Hone your interview etiquette................
Churn the right mix of deportment, attitude and dressing skills for a great job
talk !
Never make the big mistake of treating an
interview lightly. It's not an impromptu thing where you depend on your
improvisation skills. An interview requires careful thought and planning before
you take it. Keeping in mind some basic attitudes and presentation techniques
will help you sail through it with panache.
So if you thought that going for an interview
just meant pulling your best suit out of the wardrobe and updating your resume,
please think again. You are forgetting the other essentials: body language,
basic etiquette and attitude.
Remember that you are actually selling an
entire package and the packaging, in this case, is as relevant as the product
inside. Ultimately you are presenting yourself as a valuable professional to a
new job environment. And you can't do that without minding the basic interview
etiquette to get you ahead of the rest of the pack.
An interview is the sum total of many parts.
It's not just what you say but how you say it that matters equally. So it's
good to brush up on more than just your training skills when you do go in for
an interview.
ATTIRE
How you dress for an interview is perhaps as
relevant as the way you lay out your resume. The basic
rules of corporate etiquette: "A person who is sloppy in appearance shows
a sloppy personality, so you have to be decently dressed." Of course,
decently dressed does not necessarily mean being dressed to the gills. In most
cases, this would mean you would wear long sleeved shirts and a pair of formal
trousers.
In fact, "A lot of young people do not have the money to invest in suits,
consequently, they wear ill-fitting or borrowed suits and that looks even
worse. A tie, shirt and pant should do the trick for most junior level positions."
Most HR experts would also tell you to mind
the accessories like ties, belts and shoes. To be sure, badly matched shoes and
ties can have a jarring effect on an interviewer. Similarly, please avoid heavy
Jewellery or personal accessories as they would look incongruous on you.
ENTRANCE AND INTRODUCTION
Even though most of us are primed for the
basic grilling that we would face during the interview, we seldom pay attention
to the way we enter an interview room or how we introduce ourselves. "A lot of people do not think it
important to knock properly while entering the interview room. They assume that
as an interview is taking place, the panel will be expecting them."
In fact, the best way to enter an interview is
to knock, ask for permission to enter and then wait for a while before you
actually sit down. Few interviewees know this but the interview panel needs a
little quiet time to discuss the previous candidate before they get around to
the next one. So your silence till you actually get seated would be very
valuable.
Try and keep a bag with you for all your papers and certificates;
make sure this bag is an unobtrusive as possible.
ATTITUDE AND RESPONSE
This is a grey area for most interview
candidates. While dressing up and resume writing are skills you can Go for a
mock exercise before the real talk at the job table handle with a little
practice, cultivating the right attitude as an interviewee requires a lot of
patience and reading between the lines.
-> The usual complaint of most
interviewers is that few interviewees are able to and perhaps the best thing
you can do for getting your answer right. Most interviewers like to give a lead
to the candidate in the way they ask the question, so it's entirely up to you
to note facial expressions and the tone of the words.
-> Do you show your certificates immediately to
the interview panel? Not till you are asked actually. You might
already have sent in your resume, so you shouldn't try and offload all your
achievements and skills onto the panel till a turn in the interview leads to
such a situation.
-> Try and take cues form the tonal variations,
facial expressions and thrust of questions from the interview panel. That in
itself will give you a clue as to where this interview is heading.
No comments:
Post a Comment