resume Archives - PF Simplified https://add-vodka.com/tag/resume/ When Life Gives You Lemons => ADD VODKA Tue, 04 Aug 2015 20:13:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://add-vodka.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/cropped-pf_logog-32x32.png resume Archives - PF Simplified https://add-vodka.com/tag/resume/ 32 32 How to do Well in an Interview https://add-vodka.com/how-to-do-well-in-an-interview/ https://add-vodka.com/how-to-do-well-in-an-interview/#comments Fri, 23 Sep 2011 14:59:05 +0000 http://add-vodka.com/?p=142 So, you’ve read my post about resume writing and you snagged an interview (probably because you wrote your resume properly). Congrats! The fun isn’t over yet, and unfortunately you’ve entered the most time consuming part of your job search. Interviewing is no walk in the park but it’s crucial that you rock the socks off …

How to do Well in an Interview is a post from: When Life Gives You Lemons. Did you like the post? Follow me on Twitter, like me on Facebook, or hop on over to my blog and leave me your feedback.

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So, you’ve read my post about resume writing and you snagged an interview (probably because you wrote your resume properly). Congrats!

The fun isn’t over yet, and unfortunately you’ve entered the most time consuming part of your job search. Interviewing is no walk in the park but it’s crucial that you rock the socks off of your interviewers so you can get that dream job that you’ve been waiting on for your whole life.

Preparation is key when it comes to blowing an interview out of the water, and recruiters and hiring managers know the difference between somebody who prepared and somebody who didn’t. Reading this is your first step, but you have a lot more work to do.

get a job after an interview

Here are some suggestions, from a recruiter, that will make the difference when it comes to your interview:

Spend some quality time with the job description

Remember how you printed out the job description and highlighted all the key skills and abilities that the position needed? The Human Resources profession calls these skills competencies, and you need to get intimate with them.

Grab that job description again, and think of specific examples of times when you displayed these competencies.

An example:  if the job description mentions that a key competency is the ability to show initiative, my example might be about a time when I initiated a workshop on something that I felt my co-workers and I needed to learn more about.

Now write the example down. Make sure it’s a positive example, and underneath it, list all of the skills you used in that initiative. You might have used leadership skills, organization skills, or communication skills.

Consider whether any of the skills you may have used in that example correspond to a competency in the job description. If so, great! Many examples of your achievements can be used for more than one competency.

Do this for each competency that is necessary for the job. This will help you immensely with the behavioral interviewing questions – ie the “tell me about a time when..” and “can you describe a time when you..” questions which are notorious for being difficult to answer.

People tend to find the behavioral questions really hard, but they are only hard if you don’t prepare for them.

Then, dig deep into your mind

Sometimes interviewers are interested in seeing the characteristics and behaviours that you possess that are not necessarily in the job description.

Write down 3 examples of things that you have done that you are really proud of. Write down the idea, the way you carried it out or achieved the goal, and the end result. You can use things from your personal life, if you don’t have anything professional to recall. In interviews, an interviewer likes to see a well rounded person, so using an example from your personal life can serve you well at times.

Say you planned your friends wedding for her. You decided you were going to help her out, arranged the cake, the flowers, the seating arrangements, the transportation, the guest lists, invitations, and emceed the event. While you were doing this, I have no doubt that you had to communicate effectively with a billion different people. Finally, your friends wedding was a success. The bride and groom were happy and the day went without a hitch because you were so organized.

Write three of these types of scenarios down. Make sure to use quantifiable results, if you can. For instance, if you noticed a problem at work and corrected it, saving the company $1200, note the positive outcome. Make sure to write down the number so that you remember it, and don’t fudge anything.

Let’s remember something negative

To be really great in an interview, sometimes you have to gracefully recall a mistake that you made. Interviewers know that you make mistakes. You are human. They might ask “Tell me about a time when you did something that didn’t turn out very well”. To be prepared for your interview, you will have to have a negative example ready as well as all of the positive things. Make sure it is something you worked through: maybe you made a mistake and it caused conflict between you and somebody else. It turned out okay because you and that person communicated effectively and worked through the issue by compromising and collaborating.

Keep this in your back pocket just in case.

Practice with your dog

Or your friend, or mom, or yourself in the mirror. Just practice. Google behavioural interview questions.  Ask them to yourself and give yourself an answer for each one. If you can’t answer one that you came across, think of an example for it! No question should be left unanswered, because with any luck, that’s the question the interviewer will ask.

Practice, practice, practice.

Just calm down

Luckily, with all of that practice you’ve had, you will be confident enough to rock your interview. Knowing the answers to any possible question helps with nerves considerably. Confidence is key.

However, if you are still a little nervous, play a song that you like, think about something else, do anything to calm yourself down. Nervousness fosters mistakes, so just relax. The interviewer is human too.

Ask questions

Never go into an interview without a list of questions to ask the company. When the interviewer asks if you have any questions for them, ASK. Show that you are interested in the job and the company. Just don’t ask questions that you would have found out had you done your research. That will show the interviewer that you didn’t prepare.

Maybe list 5 questions to ask during the interview, because some might be answered before you get to them. That’s fine, because you will have a couple more when the time comes!

Feel free to bring the list in to the interview. It will show that you are prepared and had thought ahead.

 

If you are thorough and well prepared, it will shine through and you will dazzle your interviewers.

How to do Well in an Interview is a post from: When Life Gives You Lemons. Did you like the post? Follow me on Twitter, like me on Facebook, or hop on over to my blog and leave me your feedback.

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Where to Find Internships https://add-vodka.com/finding-internship/ https://add-vodka.com/finding-internship/#comments Wed, 08 Jun 2011 13:10:43 +0000 http://add-vodka.com/?p=73 I found three internships during the course of the last two years of my education. They were paid positions, so I was a bit spoiled, but even if they were unpaid, I would have taken them. My internships developed my confidence in my field, provided me with a real life opportunity to work in the field …

Where to Find Internships is a post from: When Life Gives You Lemons. Did you like the post? Follow me on Twitter, like me on Facebook, or hop on over to my blog and leave me your feedback.

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I found three internships during the course of the last two years of my education. They were paid positions, so I was a bit spoiled, but even if they were unpaid, I would have taken them. My internships developed my confidence in my field, provided me with a real life opportunity to work in the field and figure out what I did and did not like about it, and made me far more employable than I was prior to working in them.

I learned many a lesson about myself, my work personality, and how to deal with others during my first internship. My second internship taught me that I was capable of doing good work and showed me a little more about my strengths and weaknesses. My third internship landed me my first job in my career path, before I’d even graduated.

finding a company to intern

I’m an advocate of internships, but they can be difficult to find. 

I found internships mainly through my school, but there are other places you can check.

Check Job Postings

This may seem obvious, but so many people don’t look at job postings for internship opportunities. Many companies are trying to recruit their first interns, or are smaller companies that don’t have an “in” with the larger schools, so they post internship opportunities on Craigslist, Kijiji, Monster, or their in-house job site.

While I was interning at my second company, my manager found an intern in place of an incumbent for a position they were trying to recruit for. They got skilled labour at a far lower cost, and the intern just spent some time on the job boards getting to know the needs of the organization before pitching herself to the manager.

Check Your School

Another way to find an internship is to  check your school’s internal job posting system.

Many career centers at schools will offer internships, apprenticeships and co-operative job opportunities. Many companies want new graduates or existing students as interns. Their education is current and up-to-date, they’re fresh, will work for free or cheap, and the companies are able to test them out before hiring them on full-time.

If you check your registrars office, they can usually show you where to go to find out about getting an internship or a job placement.

Put Some Elbow Grease Into It 

Here’s the thing – staff are expensive. If somebody knows that you have skill and will work for free just for the experience, they’ll be thrilled. If you can’t find an internship or any opportunity for one the ways previously mentioned, you’ll have to put some elbow.. or finger grease into it.

Does your career path have a professional association? Do you know anybody who has an “in” to a list of companies or professionals that may be looking? Email everyone you can think of. Be professional, but really pound the sand. I emailed 20+ companies offering my services and that wasn’t even skimming the surface. If you can even look on the job postings and offer your services for free – just to get to the companies. Tweet your offer. Get people to forward it. Just do it. It can’t hurt.

Internships are a great way to get your foot in the door. They not only give you some much needed experience – after all, experience trumps education – but they also can help you network. Since an alarmingly high percentage of jobs come from networking, you better believe that this is the best way to land your job after college.

It’s also really important to make your resume look professional – same with your cover letter! If your cover letter still says “to whom this may concern” you will need to revamp it 🙂

 

Where to Find Internships is a post from: When Life Gives You Lemons. Did you like the post? Follow me on Twitter, like me on Facebook, or hop on over to my blog and leave me your feedback.

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