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You check the clock, smoothing your best suit with your sweaty palms, as the recruiter calls your name. It's time.
Interviewing can ruffle the feathers of even the most qualified candidate. And while it sometimes seems recruiters are out to get you with their tricky questions, they really just want to see how you communicate and work under pressure, noted Executive Recruiter and Career Consultant Bruce A. Hurwitz of Hurwitz Strategic Staffing. Can you maintain composure or do you become defensive?
While many of the questions you face during an interview can seem difficult, they are usually predictable, Hurwitz noted.
The most important thing you can do before an interview is to prepare for these landmines, Cathleen Faerber, managing director of The Wellesley Group Inc. (www.wellesleygroup.com), stated. "Preparing for an interview is more than just researching the company. It's thinking about these types of questions and being prepared to successfully answer them."
To help you prepare, ADVANCE polled recruitment leaders on the most common difficult interview questions, and how to answer them.
1. Why did you leave your last position?
First off, why are you here? Recruiters aren't just being nosy when they inquire about why you're looking for a job. Unless you're a new grad looking for your first position, you're leaving another one behind. Essentially, recruiters want to know what went wrong. Was it the job - or was it you?
They key to answering this one is to be truthful -to a degree. Even if you hate your boss's guts, it's better to keep it to yourself. Never say anything disparaging about your prior employer, boss or a coworker in an interview, advised Linda Konstan of Sensible Human Resources Consulting, LLC (http://www.lindakonstan.com. "It will lose you the job."
The reasons you're leaving should be professional and growth-based, Jeff Gordon, recruiter, blogger, educator and marketing consultant for IWantAnEducation.com, agreed. Cater your answers to the type of employer you're interviewing with.
Rather than saying your previous environment wasn't conducive to personal growth, put a positive spin on the situation, Sharon Blaivas (www.shakeupmyresume.com) suggested. "Explain you are looking for experience in 'X, Y or Z,' or an environment like 'X, Y or Z,' and believe you can find that here."
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| KNOW WHAT'S COMING: Don't be thrown off by tricky interview questions. Prepare your responses in advance. ADVANCE photo |
2. Where do you see yourself in 5 years?
This standard question regarding your foreseeable future is not just an open-ended inquiry. This is not a good time to spout off half-hatched fantasies of starting your own cupcake bakery or joining the PGA tour after knocking a couple strokes off your handicap.
In health care in particular, employee turnover is costly. Staff, from human resources to management, will devote hours to finding and interviewing the right candidates, and then training them after they are hired. This is not a process they hope to repeat any time soon. Recruiters are looking to make sure your professional goals align with the company and that you will be a good fit for the role at hand.
Rick Saia, CPRW, content writer for Pongo Résumé (http://www.pongoresume.com, said hiring managers are looking for a long-term commitment to the company. The best way to answer this question is to show you hope to be well established as someone who is helping that company succeed.
"You can also turn the question back to the interviewer, and ask where they see the company in 5 years," he suggested. "You might not know on a personal level where you'll be, but most companies have goals and plans that look ahead 2 to 5 years. Their answer might give you a good idea if it's a company worth sticking around that long for."
While it's good to establish yourself as a potential long-term employee, don't get too cocky, cautioned Lavie Margolin, job search advisor at Lion Cub Job Search (www.lioncubjobsearch.blogspot.com) and author of Lion Cub Job Search: Practical Job Search Assistance for Practical Job Seekers. Keep within the context of the industry and role, but as you have not been hired yet, an answer of "here" might not be appropriate.
Instead, say something like, "The actual role is not as important to me as the responsibilities. I would like to assist an organization such as yours in helping to train staff, being a go-to employee for senior management and a trusted representative for the company," Margolin said.
3. Tell me about yourself.
This seemingly innocuous question can be a real danger zone for the chatty, the unfocused and the unprepared. "Employers ask questions about your past, experience, skills and goals to determine fit," Margolin reported. "Your answers will help the employer determine if they can see you in the role of the job." Your goal during the interview is to prove you have the skills, qualifications and abilities for the job no matter the question asked.
When the recruiter asks you about yourself, keep your answer framed in a professional context, Margolin reminded. Don't focus on your family, favorite vacation spot or your Chihuahua, but on your relevant skills, experience and abilities. Keep your answer to two minutes to avoid wandering into inappropriate topics.
4. What about us?
Recruiters will often see if you have done your homework on the company you're interviewing with by asking what you know about the company.
"In this day and age of information being readily available at your fingertips, you would think that all job seekers would have an answer prepared for this question," said Roberta Chinsky Matuson, job search mentor and president of Human Resource Solutions in Northampton, MA (www.yourhrexperts.com); and author of Suddenly In Charge: Managing Up, Managing Down, Succeeding All Around. However, "Most respond with a blank stare, while the hiring manager is thinking, 'Next!'"
This is your chance to demonstrate your level of interest in the position, by researching the facility and by asking questions during the interview. Many candidates stumble at the close when asked if they have any questions for the recruiter, reported Konstan. "A candidate should have questions," she stressed. "Even if you are stumped, you can always ask something like, 'What would be the most important contributions I could make in the first 3-6 months?'"
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