Show Notes
You work so hard to get the interview, why botch it? Take some time to learn the pitfalls to avoid so you dominate the interview with offers. Join Scott and Andrew as we share the top mistakes.
9 Mistakes To Avoid When Interviewing
Not Doing Any Research on the Company and Position
Not Preparing for the Common Interview Questions
Assuming you are "Good Enough"
Not Having Any Questions to Ask the Hiring Team
Not Knowing Anyone Inside
Forgetting To Follow-Up
Lack of Self-Awareness related to Skills-Employer Match
Relying Too Heavily on Nervousness
Not Checking your Appearance
Resources (including affiliate links)
013 Never Heard Anything After The Interview010 Interviewing with Confidence003 Branding, Interviewing and Online Applications [Hot Mic]
iTunes: Rate and Review
Raw and Unedited Transcript
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00:00:00 - 00:05:01
Aw. Welcome to job seekers radio. I'm Andrew, and I'm Scott this production is meant to provide you meaningful support defiant. Great careers faster. Whether you're working or not today seekers radio we cover the nine mistakes to avoid when you're interviewing now, this is a favorite topic for us. We talk to people all the time about interviewing skills. There are classes probably every economic of every employment development office in the country. There are many resources to end yet. We find that. It is probably a hidden talent market for those who truly interview. Well, and I'm not talking about those who quote interview. Well, and then turn out to be something else. Once they get on the job were just talking about having a good interviewing conversation. So the first mistake to avoid actually is not doing any research on the company or the people you. You're about to meet, right? I can't tell you. How many people have come in? When I've been interviewing to hire. They come in thinking that their skills will speak for themselves. And they haven't done the research, I pick up on it right away. And most people do I'm not I'm not special here. Wait a minute. It's got to read my resume yet. Probably did which is why you're here today. But if you haven't shown enough interest in my company to actually know what to talk about it's gonna show right away. And that can be a very quick disqualifier. And it's a small investment of your time to overlook this is just nonsensical. Right. Just doesn't make any sense. We have the internet his days and most companies have an internet presence. Now. Maybe they're not really good. If you're with a small company, maybe they haven't done something that that is really friendly on your phone, but they still probably have a website. You can find out something about them. Just doing. Google search class horror glass to work series. I be so surprised if there wasn't a whole bunch of stuff on glass door that you can learn about that company right now, it is a simple mistake that simply should not happen. And in full disclosure, I've done that. And I realized once I walk in. I don't have enough information. And I can't blame them when they don't call me back because I didn't show enough caring to do that research. There's no excuse. I mean, whatever the motivation is it could be that. You don't want the position, but they invited you for an interview anyway. Yeah. Still just because now my professional credibility is on the line. Of course, we'll get to excuses in a moment. But the next mistake to avoid is not prepared for the standard questions that you know, everybody's going to ask right? I would say nine interviews out of ten have five or six very basic questions things like tell me about yourself. What should we know about you that really doesn't have a? Well, it has many meanings or purposes as it does people who ask they want the conversation to start. They want to know a little bit about you. And they want to know why they should listen to you beyond the your answer be prepared with something.