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Harvey Mackay
Column for the week of February 9, 2009
Do Your Homework
After The Interview Too |
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After a job interview, do you
know what happens in the office of the recruiter, personnel manager
or boss you just visited? They close the door and take out an
evaluation form or a recording device and pass judgment on your
future. In other words, they do their homework.
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I'm astonished at how few job
candidates take their own futures seriously enough to record
or organize their notes on interviews that potentially have such
an impact on their lives.
If you're going to put your future
and your fate in anyone's hands, it should be your own. You have
your own evaluation to make, impressions about your performance
and about the company.
Those of you who have read my
first two booksSwim With The Sharks Without Being Eaten
Alive and Beware The Naked Man Who Offers You His Shirtprobably
know what's coming next. First there was the Mackay 66 Customer
Profile. Then came the Mackay 33 for Employees and Managers.
What else but the Mackay 22 Job Finder, which you fill out after
all job interviews? All these forms are available free on my
website, HarveyMackay.com. (Can you tell I like lists?) |
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Because I believe so strongly
in my mantra"Prepare to win"I've also prepared
a questionnaire I call the Mackay Sweet 16, which you can also
find on my website. This will help you get ready before you ever
go to your first interview
Was I smart enough to use the
Mackay 22 when I got my first job? No. I did, however, strongly
suggest that my three children use the Mackay 22 when they launched
their job hunts. They were each ultimately successful.
As for the Mackay 22 form, obviously
you don't flip it out during your interview. Don't refer to it
either. The job interview is a corporate ritual, and your role
in this mating dance is not to take control, but to react intelligently
and creatively to the signals you get from your interviewer.
Getting the job is always going to be your number-one priority,
but getting the answers to the questions about the job is right
up there as a close second.
Simple discipline. Basic questions.
But for my money, simple and basic are the only way to go. This
is so important; I'd fill it out even before I wrote the thank
you note to the interviewer!
Here's a sampling of the information
you should gather:
1. Date of Interview: Name of
firm: Phone number: Address: Interviewer: Title:
2. Describe position being filled:
3. Last person left job because:
4. Position reports to: Title: Who reports to this position?
5. Key duties of job:
6. If last person in job succeeded, why? If last person in job
failed, why?
7. Chances to get ahead? Describe: Can you move laterally within
the company to other departments requiring other skills? Describe:
Does the company encourage educational and training programs?
Describe:
8. Would relocation be necessary now? In the future? Probable?
9. Describe the "ideal" candidate:
10. Important information about pay, benefits, etc.:
11. When can you expect a decision? Was the interviewer specific?
Vague?
12. Five most important questions you were asked?
13. Three most difficult or embarrassing questions?
14. What three things did the interviewer seem to like most about
you or your background?
15. What reservations or concerns did the interviewer reveal?
What did you say or do during the interview that you wished you
hadn't?
16. New company information you learned that you might be able
to use later?
17. How would this job/company be a good fit? How would it be
a poor fit?
18. Did you mention any references? Which ones? Have you alerted
these people?
19. How did the interviewer describe your potential boss?
20. Is this the kind of person you would trust? Feel comfortable
working with?
21. Any special conditions under which you might be offered the
job? Did you mention any conditions for you to accept it? 22.
What would be the biggest attraction to you in taking this job?
The biggest drawback?
Complete the form as soon as
possible after your interview, while the information is still
fresh in your mind. Research tells us that we forget 50 percent
of what we've heard within four hours. Then use it as a reference
tool as you move along toward getting the job you've always wanted.
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Mackay's Moral: |
The info you gather from your first
interview is invaluable for your second interview. |
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The Author  |
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Harvey Mackay is a nationally
syndicated columnist for United Feature Syndicate. His weekly
articles appear in 52 newspapers around the country, including
the Chicago Sun Times, Rocky Mountain News, Orange County Register,
Minneapolis Star Tribune and Arizona Republic.
http://www.mackay.com/
Copyright, Harvey Mackay. All rights reserved. |
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