Thursday, February 28, 2008

The World's Oldest Job Interview Question - and How to Answer It

The World's Oldest Job Interview Question - and How to Answer It
"Tell me about yourself."

It really isn't a question. It's an open-ended command.
It's an icebreaker for both interviewer and interviewee.

To put it another way, imagine you're single, and imagine
yourself at a cocktail party. And as you're mingling, you
meet someone attractive, and you say, "Tell me about
yourself."

And that person doesn't shut up for the next fifteen
minutes. Does that sound like fun for you? Probably not.
You're probably looking to catch the host's eye for a
conversational escape by minute five, and mentally crossing
off a list of lame excuses to walk away by minute ten.

In other words, you've essentially stopped listening and
you feel trapped. Do you want your job interviewer to have
the same experience with you?

When you rehearse your answer to this question - that is,
when you practice or role play with a friend, business
coach, or loved one - here are a few tips for creating a
great answer:

1. Don't go for the throat.

Your resume got you in the door, and you're going to be in
the interviewee's chair for another 30-60 minutes. Relax.
Don't try to tell the interviewer why you're the right one
for the job in that first answer. No interviewer ever hears
the answer to "Tell me about yourself" and says, "Stop the
interview! The job is yours!"

2. Keep it high-level.

The executive summary of your resume has the salient points
of your career direction concisely packaged. Drawing from
that language (though not parroting it) reinforces your
personal marketing message, and connects the dots between
you and the position you're seeking.

3. Keep it focused.

Don't talk about your early childhood unless it has a
direct correlation to why you're in the interviewee chair.
And if it does have a direct correlation, get to the point
fast.

4. Keep it brief.

You'd be surprised at how slow time moves in an interview.
In a conversational tone and style, reading this article
aloud would take less than three minutes, and it's about
400 words. Three minutes is forever in an interview,
especially at the start.

There's a reason why "Tell me about yourself" is so
commonly used, and it's just to get the conversational ball
rolling. Keep your answer simple, high-level, focused on no
more than 2-3 salient points, conversational, and about
half as long as this article.


----------------------------------------------------
Allen Voivod is the Chief Blogger for ResumeMachine.com,
the leading resume distribution resource for managers,
executives, and professionals looking to accelerate their
job search results. Get the attention of thousands of
hiring agents with the largest and most frequently updated
recruiter database on the web, and dive into a wealth of
immediately useful career articles and blog posts - all at
http://www.ResumeMachine.com !

No comments: