Page 30 - Fearless Interviewing How To Win The Job By Communicating With Confidence
P. 30

Building Your Skills Arsenal
                   and exactly how they can make a positive impact on whatever
                   organization you’re applying to. Unlike Marie you won’t do the
                   following:
                       • Think your résumé will speak for you.
                       • Speak in generalities and expect the interviewer to “con-
                          nect the dots” for you.

                       No wonder. Marie kept getting turned down for jobs in spite
                   of her friendly and businesslike demeanor. Employers want proof
                   of your abilities! The reality is that, before an employer pays
                   Marie over $100,000 per year to act as his or her sales director,
                   the employer will want to have some specific examples of where
                   and how Marie had used those skills to produce positive results
                   for another company. Marie cannot expect her résumé to “do the
                   talking” for her. Instead, she has to learn to clearly and succinct-
                   ly verbalize those results.



                             In the next two chapters you will learn how you
                            can easily avoid the pitfall of sounding too vague
                             simply by knowing your skills and knowing how
                                  to communicate them with confidence.
                                     Let’s move on to the good stuff!





                                        Assessing Your Skills

                   Taking an inventory of your skills is the beginning of being suc-
                   cessful in any job interview. Ninety percent of employers say that
                   the primary reason they do not hire a candidate is because the
                   interviewee could not clearly state his or her skills. Read that last sen-
                   tence again. That doesn’t mean they didn’t have the skills neces-
                   sary to do the job. It means that they could not verbally state those
                   skills in a convincing way.
                       When you’ve finished the exercises in the next two chapters,
                   you’ll have built the foundation for an enormous constellation of
                   personal skills and accomplishments that I call your “skills arse-
                   nal.” In this chapter, we’ll take an inventory of your skills. What


                                                    19
   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35