Page 32 - John Kador - 301 Best Questions to Ask on Your Interview, Second Edition-McGraw-Hill (2010)
P. 32

WHY YOU HAVE TO QUESTION

          Well, the situation I’ve just described is your next job interview.
        It’s a presentation. The agenda: your future at the company. In the
        audience: the senior decision makers required to authorize offering
        you a position. Everyone is looking at you to shine. Now, given the
        stakes, are you willing to wing it? If you’re comfortable with working
        like that, there’s little need to read further.
          Some applicants believe that spontaneity can make up for lack
        of strategic planning. But spontaneity, in cases such as this, can be
        indistinguishable from laziness and lack of preparation. Interview-
        ers, professionals themselves, really want you to prepare for the
        interview as they did. Preparation is professionalism in action. It’s
        common sense. It’s courtesy. It works.





        WRITE YOUR QUESTIONS DOWN

        You’ve secured a job interview. Great. The first thing you do is home-
        work (see Chapter 4 for a discussion on researching the company).
        The second thing you do is write down the questions you will ask.
          Some job seekers are uncertain about whether they should write
        down their questions. If they do, should they bring them to the inter-
        view? The answer to both questions is yes. Doesn’t that look, well,
        premeditated? Of course it does. That’s the effect you want. See
        Chapter 5 for a fuller discussion of the issues around taking notes.
          Writing down your questions accomplishes a number of useful
        objectives.


           •  It helps articulate your thoughts. Your questions should be as
        crisp as your shirt or blouse. Write them down, practice reading
        them aloud, and edit until the questions sing.
           •  It helps prioritize your issues. Not every question carries equal
        weight. But only when you write them all down can you decide which

        question to ask first. Some candidates write questions on index cards
        so they can easily order and reorder them until they have the fl ow
        they want before transferring them to a notebook.
           •  It helps you remember. In the anxiety of the interview, you can
        easily forget a question you meant to ask. Or worse, your brain can



                                      11
   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37