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This is how you FAIL an interview! |
| 12 Feb 2012 | |||
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As a leading professional recruitment agency in Singapore, we’ve seen and interviewed tonnes of applicants. Our clients pay us top dollar to surface across the top talent that fits their criteria 110%. Needless to say, not a lot that came through our door made it. Many rejected applicants are highly experienced and educated. But they just can’t make that 30 minute impression even if their life depends on it. Here is what I’ve learned so you can too and avoid bombing your next interview.
Under-dressing And plunging neckline? Unless my client is hiring a cleavage, they just distract from everything else.
Arrive Unprepared Be prepared. Do the necessary homework BEFORE the interview not during them. The more you know about the company and industry, the chances of asking the right questions will naturally arise. Preparations also involved having the right answers about yourself at your fingertip, and not conjure one up when you are asked about your area of improvement. Here is an Interview Preparation Sheet that could guide you.
The worst Handshake The handshake is a long-standing tradition since time immemorial. If you can’t even get 3 seconds right, you will be slaughtered in the next 30 minutes. A good handshake should be complete, firm and coupled with a smile and eye contact. That is confidence oozing out from you.
Ring Ring. Hello? I even had an applicant picking up the call, talking for a good 30 seconds while I re-appreciate the decoration of my meeting room. Just turn the damn thing off. The world isn’t going to end because you missed that one phone call. Your lack of social etiquette speaks volume.
Body language of kids
Money talk Learn about the position comprehensively first. To be paid a fair wage is certain but before you go into it, assess how good you will be doing it, if you will love the job and will the company have trouble working with someone like you. These are not answers you can provide in split seconds. Sleep on it and talk about the salary once you worked that out.
Zero personality I once hired a lady who has zero experience but because she was into roller-hockey like I used to. It didn’t work out eventually but it tells you the halo effect even seasoned recruiter like me will fall into. Turn that to your advantage.
No Follow Up Based on my assessment, probably 1 in 30 applicants would write a follow up. Be that 1 in 30. - Adrian Tan, Managing Director
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