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I interview a lot of people. Some freeze up. Some don't.
Here's what I'm looking for.
What can I do to be less nervous during my interview?
What are you afraid of? Really. This is a hard self-examination question, but you need to know -- specifically -- what terrifies you. 80% of the time it's the "what if I make a mistake?" question. Which is -- ultimately -- foolish. As a musician and a software geek, let me tell you that mistakes must happen. The question isn't "am I going to make a mistake?" The question is "when I make my usual mistake, will I recover gracefully."
Do some research on Performance Anxiety. Read sites like this: http://www.sharonstohrer.com/performance%5Fanxiety.html for more information on what you can do.
As a consultant, my biggest mistake is misjudging politics. The influence the person actually has over the organization. As a musician, I miss the chord changes and have to leap ahead, mentally, to where the song's going and figure out what I'm going to do to arrive with the rest of the band and make it look like I meant it that way.
My employers wants me to explain what I used to do at my prior employment.
What to do I want to know? I want to know exactly what skills you used. I want specific, technical verbs. Did you design? Code? Test? Write requirements? Did you use tools like configuration management, automated testing, continuous integration? Did you work alone or in a pair? How did you come to understand the domain? The specific problem? The users?
What exactly is my interviewer looking for? See above.
At some point, my interviewer will ask "do you have any questions for me while you're here?"
You need to consider what it is about the job that appeals to you and scares you and ask specific questions about that.
Many people ask how long I've been with my company -- it's a way of judging turnover and the possibility of getting cut. "30 years" is a conversation stopper -- not many folks expect that.
I'm a consultant; when I'm being interviewed, I ask what's going on -- why do they need me. ? Who will I be working with. ? What do they want from me. ? I need to know about their processes, their tools and their organization. I need to know about the problem domain, the users, and the funding.
My interviewer always asks why I'm looking for a new job.
Do Not Sugarcoat. We actually need to know what actually motivates you. Not what you think we want to hear. We interview lots of people for a position; if money motivates you, then we can make that happen. If you left because you didn't get along, or you were arrested, or you got caught with a gun in your desk, we'd like to know that, too. Some stories run afoul of EEO guidelines, but we need to know what you want from life so we can find a way to dangle that in front of you and make you work your tail off (cruel, but true.)
What can I say to compete against applicants with more work experience?
Skills. It's all about skills. What specific things did you do? What problems did you solve? How gnarly was the business problem? What was the technology stack? How did you cope with debugging? Testing? Users who lie? Deadlines?
As an interviewer, I need to know three things.
- What do you know?
- What can you do?
- What kind of person are you?
Don't tell me what I want to hear. Don't sugarcoat. Lay it out there clearly, so I can fit you into the organization and find a compensation plan that will make you want to stay there.
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I interview a lot of people. Some freeze up. Some don't.
Here's what I'm looking for.
What can I do to be less nervous during my interview?
What are you afraid of? Really. This is a hard self-examination question, but you need to know -- specifically -- what terrifies you. 80% of the time it's the "what if I make a mistake?" question. Which is -- ultimately -- foolish. As a musician and a software geek, let me tell you that mistakes must happen. The question isn't "am I going to make a mistake?" The question is "when I make my usual mistake, will I recover gracefully."
Do some research on Performance Anxiety. Read sites like this: http://www.sharonstohrer.com/performance%5Fanxiety.html for more information on what you can do.
As a consultant, my biggest mistake is misjudging politics. The influence the person actually has over the organization. As a musician, I miss the chord changes and have to leap ahead, mentally, to where the song's going and figure out what I'm going to do to arrive with the rest of the band and make it look like I meant it that way.
My employers wants me to explain what I used to do at my prior employment.
What to I want to know? I want to know exactly what skills you used. I want specific, technical verbs. Did you design? Code? Test? Write requirements? Did you use tools like configuration management, automated testing, continuous integration? Did you work alone or in a pair? How did you come to understand the domain? The specific problem? The users?
What exactly is my interviewer looking for? See above.
At some point, my interviewer will ask "do you have any questions for me while you're here?"
You need to consider what it is about the job that appeals to you and scares you and ask specific questions about that.
Many people ask how long I've been with my company -- it's a way of judging turnover and the possibility of getting cut. "30 years" is a conversation stopper -- not many folks expect that.
I ask what's going on -- why they need me. Who will I be working with. What do they want from me. I need to know about their processes, their tools and their organization. I need to know about the problem domain, the users, and the funding.
My interviewer always asks why I'm looking for a new job.
Do Not Sugarcoat. We actually need to know what actually motivates you. Not what you think we want to hear. We interview lots of people for a position; if money motivates you, then we can make that happen. If you left because you didn't get along, or you were arrested, or you got caught with a gun in your desk, we'd like to know that, too. Some stories run afoul of EEO guidelines, but we need to know what you want from life so we can find a way to dangle that in front of you and make you work your tail off (cruel, but true.)
What can I say to compete against applicants with more work experience?
Skills. It's all about skills. What specific things did you do? What problems did you solve? How gnarly was the business problem? What was the technology stack? How did you cope with debugging? Testing? Users who lie? Deadlines?
As an interviewer, I need to know three things.
- What do you know?
- What can you do?
- What kind of person are you?
Don't tell me what I want to hear. Don't sugarcoat. Lay it out there clearly, so I can fit you into the organization and find a compensation plan that will make you want to stay there.
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answered Nov 30 '08 at 21:13
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I interview a lot of people. Some freeze up. Some don't.
Here's what I'm looking for.
What can I do to be less nervous during my interview?
What are you afraid of? Really. This is a hard self-examination question, but you need to know -- specifically -- what terrifies you. 80% of the time it's the "what if I make a mistake?" question. Which is -- ultimately -- foolish. As a musician and a software geek, let me tell you that mistakes must happen. The question isn't "am I going to make a mistake?" The question is "when I make my usual mistake, will I recover gracefully."
As a consultant, my biggest mistake is misjudging politics. The influence the person actually has over the organization. As a musician, I miss the chord changes and have to leap ahead, mentally, to where the song's going and figure out what I'm going to do to arrive with the rest of the band and make it look like I meant it that way.
My employers wants me to explain what I used to do at my prior employment.
What to I want to know? I want to know exactly what skills you used. I want specific, technical verbs. Did you design? Code? Test? Write requirements? Did you use tools like configuration management, automated testing, continuous integration? Did you work alone or in a pair? How did you come to understand the domain? The specific problem? The users?
What exactly is my interviewer looking for? See above.
At some point, my interviewer will ask "do you have any questions for me while you're here?"
You need to consider what it is about the job that appeals to you and scares you and ask specific questions about that.
Many people ask how long I've been with my company -- it's a way of judging turnover and the possibility of getting cut. "30 years" is a conversation stopper -- not many folks expect that.
I ask what's going on -- why they need me. Who will I be working with. What do they want from me. I need to know about their processes, their tools and their organization. I need to know about the problem domain, the users, and the funding.
My interviewer always asks why I'm looking for a new job.
Do Not Sugarcoat. We actually need to know what actually motivates you. Not what you think we want to hear. We interview lots of people for a position; if money motivates you, then we can make that happen. If you left because you didn't get along, or you were arrested, or you got caught with a gun in your desk, we'd like to know that, too. Some stories run afoul of EEO guidelines, but we need to know what you want from life so we can find a way to dangle that in front of you and make you work your tail off (cruel, but true.)
What can I say to compete against applicants with more work experience?
Skills. It's all about skills. What specific things did you do? What problems did you solve? How gnarly was the business problem? What was the technology stack? How did you cope with debugging? Testing? Users who lie? Deadlines?
As an interviewer, I need to know three things.
- What do you know?
- What can you do?
- What kind of person are you?
Don't tell me what I want to hear. Don't sugarcoat. Lay it out there clearly, so I can fit you into the organization and find a compensation plan that will make you want to stay there.
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