Page 100 - Fearless Interviewing How To Win The Job By Communicating With Confidence
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Managing the First Twenty Seconds of the Interview
                           you for seeing me today.” You’ll be smiling warmly and
                           offering a professional handshake at the same time.
                           After the introduction, the interviewer will ask you to sit
                           down. Don’t sit down until he or she asks you to. If he
                           or she does not ask, say, politely, “May I have a seat,
                           please?”
                       2.  If it’s a small office or you are very close to his or her
                           desk, you may feel tempted to put your notepad or
                           some other article like a purse on the desk. Don’t. The
                           desk is the territory of the interviewer, and he or she will
                           feel encroached upon if you pass that invisible line of his
                           or her space and your space. Putting any item, including
                           your hands or elbows on the desk will be taken as a sign
                           of disrespect and an unconscious threat. If you wish to
                           take notes, hold your notebook on your lap.
                       3.  Don’t take any beverages into the interviewer’s office—
                           spills or choking can be embarrassing and inconvenient.
                           Even if you are offered coffee, it’s quite all right to
                           politely decline.
                       4.  Turn your pager and cell phone off! If you forget and it
                           happens to ring, do not glance to see who called. Simply
                           apologize for the interruption and turn off the device.



                                             Your Attitude

                   Have you ever noticed that when someone likes you, you tend to
                   like him or her in return? Well, it’s the same with interviewers. As
                   I said earlier, many interviewers are going to be more nervous
                   than you would imagine at this meeting. They want you to like
                   them, just as you want them to like you.
                       It may seem hard to fabricate having affection for someone
                   you hardly know or who doesn’t seem particularly likeable, but
                   there is a way. One way that I’ve suggested to my clients that real-
                   ly seems to work is that they picture the interviewer as a friend of
                   theirs or someone they really admire.
                       You can pretend it’s your sister Sylvia or your brother
                   Harold, your Aunt June or Uncle Bob. It may seem a little bit
                   silly, but I’ve actually told clients to picture the interviewer
                   as a big stuffed teddy bear. Who doesn’t like a teddy bear? In

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