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Recently I went for an interview. But unfortunately it did not go that well. Now I want to get over it and continue. How to go about it?

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You should probably expend some effort adding programming-specific details to the question. I won't vote to close for now to give you a chance to do that. – Rex M Feb 20 at 5:50
I, on the other hand, will not be so merciful (and I thing you mean "get over it"). – paxdiablo Feb 20 at 5:51
Please make this a community post. – tehvan Feb 20 at 6:18
Why make it a CW? Is it a poll? Is it meta discussion about SO? – EBGreen Feb 20 at 6:25
Why make it CW? ... because it is "not-programming-related" and "off-topic" and "subjective" – Software Monkey Feb 20 at 8:06
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closed as not programming related by Sam Saffron, paxdiablo, EBGreen, David Feb 20 at 7:01

10 Answers

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I have some funny experiences about interviews. What comes to last 3 firms I worked for, I felt that the interview went badly. On the other hand those interviews that went well, I wasn't chosen. Maybe I should learn to see myself from another perspective.

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Don't dwell on it. Everyone blows an interview now and again. It's just like any other skill, in that you just need to practice. Don't beat yourself up about it either. I've had plenty of interviews which I felt "didn't go well", but still ended up getting an offer.

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it's just one interview... think of it as a learning experience and move on. as a programmer many more interviews are likely to come your way in the near future, so be better prepared!

  • identify the areas you're weak in and brush up on those skills.
  • find answers to the specific questions you couldn't answer in the interview. there's no reason you should ever walk into another interview not knowing the same things you didn't know before.
  • know the position you're interviewing for. if they list skills a, b, and c as requirements, be able to talk about a, b, and c.
  • be confident. believe in yourself if you want others to believe in you.

good luck!

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I'm not really sure what you're asking. You get over it by going on another interview.

If you can tell us what went wrong in the interview, maybe we can help.

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  1. Send a letter to the interviewer thanking them for their time.
  2. Write down a list of things that went poorly.
  3. Analyze the list as honestly as possible. Was it lack of technical skills? Were there problems with communication? Was it my fault, or was the interviewer's (this one is hard to answer honestly)? Was this job outside my abilities?
  4. Solve the things that went poorly. Make sure that you are as prepared as possible for the next interview. If you couldn't think of three inane answers to some hypothetical question, think of them now so you aren't caught so unprepared. Maybe you've applied for the wrong job; your skill set might be better suited for something else.

More importantly, don't quit. It can take several interviews to find a good job, and all getting down on yourself is going to do is make the next interview worse. Shit happens, it'll be okay.

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+1 for the good advice. Don't do 2) and 3) in 1) though :) – tehvan Feb 20 at 6:15
+1.. :) agree with tehvan as well haha – krebstar Feb 20 at 6:19
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Performing your best at an interview is a skill that develops over time. Like most skills, they go rusty if they're not regularly exercised.

When I'm in the market for a new job, I'll try and get a practice interview in before the ideal job. The practice interview helps me sharpen my skills and get back into the interview "zone". In this situation I'm fairly relaxed as it's not the dream position and I find this flows through to subsequent interviews.

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One thing I wouldnt do is find the interviewer on FaceBook, and add him as a friend. I lost a GOOD interview like that. I also would not hesitate to email him and ask him/her if they are interested, and if not, move right on.

EDIT: Also, don't be afraid to ask what you did wrong at the interview. Alot of interviews will be willing to say, "I cant hire you because ___".

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What did you learn from the experience? Consider it a practice for the next interview, which you will surely do better with if you learn from your mistakes this time around.

If you feel comfortable doing so, ask your interviewer for feedback on how you might do better.

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Analyse what went wrong. Write it down.

Then see if you can learn something from it. Then make changes to learn and rectify those lecunae. Write them down.

Then move on. Life is full of such lessons. Those are meant to learn and not brood.

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Why dont you get some feedback from the person who conducted your interview and try to improve on those?

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Because there is the potential for legal issues, in the US at least companies will rarely offer feedback beyond generic "we didn't feel there was a fit" answers. – Andrew Grant Feb 20 at 6:04
Can't you even legally give positive feedback? – tehvan Feb 20 at 6:16
And aside from the legal issues, companies usually want to leave you with as positive an impression about the company as possible. That's why they will usually give you a sales pitch on the company, even if they know they are not going to hire you. – DasBoot Feb 20 at 6:40
It's not that it's illegal to give positive feedback, it's that companies generally prohibit any type of feedback to avoid the risk of something being said that COULD be legally dubious. – Andrew Grant Feb 20 at 7:16
I never had a problem with this. last couple of times I got some very good feedback on areas to improve. yes US top tech companies. – Kripp Feb 20 at 15:39

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