candidates like to look through
Value Line before they interview, so they can talk
intelligently about the company’s financial picture.
• The company’s divisional or
departmental details -- the changes that are taking place
that could potentially affect the position you’re
interviewing for. Is there a new product introduction or
marketing strategy in the works? Or how about an overhaul in
the company’s accounting methods, capital equipment, or
computer system?
By arriving for your interview
adequately briefed, you’ll make a strong impression on the
interviewer. Best of all, you can spend your interviewing time
discussing your background and the company’s needs, not the
corporate biography, or company financial report.
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Seven: A Complete List of
Questions You Want to Ask.
During the course of an interview,
your dialogue with the other person will spawn a number of
questions spontaneously. However, there may be important issues
to discuss which will never come up unless you take the
initiative. For that reason, you should bring a list of
questions with you that will address these issues, so that you
don’t leave the interview uninformed.
Premeditated questions can be grouped
into four different categories:
[1] Company questions deal with
the organization, direction, policies, stability, growth,
market share, and new products or services of the
prospective company or department;
[2] Industry questions deal with
the health, growth, change, technological advancement, and
personnel of the industry as a whole;
[3] Position questions deal with
the scope, responsibilities, travel, compensation policies,
and reporting structure of the position you’re
interviewing for; and
[4] Opportunity questions deal
with your own potential for growth or advancement within the
company or its divisions, and the likely timetable for
promotion.
You may have specific interests or
concerns surrounding topics in each category. For example, if
you’re interviewing with a computer manufacturer, you may want
to ask about the future growth of the industry. Or, let’s say
you’re interviewing for a position with a company that’s
known for its high rate of personnel turnover. You might want to
prepare a carefully worded question that deals with that issue.
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Leave Your Laundry List at Home
Naturally, you need to be careful not
to come on too strong by asking too many questions -- it may
turn the interviewer off. Presumably, if there’s mutual
interest, you’ll get all your questions answered at a
subsequent interview. The general rule of thumb is to limit the
number of premeditated questions to about a dozen or less. While
it’s true that you’ll be interviewing the company as much as
they’ll be interviewing you, the last thing you want to do is
turn a dialogue into an inquisition, or come across as a walking
encyclopedia of corporate trivia.
You should also be aware that there’s
one specific taboo to first-level interviewing, in terms of the
questions you should ask. Never, ever bring up the issue of
salary or benefits. If the employer initiates a dialogue
surrounding these issues, and asks if you have any questions,
fine.
But if it appears to the employer
that your primary motivation for changing jobs is the new
company’s compensation or benefit package, you’ll be out the
door quicker than a bolt of lightning. Employers get chills of
fear and loathing when they think you’re only on the job
market to feather your nest at their expense. They visualize
your employment with them as a short term, non-committal, career
leveraging maneuver, and understandably, want to avoid being
victimized.
Early in my career as a recruiter, I
arranged an interview for a qualified candidate with a client
company. After the interview, I called Shelly, the employer, to
debrief her.
"Well, your candidate didn’t
do so well," Shelly said.
"Really? I thought he had the
perfect background."
"That wasn’t the problem. I
just didn’t like the way he handled the interview."
"What happened?"
"I spent over an hour with him,
telling him everything about the company, and introducing him to
all the key people," Shelly said. "I even gave him an
extensive tour of the manufacturing area."
"And then?"
"And then, I brought him back to
my office, and we sat down to talk about what he’d seen. I
asked him if he had any questions."
"And did he?"
"Yes. That’s when the
interview ended. He looked me straight in the eye and asked, ‘What
are your benefits?’"
"And?"
"And I got up," Shelly
said, "and walked him right out the door."
Don’t misunderstand me. The
candidate’s actions in no way reflected on his abilities or
his character; his intentions were perfectly honorable. But
after that incident (which cost the candidate a job and me a
placement fee), I learned to caution interviewees not to
initiate the subject of salary or benefits.
My suggestion is to take the John F.
Kennedy approach to interviewing: "Ask not what your
company can do for you, ask what you can do for your
company."
This way, you can present yourself as
a loyal, hard-working, virtuous, and dedicated candidate, rather
than as an opportunistic job-hopper who’d prefer to live off
the fat of the land.
While it’s unthinkable to accept or
even consider a job without first knowing the financial rewards
(or the details of the benefit package), there are better and
more timely ways to broach the subject, without endangering your
candidacy.
Interview preparation is perhaps the
single most overlooked aspect of the job changing process. A
candidate who’s fired up and ready to go at the time of the
interview has a tremendous advantage over a candidate who’s
not.
The more carefully you prepare for
your interview, the better your chances of getting hired.
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Staff Resources Inc.
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P.O. Box 4557
Rock Hill, SC
29732-6557
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803-366-0500
Fax: 803-366-1021
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