Page 60 - John Kador - 301 Best Questions to Ask on Your Interview, Second Edition-McGraw-Hill (2010)
P. 60

WHEN TO QUESTION

        INTERVIEWER: Thank you for coming. Can I get you a cup of
           coffee?
        CANDIDATE: No, thank you. Perhaps later. (Leaving the door open
           softens the refusal to accept the interviewer’s hospitality. Avoid
           anything that might spill. Also you will need your hands free
           for taking notes on the important information you are about to
           receive.)
        INTERVIEWER: Well, then, make yourself comfortable. Can you tell
           me about yourself?
        CANDIDATE: I’ll be glad to. But fi rst, may I ask a question? (Always
           ask permission.)
        INTERVIEWER: Of course. (You will never be refused. The inter-
           viewer is now curious about what you are going to ask.)
        CANDIDATE: My question is this: By what criteria will you select the
           person for this job?
        INTERVIEWER: That’s a good question.
        CANDIDATE: Is it all right if I take notes? (Always ask permission.)
        INTERVIEWER: Of course. Now, let me see. I think the fi rst criterion
           is . . .

        Now listen. When the interviewer is done reviewing the fi rst crite-
        rion, ask about the second. Then the third. Pretty soon you will have
        a list of the interviewer’s hot buttons, a recipe for the ideal candidate
        for the job. Your challenge is to underscore how your credentials and
        experience just happen to fall in perfect alignment with those very
        criteria.
          Let’s back up a minute. Notice what else you have accomplished
        by asking this marvelous question. You have seized control of the
        interview. Suddenly the interviewer is working according to an
        agenda that serves both parties. The question—By what criteria will
        you select the person for this job?—is designed to put you in the driv-
        er’s seat. Take a close look at how the question parses:

        •  By what criteria. This part of the question focuses the discussion
           where it belongs—on the job and its requirements, rather than
           your education, experience, age, gender, and so forth. What the

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