Congratulations!
You’ve gotten an interview for that job you want. The next step is to
ace it and get closer to getting hired. To do that, you’ll want to avoid
making one -- or more -- of these five big job interview mistakes.
Criticizing a Previous Employer
Putting
down the company you’re trying to leave or one you’ve worked for in the
past gives off the impression you’re a negative person who can’t let go
of the past. It also may make people wonder what you’d say about their
company if they hire you.
Also, “it's not a good sign if you're saying really mean things about your old boss,” says Jacob Shriar, a growth manager at Officevibe. “It doesn't make you look good.”
Missing Opportunities to Prove Yourself
Interviewers
will ask questions that give you the chance to demonstrate your
qualifications and show you have what it takes to do the job. “Failure
to answer questions with ESR (Example, Specifics, Results) responses,”
is a failure to make the most of the interview, says Hank Boyer,
president and CEO of Boyer Management Group.
“Most
questions offer you the opportunity in your answer to provide the
interviewer with specific, relevant examples of you accomplishing some
type of measurable result that benefited the employer,” says Boyer.
“This requires you to have done your homework ahead of time, and to
accurately portray what happened, so that when the employer verifies
your story with prior employers, it matches what you said.”
Providing the Wrong Recommendations
When
you first hit the job market, it’s easy to think you don’t have any
connections who could serve as professional recommendations. The answer
is not to use your mom, your uncle or some other personal contact as a
reference.
“When
graduating from high school or college one thinks they don't know
anyone and therefore don't have references they can use,” says Carolyn
R. Owens, founder and president of Infinity Coaching.
“They decide to bring to the interview a letter from their parents
stating how great of a son or daughter they are; this does not go over
well with hiring managers and the candidate is not taken seriously.”
Setting Yourself Up to Fail on Social Media
Social
media is part of the process companies use to vet prospective employees
these days. Before you walk into an interview, there’s a good chance
your prospective employer is looking at your Facebook, Twitter,
Linkedin, Tumblr, Google +, and other social media accounts. If they
don’t like what they see, your interview may be doomed.
“Posting
on social media sites how you have interviewed countlessly
unsuccessfully or a picture of you partying the night before an
interview,” says career coach Chantay Bridges. “This is not what a
potential employer wants to see” and it’s not doing you any favors.
Bringing Children Along
This may seem obvious, but career coach Jill MacFadyen says she once saw a “man
[arrive] for the interview with a toddler. He had on a leather jacket.
The toddler had no socks and no jacket, and it was cold.”
The
leather jacket and the toddler weren’t the biggest problems, though.
“In general, big mistakes are not showcasing how you meet the company
needs,” says MacFayden. If you show up late, improperly dressed, without
having done research, or even with a child in tow, you’re showing the
company exactly why they don’t need you instead of what they could gain
by accepting you for the position.
By Hannah Hamilton
Monster Contributing Writer
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