How to Ace Your Job Interview

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Jessica Hensen has been in recruiting and hiring for 11 years, including 9 years at 草榴社区 as a Recruiting Manager leading our Experienced Hiring Team.

During my recruiting experience I鈥檝e conducted hundreds, maybe thousands of interviews, and I've been part of hundreds of hiring decisions for a wide variety of positions.聽Through this experience I鈥檝e definitely found common themes for those聽who are successful in ultimately getting the job, and I鈥檝e summarized those for you below.

Note: Keep in mind that at the end of the day, you never want to take a job that isn鈥檛 right for you.聽As hard as it can be getting turned down, you don鈥檛 want a job that you aren鈥檛 qualified for or that isn鈥檛 the right culture fit.聽Interviews are meant to identify the best person for the job, and you must be yourself and trust the process.聽Use these tips, but also be authentic and your true self when interviewing.聽Good luck!

Great Interviews Start with a Great Resume 

Without the right resume you won鈥檛 get the interview in the first place. 聽The best practices here are simple:

  • 1-2 pages. Period.聽Even if you have 30 years of work experience it鈥檚 2 pages max.聽 Recruiters and hiring managers aren鈥檛 going to read past that amount plus resumes should be summaries 鈥 not an autobiography.聽Keep bullets (not paragraphs) short and concise.
  • Clean formatting goes a long way!聽I can鈥檛 tell you how many resumes I decline because I can hardly read it because the formatting is so poor (even senior level candidates). Find a clean template online and use that to get you started. On average recruiters take anywhere from 30 sec 鈥 2 minutes to review your resume 鈥 if it鈥檚 not easy to follow, your chances of moving forward are much lower.
  • No typos.聽Proofread, then have someone else proofread, then proofread again.
  • Cover letters are a dying art.聽Include them only if they are required or if you have something to add color to that is not listed on your resume.聽A great example of this is explaining a gap on our resume or why your last position ended.聽If you are going to include one then it needs to be great 鈥 not a template you copy and pasted from the internet.

Research the Company Thoroughly

Do your research on the company beforehand and聽go beyond the basics.聽This will help you immensely in responding to questions, asking great questions of the interviewers, and will also help you determine if the company and role is the right fit for you. Remember, you should interview them as much as they are interviewing you!聽Here are some things to include in your research:

  • The person you are speaking with 鈥 what do they do at the company, how long have they been there?聽Do you have anything in common?
  • Why are you interested in working there? You will likely get asked this question specifically.
  • What is their culture and environment like?聽How is it similar or different to where you鈥檝e worked in the past?
  • What is their business model?
  • Have they been in the news lately?
  • Can you find reviews online? 聽is a good resource for this but also remember that reviews tend to skew more negative b/c the happy people rarely think to write a review about it.
  • What is their reputation like in the community?

Be Concise

I frequently begin phone interviews by asking candidates to briefly walk me through their story/work history. I ask them to keep things high level and walk me through their background and experience as an overview. I kid you not, sometimes 20 minutes later I have to jump in and interrupt them!聽It鈥檚 easy to want to make sure you don鈥檛 leave important things out but remember the conversation should have back and forth and no response should be over a few minutes.聽In addition to learning more about their backgrounds, I am also looking to see if they can successfully do what I鈥檝e asked and are intuitive enough to realize when they are being long winded.聽If we hire them and they are asked to give an overview of their work in a meeting, are they going to take 30 minutes to do that? You see, what happens in interviews can be a direct correlation to the performance on the job and I鈥檓 looking for those cues during my conversations.

Being long-winded is also feedback I get from many of our managers at the 1st and 2nd onsite interview stage.聽It鈥檚 very common to have candidates come in that take way too long to answer every single question they get asked.聽You really need to look for cues when someone is ready for you to move on or even stop and ask if you are providing the right level of detail.聽It鈥檚 always better to get clarification and ask than go down an unnecessary rabbit hole.

Know Your Strengths and Opportunity Areas

I鈥檓 always surprised at how such a simple question can throw people off and how many people give very generic responses to this question.聽Before you go on any interview, you should write down your strengths and opportunity areas and specific examples within each.聽Going back to past performance reviews is a great way to do this and even bring your reviews up in the conversation.

It鈥檚 also important to know that opportunity areas or weaknesses are okay!聽 If you give an inauthentic answer to this question like 鈥渕y biggest weakness is that I work too hard鈥, it makes it seem like you can鈥檛 admit your faults or have too big of an ego.聽We see right through those responses immediately. The main thing companies want to hear is that you have been working on and seeing improvements in your opportunities 鈥 not that you don鈥檛 have any.聽An example of a good response might be 鈥淚鈥檝e been working on improving my communication skills. I tend to lack confidence in larger group settings but I鈥檝e made strong improvements on this over the past year and have received positive feedback from my manager.鈥澛營n this response I was honest with the opportunity area but immediately spoke to improvements.

Have Work/Project Examples Ready

While preparing for an interview, think through examples of recent projects or scenarios you鈥檝e been in, what the results were, and the feedback you received.聽You are either going to get asked specific behavioral questions, like 鈥渢ell me about a time when you disagreed with your manager鈥, or asked to provide examples in a response you are giving.聽For example, if you mention receiving strong feedback on her leadership skills, I might follow up by asking about a challenging situation you鈥檝e faced as a leader and how you handled it.聽Another example is, if you say you drove strong results in your business unit this year, I might follow up and ask what the specific metrics were that you hit to determine that success. It can be difficult to think quickly when you鈥檙e nervous so it's good to prepare in advance for these types of questions.

Ask Great Questions

I鈥檇 say there is a 95% chance that every single interviewer will ask if you have any questions, and the types of questions you ask tells us a lot about your potential fit. Do you read a bunch of generic questions from your notebook and ask every person the same thing or do you cater to your questions to the conversation or specific role someone is in? Interviewers actually like getting asked strong or sometimes difficult questions because it shows intellectual curiosity and that you are taking the interview and job search seriously. It鈥檚 okay to prepare some in advance but make sure you cater them to the conversation and interviewer so it doesn鈥檛 feel so scripted.聽A few questions are always better to save for the hiring manager or recruiter such as;聽working hours, compensation, and other benefits.

I hope that these tips have been helpful聽if you are currently or will sometime in the future be conducting a job search.聽As I said above, you ultimately want to be yourself, but use these tips as a guide for the conversation.聽Good luck!

Want more tips from 草榴社区 Recruiters? Check out聽, or聽.

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