Page 36 - John Kador - 301 Best Questions to Ask on Your Interview, Second Edition-McGraw-Hill (2010)
P. 36

WHY YOU HAVE TO QUESTION

           hopping, I am concerned about your ability to stick with one
           employer for more than a year.
        Oops. Better to wait for the full question.
          Consider how much better it would have been for the above can-
        didate if the exchange had gone this way:

        HIRING MANAGER: I see by your résumé that you’ve had six sys-
           tems analyst jobs in six years. Can you mention one specifi c skill
           you took away from each experience?
        CANDIDATE: You’re asking what’s one important skill I added to my
           portfolio from each of the jobs I’ve held, is that right?
        HIRING MANAGER: Exactly.
        CANDIDATE: Fair question. Let’s take my jobs in order. At Netcom,
           I learned how to implement an enterprise network management
           strategy. Then at 4Com, I worked with client-side Java program-
           ming. I believe you mentioned Java as one of the hot buttons for

           this job. After that, I finally got my hands on . . .


        4. Getting to Yes
        James Joyce, the author of Ulysses, went out of his way to end his

        epic novel with a big “Yes,” the most affirming word in the English
        language. He knew that ending the novel with “Yes” would let read-
        ers exit the novel with a positive frame of mind.
          Your goal in the job interview is also to end the interview on an
        affirmation. In fact, the more yeses and statements of agreement you

        can generate, the better off you will be. Why? People, including job
        interviewers, really prefer being agreeable. Few people enjoy saying
        no. Who needs arguments? The best way to avoid arguments is to say
        yes.
          If the job interview features wave after wave of yeses, think how
        much easier it will be for the interviewer to say yes to that last ques-
        tion, whether it’s asked explicitly or implicitly:


        I think I’ve demonstrated I’m qualified for this job. I’d very much like
        to join the team. Can we come to an agreement?


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