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| Interviewing is a selling opportunity. It's a relatively short time frame and you're in the spotlight. Even in so-called casual interviews, you're watched and evaluated very closely. You're compared to others and graded. Everything you do, everything you wear, and everything you say is magnified, and either helps or hurts you. | |||
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You can sell yourself into a job and receive an offer
by using "closing comments."
Closing comments are thoughts you drop into the conversation to
"close the sale." Closing comments screen you into the
position as opposed to screening you out. They say, in effect,
"You should hire me. I belong here."
Interviewers want to know at least three things: 1) Can you do the job? (Do you have the technical skills and experience?) 2) Will you do the job? (Are you motivated to perform?) and 3) How do you fit into the corporate culture? (Is the personal chemistry good?) To be successful, you need to win in all three areas. Let's discuss them separately. Can you do the job? The company wants to know if you have the required technical skills and experience. They also want to know if you can take the ball and run with it. You want to show sureness (self confidence) rather than unsureness (lack of confidence). Don't lie, but don't be unnecessarily modest. You want to communicate "I can handle this with no sweat," not, "I could do it if you'd hold my hand every step of the way." Here are some good closing comments: Will you do the job? The company wants to know your level of motivation. Do you want the job? If so, how badly? (Remember that wanting it too badly can be interpreted as desperation.) Here are some closing comments: How do you fit into the corporate culture? The company wants to know if you'll like others and if they'll like you. You want to use phrases that say, in effect, "I like it here." For example: Footnote: A consultant came here to interview this week. Midway through the meeting I said I was going to get more coffee. She said, "Would you like me to get it? I like to make myself useful." I had to laugh. She's a sales and business development person, and I knew what she was doingshe was selling me. I loved every minute of it, and told her so. We had a good laugh together. Her dropping that closing comment into the conversation really gave us something to talk about.
I'm convinced that if you use these comments during your interviews,
you'll make a wonderfully positive impressiongood enough to get
the job offer or consulting assignment you're after.
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