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  • Shortly before the interview, write out the details of a time you overcame a problem or did something particularly competent. What you did, how you overcame, the effect it had, the recognition you got.

    Not for use in the interview, just to get yourself in a good headspace for displaying your strengths.

  • My best interviews were the two where I was calm, relaxed, and myself. And I was offered the job each time.

    Granted these interviews were for a better job than the one I had, but, at the time, I had a pretty good job and didn’t technically need the one I was interviewing for. That allowed me to be more relaxed, I made a few well-placed jokes, and was just myself, which is ultimately who you want them to hire anyway - the person you really are, not some stuffed shirt, stiff version of you.

  • Research the shit out of the company and (if possible) your interview board, ask informed questions, and approach the interview as a two way street: You are interviewing them/the company every bit as much as they are interviewing you.

    Make sure you actually want to work at this place because you'll probably be spending at least 40 hours of your life there every week.

  • I’ve been interviewing folks for an internship position lately. These have been remote interviews. Six things that have made candidates stand out to me.

    • Get your camera angle straight. Don’t slouch in the corner. I need professionals so I need you to look like one.
    • Hide the weird shit in your backgrounds, unless it’s something you want to talk about
    • Have presence / wow factor. I’m interviewing for a position that will sometimes talk to customers. I’m your customer at the moment and I really do want to buy what you’re selling, and will absolutely do so if you wow me.
    • Read the job description, I put a lot of effort into that thing (I know, not every company does). Get to know the JD and company website. I had a marketing guy apply and he got through the resume review because he had an lot experience in my industry. Turns out he didn’t and I read right through it. Don’t waste my and your time, neither of us have enough of it on this planet as is.
    • Have hobbies, extracurriculars. I get tired of asking the same boring questions to everyone so I may ask you about them. I’m in no way religious but surprisingly, I’ve now had two candidates talk to me about how they’re a leader in their church and that they’re leading groups or projects there. It got them both to the next round. I want to hire a colleague not a robot.
    • Have writing and presentation samples prepared. I want to see how you document things I want to see the work you’re proud of. I need dynamism and a diverse team, not all of us need to be customer facing rockstars. A beautiful presentation absolutely can and has won me over on candidates that did not have the interview presence.

    Some don’ts

    • Don’t act aloof. I’m giving you my attention and I need the same from you.
    • Don’t be cocky. I want confidence but not cockiness, as cockiness would likely have my clients calling me telling me to get you off their projects.
    • Don’t ask me to rate how well you did at the end of the interview. That’s what practice interviews are for.
  • When they ask if you can/want to do a type of work and the simple answer is ‘No’, never directly say no but instead talk around your limitations in as positive a way you can.

  • If you suck at interviews cheat, or get lucky.

    I flunked the interview for the job I wanted, did well in an interview for a different position at the same company, new boss loved me and I have no clue why. She got fired the weekend before I started and I got moved into an even better job than I'd originally wanted.

    For my only other interview ever, I got in because I literally just googled answers to the coding test on my phone just out of view of the camera, not that they were watching anyway. I'm glad I did too, that company was an unethical hell hole and it's tragic that it hasn't folded. I left after a couple of months and got abother job with the company from the first paragraph, no interview at all, and significantly better pay (more than double lol).

    I seriously have no clue how people get jobs the normal way. I've tried, I've been trying for years and can't get another interview.

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