Page 167 - Marky Stein - Get a Great Job When You Don't Have a Job-McGraw-Hill (2009)
P. 167

Get a Great Job When You Don’t Have a Job


             From my evaluation of the résumé she sent me, neither her qual-
             ifications nor her education were the problem.
                 When Christine came to my office for an appointment, she
             told me that she had been out of work for several months and
             added emphatically that interviewing had been “torture” for her.
             She said that she felt timid at the interviews she had gone to and
             that she felt intensely uncomfortable about being asked questions
             that required her to call attention to herself and her skills.
                 Though perfectly well qualified for just about any financial
             analyst position, Christine suffered from what is sometimes
             known in psychology as the imposter syndrome. The imposter syn-
             drome presents itself as the feeling that, even though we have
             accomplished something, we somehow feel that we don’t deserve
             the recognition or prestige that goes with it.
                 According to Christine, “I’ve never had a problem talking
             about a friend’s accomplishments, but when it comes to my own,
             I find it embarrassing.” She reports, “I’m afraid that others will
             think I’m arrogant. I feel that if I boast about myself at an inter-
             view, the company might hire me and then find out I can’t do the
             job at all.”
                 At first, as Christine learned the techniques of fearless inter-
             viewing, she told me that she felt uncomfortable relating her
             strengths in such a straightforward manner. “It feels like brag-
             ging,” she said. But as we worked together to reframe her notion
             of “bragging” into one of simply “reporting the facts,” she began
             to relax and handle questions about herself more easily.
                 When Christine built her skills arsenal and constructed her
             Q statements (as you’ll do in Chapters 2 and 3, she realized that
             her strengths were not just fabrications; they were real. Further-
             more, they could be proven by citing examples of what she had
             actually done in the real world!



                          Her accomplishments, she soon learned,
                      were not exaggerations at all; they were simply
                                    statements of facts.



                 Christine’s next interview was with a Fortune 500 financial
             organization for a job as a financial analyst. I heard from her


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