Wednesday, November 6, 2019
How to Think like a Hiring Manager and Get the Job
How to Think like a Hiring Manager and Get the Job When youââ¬â¢re interviewing for a new job, the odds are in your favor if you can rely on a referral from a mutual friend or a big-name former employer. If thatââ¬â¢s not the case, youââ¬â¢re going in to a situation where youââ¬â¢ll need to sell yourself. Hiring managers are often misled by their personal biases- and learning to stack the deck in your favor can pay off when it comes time to get hired!Keep the following in mind if youââ¬â¢re gearing up for an important interview:We tend to think positively about people who we think are like us.What can you find out about the company culture or even the hiring manager in particular to help you demonstrate interests they may share?We tend to view those different from us negatively, even if we need someone with very different skills.While itââ¬â¢s good to be yourself in an interview, itââ¬â¢s only common sense to downplay any fringe interests or edgy personal style features- for example, hide visible tattoos or pierc ings until youââ¬â¢re sure the office culture is receptive to them.First impressions count.ââ¬Å"The halo effectâ⬠and its opposite (ââ¬Å"the pitchfork effect,â⬠maybe?) is what happens when we find one quality we like in a person and assume that the rest of their unknown qualities are probably just as good (or as a bad, if we focus on a quality we donââ¬â¢t like).If you make a great impression with one area of experience or personality trait, the interviewer may give you the benefit of the doubt in areas where they know less about you! (The flip side is of course that one bad impression may color their whole perception of you just as easily.)Peopleà make subconscious assumptions.Try as you might, you wonââ¬â¢t know what traits will ping a hiring managerââ¬â¢s radar. It could be your college, yourà last company, your hometown, the teams youà support, or the stores you visit. Keep an eye out for what you might mention, but always alwaysà be genuine. E veryone can spot a fake.Living and working in New York, I have had to become as cautious about disclosing sports affiliations as most people are about politics, religion, and money! But when Iââ¬â¢m lucky enough to encounter a fellow Mets fan or a member of my alumni association, I play that up like nobodyââ¬â¢s business- donââ¬â¢t be shy about school/team/town name-dropping, just avoid coming across like The Officeââ¬Ësà Andy Bernard and trying to mirror everyoneââ¬â¢s experience with your own!
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