Common Interviewing Mistakes

1.  Please make sure that answers to interview questions start with the word “I” and not “We?”
 
When interviewing, highlight your accomplishments while stressing how effectively you worked with a team of fellow employees when answering questions. This way you can discuss what YOU have accomplished without sounding big headed.  Here’s an example of how to answer a question regarding specific job responsibilities:  “I, along with my co-workers, wrote the collateral for all our programs and presented new concepts to the sales team.” Or, if you are asked about your ability to handle new business, you could say something like:  ”I worked on new business initiatives on a regular basis and, along with the Partners of my company, brought in x-number of accounts.”  In this way, you are clearly articulating your responsibilities and accomplishments while being careful not to suggest that you did everything yourself.
 
A busy IT department could deal with many concurrent projects. You were perhaps only involved with a certain number so these are the projects you want to talk about.  You want to make sure you specify what your role was within these projects. Did they complete on time? Were there any snags and if so how did you rectify any problems. Did the projects save your company money? If so, tell the interviewer.
 
When you are on an interview, the hiring manager or recruiter wants to know specifics about what YOU personally contributed to your current and past jobs.  They are not so interested in what “we did.”

2. Do not be negative about your last workplace

Your last boss was an overbearing bully?  The company you worked for was poorly organized?  Red tape stopped you from getting anything accomplished?   Don’t discuss this when you’re interviewing.   We have all had to work for and with  people whom we don’t necessarily see eye-to-eye with.  A hiring manager/recruiter wants to know that you can handle working with all kinds of personalities, whether they are easy or difficult.  Nothing turns off a hiring manager or recruiter more than negativity.  However, you should be truthful when giving an interview, that doesn’t mean you have to share negative feelings.  Instead of focusing on the forces behind your reason for leaving, focus on the big picture.  Here’s an example:

Sample Question:  ”Why did you decide to leave company x?”

Sample Response #1
“To be honest, it is such a big company, with so many layers of management, I found myself in a quagmire of red tape.  I would work on projects for months at a time, incorporating change after change from upper-management.  Nobody could agree on what they wanted.  I just got too frustrated and decided to find a new job where I could actually feel like I was contributing something.”

Sample Response #2

“I absolutely love what I do and really learned a lot from Company X.  However, at this point, I feel like I’m ready for a new challenge. I’d like to perhaps take on a management role and think I’m ready for that. The structure at Company X, as it is today, doesn’t allow me to achieve that next level of responsibility.  Therefore, I’m searching for new opportunities.”
Respondent #2 was able to hone in on the positives of the situation without having to provide negatives.  Both respondents essentially want more responsibility.  It doesn’t really matter why they are not currently getting it.  What does matter is they are ready for the next challenge.  And, the old saying that something positive comes out of every negative is true.  The reality is, respondent #1 probably did learn a lot from his experience.  He learned that he can’t thrive in a heavily managed, hands-on corporate environment.  And, he knows that his next job will have to offer a significantly different cultural environment.
Another, simple reason not to bad-mouth an organization is that the person you are interviewing with might know someone who works there.  In fact, he/she might know your old boss. Or worse yet, maybe her husband works there.

#3: Tell It Like It Is

If you were laid off, be honest.  If you made £45K/year, then that’s the salary you say you made.  Never, ever tell a lie.  If you have spent your entire career in a singular industry, rest-assured that the hiring manager or recruiter knows someone who you work, or have worked, with.  They can easily find out if you are lying about something just by picking up the phone.  Even if you are changing industries, it is imperative that you are always up-front and truthful.

Sometimes hiring managers and recruiters perform blind reference checks. This means they call people from past companies you worked for who may not have been listed among your references.  If you lie and they find out, you will immediately be cut from the job.  And, if your recruiter catches you in a lie, he will not want to risk.



Walton-on-Thames 01932 230 868
info@jenrickcommercial.co.uk
specialists in recruitment
© copyright 2012 Jenrick Commercial Ltd.
a Simon Holdings Plc Company
online marketing by Bitmedia Limited