Top interview Mistakes Candidates Make
Not feeling so great about your last interview? Take heart. Chances are
the interviewer has seen worse. A recent CareerBuilder study surveyed
hiring managers to identify the most common mistakes candidates make.
Here are the top five categories - along with some real-life examples:
1. What They Say (or Don't Say)
According to CareerBuilder's survey, the number one mistake interviewees
make relates to how they communicate. Some come in with a pre-determined
script and sound as if they're reading from a textbook. Others give
one-word answers with no further elaboration. While still others use
profanity or ramble on about their personal problems and social lives
rather than answer - or ask - questions about the job or company.
Others are too candid. For example, when asked what interested her about
the position, one candidate replied: "I'm open to anything; I really
need to get some medical insurance." Another candidate at a children's
organization stated that he "hates kids." Those interviewing for
customer service positions confessed: "I'm not a people person," and
"customers are annoying." While a man applying at a drug treatment
facility anxiously asked if they drug-tested employees and whether
they'd give advance notice.
Others complain about former bosses. And many make the mistake of
bringing up money and hours-required in the first interview. But the
"Too Much Information" award has to go the candidate who said: "I'm only
here because my mom wants me to get a job." He was 37!
2. How They Act
The second most common way candidates flub their interviews is what they
do. Many of these mistakes are the result of being unprepared and
knowing nothing about the job or company. Others are because candidates
don't listen to the questions being asked or try to bluff their way
through technical questions.
Some stem from a lack of common sense or courtesy. Many hiring managers
complain about candidates showing up late and the surprising number who
interrupt the interview to take calls on their cell phones. One woman
brought her children along.
And which is worse? The candidate who asked the hiring manager to hurry
up because he wanted to have lunch, or the one who pulled out a sandwich
and began eating?
Yet other bloopers are simply a result of nerves - or two much coffee.
Several hiring managers complained of nail-biting while another watched
in horror as a candidate jumped up to make a point, then turned around
and fell to the floor!
3. Bad Attitudes
The third most-cited category of mistakes has to do with the candidate's
attitude. No one likes a braggart, know-it-all or name-dropper - or the
candidate with the super-sized ego who demanded to be hired and said the
company could do no better. Then there's the interviewee who declared he
was "used to a higher class of business."
On the other side of the coin, are those who show no enthusiasm. Many
hiring managers complained of interviewees who show little energy or
interest in the conversation. One candidate spent the better part of the
interview looking at his watch.
4. How They Look
Coming to the interview improperly groomed and dressed is the fourth
most common mistake. Along with the usual culprits: bad posture,
tattoos, facial piercings, fluorescent-colored hair and poor hygiene,
hiring managers also told of a candidate who did not wear shoes, one who
wore a skirt slit to her derriere, another who wore dark glasses
throughout the interview and a candidate with dirty fingernails wearing
jeans and a t-shirt - oh, by the way, he was drunk, too!
5. They're Dishonest
Common forms of dishonesty include exaggerating about achievements or
misrepresenting knowledge. There's also the candidate who mentioned his
arrest after saying on his application he had never been arrested - and
the one who actually stole something from the interviewer's office.
Besides highlighting ignorance in action, the survey confirms that truth
is stranger than fiction and proves that life is not all that rosy on
the other side of the interview process either.
Article reprinted
from CareerBuilder.com
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