According to veteran career coach David Couper
Here is his list of the top 10 job interview myths, and how to deal with them:
Myth #10: The interviewer is prepared.
"The
person you're meeting with is probably overworked and stressed about
having to hire someone," Couper says. "So make it easy for him or her.
Answer that catchall request, 'Tell me about yourself", by talking about
why you're a great fit for this job. If it's obvious they haven't read
your resume, recap it briefly, and then tie it to the job you want."
Tell them what they really need to know, so they don't have to come up
with more questions.
Myth #9: Most interviewers have been trained to conduct thorough job interviews.
While
human resources professionals do get extensive training in job
interviewing techniques, the average line manager is winging it. "To
make up for vague questions, be specific even if they don't ask," Couper
suggests. "Be ready with two or three examples of particular skills and
experiences that highlight why they should hire you."
Myth #8: It's only polite to accept an interviewer's offer of refreshment.
"They
usually try to be courteous and offer you a drink, but they don't
really want to bother with it," says Couper. "Unless the beverage in
question is right there and won't take more than a second to get, just
say, no, thank you."
Couper once interviewed a job candidate who
said she would love a cup of tea, which, he recalls, "meant I spent half
the allotted interview time looking for a tea bag, heating water, and
so on. It was irritating."
Another good reason, Couper says, to
decline caffeine is that "if the interview is a lengthy one, you don't
want to need a restroom halfway through the conversation."
Myth #7: Interviewers expect you to hand over references' contact information right away.
Hold
off until you're specifically asked, Couper advises, and even then, you
can delay a bit by offering to send the information in an email in a
day or two. There are at least two good reasons for not rushing it,
Couper says. First, "you sometimes don't know until the end of the
interview who would be the best references for this particular job," he
notes. "If you get a sense that the interviewer cares most about, for
instance, teamwork, you want to choose someone who can attest to your
skills in that area. A reference who can only talk about some other
aspect of your work is not going to help."
Second, and no less
important, "you want a little time to prep your references, by gently
coaching them on what you'd like them to say, before the employer calls
them."
Myth #6: There's a right answer to every question an interviewer asks.
"Sometimes
how you approach your answer is far more important than the answer
itself," Couper says. If you're presented with a hypothetical problem
and asked how you would resolve it, try to think of a comparable
situation from the past and tell what you did about it.
Talkback: Has anything surprised you during a job interview?
Myth #5: You should always keep your answers short.
Here's
where doing lots of research before an interview really pays off. "The
more you've learned about the company and the job beforehand, the better
able you are to tell why you are the right hire," Couper says.
Don't
be afraid to talk at length about it, partly because it will spare the
interviewer having to come up with another question for you (see Myth #1
above) and partly because "in a good interview, you should be talking
about two-thirds of the time."
Myth #4: If you've got great qualifications, your appearance doesn't matter.
Reams
of research on this topic have proven that physical attractiveness
plays a big part in hiring decisions. "Anyone who says otherwise is
lying," Couper says. "People care about your looks, so make the absolute
most of what you've got." Even if you're not drop-dead gorgeous, it's
impossible to overestimate the importance of looking "healthy,
energetic, and confident."
Myth #3: When asked where you see yourself in five years, you should show tremendous ambition.
The
five-year question is a common one, and it's uncommonly tricky.
"Interviewers want you to be a go-getter, but they also worry that
you'll get restless if you don't move up fast enough. So you want to say
something that covers all bases, like, 'I'd be happy to stay in this
job as long as I'm still learning things and making a valuable
contribution,'" says Couper.
You might also consider turning the
question around and asking, "Where do you see me in five years?" Says
Couper, "Sometimes the answer to that -- like, 'Well, we'd expect you to
keep doing the same thing we hired you to do' -- is a good way to spot a
dead-end job."
Myth #2: If the company invites you to an interview, that means the job is still open.
Alas,
no. In fact, the job may never have existed in the first place: "Some
companies use 'interviews' to do market research on the cheap. They ask
you about your current or recent duties, your pay scale, and so on, to
get information for comparison purposes." Another possibility, Couper
says, is that "they may already have a strong internal candidate in mind
for the job but just want to see if they come across someone better."
If
you get an interview through a networking contact, he adds, "an
employer may interview you simply as a courtesy to the person who
referred you, if that is someone they don't want to disappoint."
Even
if the job opening is phony, it's still worth going, he says:
"Sometimes they discover you're a good fit for a different opening that
really does exist. You never know where an interview might lead."
And the #1 myth about job interviewing: The most qualified person gets the job.
In at least one crucial respect, a job interview is like a date: Chemistry counts.
"A
candidate who is less qualified, but has the right personality for the
organization and hits it off with the interviewer, will almost always
get hired over a candidate who merely looks good on paper," Couper says.
What can you do if you suspect you're not knocking an interviewer's socks off?
"At
the end of the discussion, you'll probably be asked if you have any
questions," Couper says. "If you sense the person has reservations about
your style, ask what the ideal candidate for this job would be like."
Then think fast. Can you talk a bit about how you fit that profile?
"Addressing any concerns the interviewer might have, beyond your formal
qualifications, is your chance to seal the deal," Couper says.
Talkback:
Has anything surprised you during a job interview? If you're an
interviewer, what do you look for in candidates? Tell us on Facebook,
below.