Page 66 - John Kador - 301 Best Questions to Ask on Your Interview, Second Edition-McGraw-Hill (2010)
P. 66

CH A P TER 4







           DO YOUR HOMEWORK


                    KNOW BEFORE YOU ASK







        As you go into an interview, assume that the interviewers know a
        lot about you. After all, they have your résumé. They have your ref-
        erences and may have checked them. They have probably Googled
        your name and checked out your presence on Facebook and other
        social networking sites. (It’s critical, then, to be careful about what
        you post online, but that’s another subject.)
          My point is that you have to be even more informed. You can’t go
        into an interview cold and expect to come out looking good. And if
        you use your opportunity to ask questions the answers to which are
        a Web search away, interviewers will conclude that you are lazy. And
        they will be right.
          Many interviewers send out information about their organizations
        to candidates. I know one interviewer at a large design company in
        Ann Arbor, Michigan, who always starts the job interview process

        with a telephone conversation. The first question is always:
        What do you know about us? Have you reviewed the packet I sent, or
        have you poked around on our website?

        If the candidate hedges, the interviewer ends the process. At this
        point, the interviewer’s goal is to weed out candidates. The applicant
        has failed the fi rst test.






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