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Career Related Articles

Advice, Tips, and Strategy
[ Advice, Tips, and Strategy ]

·How to Manage your Career
·End The Blame Game
·Create a good impression in your new job!
·Should I accept a COUNTEROFFER???
·Relocation Info/Calculator
·Consider All the Facts
·Prepare for a Behavioral Based Interview
·Writing Thank You Letters
·Do's & Don'ts
Career Resources: Clarify Expectations With New Employees
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Industry Trends and ArticlesHe was upset and it showed. I could hear it in his voice. "Scott, when I told him I was not happy with his work performance and that I was terminating him, he just stared at me and his face turned white.
Career Resources: How to Manage your Career
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Advice, Tips, and StrategyTo succeed in today's demanding and ever-changing work environment, you must take charge of managing your own career.

Career Resources: End The Blame Game
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Advice, Tips, and StrategyWho do you blame if something goes wrong in your career?  Your boss or former boss? Your employer or past employer?  Colleagues, family members, or the person who recently was hired and either took away your job or the promotion you wanted?
Career Resources: Create a good impression in your new job!
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Advice, Tips, and Strategy
Congratulations! You've just been appointed to your new job.
Now the real work begins.

Career Resources: When To Say ''I Quit''
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Industry Trends and Articles
Career Resources: Your ''30 Second Commercial''
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Industry Trends and Articles

"30 Second Commercial"
Diana Knoles, Business & Career Coach

Winston Churchill once said that, "It takes at least six weeks to prepare a good extemporaneous speech." You will be asked by neighbors, recruiters, interviewers and many others to, "Tell me about yourself." You should be able to do that concisely and in an interesting manner so they can understand what you do and who they might refer you to. During your short sound bite you will communicate clearly your background, strengths, and career objective.

Be sure to include:

Your background information includes strengths, work history, education, training.anything that would be considered a "selling point" for you in this area.

Then slide into one or two accomplishments that relate to how you used your strengths to help a company or business.

And end with your career objective.

An example might be:

Background: I have 15 years of experience in financial management within Fortune 500 companies. I'm particularly skilled at helping senior teams understand how the financial reports act as a tool to help them achieve company goals.

Accomplishment:
For example, during a tight budget period, I worked with a senior team that sat down together and, with my facilitation, made cuts in a way that best served their common business goals. I helped them see that fighting individually at the expense of the company goals was not productive.

Objective:
I would like to find another senior financial position in which I could play a key role in helping the organization meet its objectives.

Write down your own "30 Second Commercial" and practice it often. A tape recorder and mirror are wonderful props. You can have versions from 30 seconds to several minutes, but be sure to keep to the point.

Copyright @ Diana Knoles 2003. All rights reserved.

Career Resources: Behavioral Interviews Require New Approach by Candidates
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Industry Trends and ArticlesIn today's rapidly changing business climate, the staffing of companies has become more difficult. The cost of choosing the wrong candidate for a managerial job is estimated by some employers to be three times the annualized salary of an employee who leaves before a year is out. This does not factor in the cost of having the position vacant until the right person can be found.

As a result, a new interviewing technique called behavioral interviewing has become increasingly popular. Behavioral interviewing is a technique that seeks to evaluate everything about a candidate through assessment of specific actions or behaviors in given circumstances or jobs. It also elicits general knowledge or expertise from a candidate. Interviewers who use the technique encourage candidates to recount in detail job situations and the results of specific actions, even for seemingly minor tasks on previous jobs.

"It's actually very effective," according to Jay Schwartz, President of the Richmond office of Management Recruiters International, Inc. (MRI), the world's largest search and recruitment organization. Schwartz's company trains its recruiters and clients in how to use the technique. "But candidates who are prepared to answer questions in the appropriate way have an advantage over candidates who are blindsided by it and must be coaxed by the interviewer to respond appropriately. It's not that you can 'beat the test' by understanding it beforehand. It's more a question of making the interview go a little better by knowing what's required of you," says Schwartz.

Schwartz indicates that there are clues to know when one is in a behavioral interview and suggests some strategies to keep in mind:

Behavioral interviews often begin with a statement that the interviewer will be looking for specific instances from real situations in answer to his questions, and not to be nervous if it takes the candidate a few minutes to gather his thoughts.

The questions will often begin with words to the effect of "tell me about a specific situation in which you..."

When the candidate wanders towards generalities, the interviewer will often coax the candidate back to specific examples, asking for the names of people, their titles and other concrete details. Often the interviewer will rephrase a question so it sounds different but elicits the same information.

There are some easy ways to prepare for a behavioral interview according to Schwartz:

Decide what your chief skills or strengths are and fix in your mind actual experiences, which exemplify each. Be sure to recall or remind yourself of dates, names, quantities or measurements of success and other details that will convey the reality to the interviewer.

Understand the job description for which you are interviewing and be prepared to recall specific actions and behaviors which address the skills needed in the position.

Specificity is more important than vague proclamations of your skills. Small but telling actions and behaviors are more important than grandiose but unsubstantiated claims of job success. No one expects you to have single handedly saved the world, the company and your immediate boss from sure ruination. They simply hope that you are the person who can do the job for which they are hiring.

"The idea behind behavioral interviewing is that you can tell much more about a person's attitudes, work habits and skills by hearing them describe real actions taken in real circumstances than by letting them speak in the abstract about themselves," said Schwartz. He went on to say, "It's amazingly effective, I think, because each of us reveals our motivations and attitudes whenever we recount our part in human interaction. Motivation and attitude are huge success factors in a new job."

Source: Management Recruiters International

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