Page 245 - Marky Stein - Get a Great Job When You Don't Have a Job-McGraw-Hill (2009)
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Get a Great Job When You Don’t Have a Job


                    the other hand, a bone-crushing handshake sends a
                    message that you may be overly competitive. Neither of
                    these messages is attractive to an interviewer. A hand-
                    shake that is firm with one, two, or three “pumps” of
                    the elbow is an appropriate business greeting, signaling
                    to the employer, “Let’s get down to business.”
                 4.  Address the interviewer as Ms. or Mr. ________________
                    until you’re invited to call him or her by a first name.
                    Again, this greeting is part of being respectful of the
                    interviewer’s time and authority.
                 5.  Introduce yourself by your first and last names and say
                    that you are happy to be there. Do you know that only
                    40 percent of interviewers are trained to do the job of
                    interviewing? My surveys of managers and directors
                    from Fortune 500 companies indicate that they very
                    often feel more nervous about interviewing you than
                    you feel about the interview! Introducing yourself and
                    expressing that you’re glad to be there is the first step
                    to putting the interviewer at ease, so that you can both
                    enjoy a relaxed meeting.
                 6. Do not sit down until the interviewer suggests that you
                    do. If he or she doesn’t, ask politely if you may sit down.
                    As soon as you sit down in a chair in the interviewer’s
                    office, you become part of his or her territory. It is
                    therefore wise to wait until you are invited to sit or
                    you have asked permission to do so.
                 7. Do not, at any time during the interview, put anything
                    on the interviewer’s desk. Keep briefcases, note pads,
                    date books, and purses by your side or on your lap.
                    The employer’s desk is even more sacred and private
                    territory than the surrounding office. Keep hands,
                    elbows, and any other items from the top of the desk.
                    If, however, you have been invited to sit at a conference
                    table or a round table that is not a desk, you should feel
                    free to take notes on the tabletop as the meeting goes
                    on. These spaces are shared territory, unlike a person’s
                    desk, which is private.
                 8.  Make your behavior in the waiting room impeccably
                    professional and polite. Interviewers often ask their

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