15 Ways to Hack-an-Interview
Hacking
an interview isn’t about being able to answer questions properly. It’s about
ensuring you’re being asked proper questions.
15 Ways to Improve the Odds You’ll
be Interviewed Correctly
1. Spend 8-10 hours becoming fully prepared to handle any
oddball situation and present yourself in a professional manner.
A job interview is as important as any major presentation.
These take at least 8-10 hours to get ready and rehearse. Spend as much time trying
out these ideas below.
2. Do your homework about the
company.
Read the LinkedIn profiles of those who will be interviewing you. Look at all
of the related open jobs that are posted. Read about the company on business
sites, Glassdoor.com and read the latest press releases. You’ll use this info
to generate great questions.
3.
Own your strengths and weaknesses.
List
your top 6-8 strengths on a piece of paper and include an example of an actual accomplishment to prove each one. Interviewers will remember
the example, not the hyperbole. Do something similar with weaknesses but in
this case demonstrate how you’ve grown or changed as a result.
4.
Prepare a
write-up for two accomplishments for each of your past few jobs.
Be prepared to discuss in detail one major individual
accomplishment and one major team accomplishment for each of the last few jobs
over the past 5-10 years.
5.
Use the
universal answer to any question.
The key is to present a detailed example to prove any general statement and you
need to do it in about one to two minutes. No more. No less.
6.
Clarify
real job needs early in the interview.
Ask the interviewer to describe some of the challenges in the job, the focus of
the job, the team issues and things that need to be addressed, improved or
fixed. You’ll use your accomplishments to prove you’ve handled similar
challenges.
7.
Ask
forced-choice questions.
Is
(skill) important for success in this position? Ask this question if the
skill is one of your strengths, you know it’s part of the job, and it hasn’t
been addressed yet. Then give your two-minute answer with a great example. This
is a great technique to make sure the interviewer covers all of your strengths.
8.
Ask great
questions via a needs analysis.
Ask about problems, resources, timeframes, bottlenecks and people challenges.
Then give examples of past accomplishments in which you have successfully
handled comparable situations. The quality of these questions demonstrates true
insight regarding actual job needs.
9.
Prepare a
one-page job proposal.
If you can roughly describe how
you’d plan and solve the biggest challenge the hiring manager is facing you’ll
become a finalist. Preparing it ahead of time might even land you an interview.
10.
Insist on
a phone screen to overcome a less than stellar first impression.
A phone screen focusing on general fit and a review of the
candidate’s most significant accomplishment increases objectivity by minimizing
the impact of a weaker first impression.
11.
Prove
you’re not overqualified.
Despite
your competency to handle a job, you are over qualified if you haven’t done the work that needs to be done somewhat
recently. Hiring someone is more about determining their motivation to do the
work. That’s why you’ll need to prove motivation by demonstrating recent
accomplishments.
12.
Expect to
be nervous.
You will be less nervous if you
practice all of these ideas.Even if you are a bit nervous, asking a question
will force the interviewer to answer it, giving you a few moments to recover.
13.
Ask about
next steps.
At the end of the interview tell
the interviewer you’re interested, but would like to know the next steps. If
the interviewer is vague, ask if there is something in your background of
concern and then attempt to overcome
it
with your best two-minute example.
14.
Neutralize
all negatives, aka “No Surprises.”
Don’t try to hide problems like too much turnover, being fired, no degree or
being too non-perfect. Instead, anticipate the problem and address it up front
by describing how it’s enabled you to become a stronger or more dedicated
employee. An end-game negative surprise will end the game.
Bonus Hack:
How to answer stupid questions: don’t! Instead ask, “How
does the question relate to real job needs?” Then describe something related
you’ve done using the universal answer to any question. Even if you don’t get
the job you’ll have demonstrated you’re not afraid to handle ambiguous
questions or issues that are designed to confuse rather than clarify. This is
an important trait and the best managers will find your response refreshing.
Hacking an interview isn’t just
about being able to answer questions properly. It’s more about ensuring you’re
being asked proper questions. This concept will become perfectly clear once you
start hacking.
___________________
Lou Adler
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/15-ways-hack-an-interview-lou-adl
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