Page 44 - Fearless Interviewing How To Win The Job By Communicating With Confidence
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Building Your Skills Arsenal
                       The second time you go through the list, please select the
                   three or four personal traits that describe you best and that you
                   think you would like to use in your next job. You may very well
                   possess a majority of these skills. To narrow them down for the
                   following list, try to list those traits that seem to come to you
                   almost naturally and effortlessly. You might also consider listing
                   the traits you’re most often complimented for. Please record
                   them here:
                       1. ____________________________________________________

                       2. ____________________________________________________

                       3. ____________________________________________________
                       4. ____________________________________________________



                                            Competencies

                   You’ve already uncovered some foundational skills that will sure-
                   ly impress your interviewer and tip the scales in your direction—
                   your general skills, your job-specific skills, and your personal
                   traits. Now, let’s add two more types of skills that will add even
                   more credibility to your presentation.
                       The first is a group of skills called competencies. Competen-
                   cies are actually clusters of skills, and they are rapidly becoming
                   the criteria upon which all employees and potential employees
                   are judged. They can make the difference between being pro-
                   moted or passed over. They can and definitely do carve out the
                   space between people who are hired and those who are not.
                   More and more, interviewers are trained to look at competencies as well
                   as skills.
                       The Occupational Outlook Handbook, a useful source for career
                   information, is updated and published yearly by the U.S.
                   Department of Labor. It lists the job descriptions, qualifications,
                   job market expectancies, and salaries for more than 6000 jobs,
                   and it is published both nationally and regionally. Accessing it on
                   the Internet at www.bls.gov/oco/ or in hard copy at your local
                   library is a top-notch way to find vast information on what kinds
                   of skills, education, personal traits, and competencies employers
                   are looking for to fulfill certain positions. Increasingly, the hand-


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