Page 106 - Fearless Interviewing How To Win The Job By Communicating With Confidence
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Answering Interview Questions
                                their jobs for at least 1 year. I’m applying here today
                                as a licensed clinical social worker because I’d like to
                                prove we can get similar results with your clients.
                   Your Positioning Statement: “Tell Me about Yourself”


                           The question “Tell me about yourself” is most often
                              the first question to be posed in an interview.



                   Although it may be interpreted as a personal question that
                   requires a personal answer, it is really an opportunity for you to
                   introduce some of your most important employment-related
                   skills as well as your education and accomplishments to the inter-
                   viewer. Your response to “Tell me about yourself ” should be a
                   very brief synopsis, or “sound byte,” about your background.
                        Your answer to this question is very important because it
                   positions you for the rest of the interview. That’s why some career
                   coaches call this statement a positioning statement. I have found an
                   excellent formula for positioning statements that fits for just
                   about every type of job and every type of industry. The template
                   is reproduced here so that you can fill in the blanks. A template
                   filled in with hypothetical answers follows.
                        I don’t usually recommend that my clients memorize any
                   answers to interview questions . . . except this one.
                        Your positioning statement is extremely valuable. It can be
                   used not just in an interview but in certain social situations, on
                   the phone, or any time you have the opportunity to introduce
                   yourself to someone who could hire you or who knows someone
                   who could hire you. It’s good always to have this statement ready
                   when you’re in a career transition. I suggest that you work with
                   the template carefully so that you construct something that’s
                   comfortable to say and that really feels like a good fit for you.


                   Other Common Straightforward Questions

                   For other straightforward questions, you’ll want to use your skills
                   lists and Q statements that you prepared earlier in the book. For
                   example, looking back at your skills arsenal:

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