Any accomplished
and successful salesperson reads the title and knows immediately to what I am
referring. The best way to sell any product or service is to present the
benefits, thus demonstrating to potential customers why they should choose what
you have to offer to them rather than someone else.
When you interview,
it is, or I suggest it should be, the very same concept you use when you interview
for a job. Simply replace the word buy
with the word hire and the advantage
of this approach should be obvious. Applying this logic and making the
appropriate adjustments to your efforts can make a notable difference anytime
you are presenting yourself in pursuit of a new job, for a promotion or even a
pay raise.
This concept goes
to the heart of the interview process and exemplifies your task when you are
looking for a new job. As a headhunter, before I will consider whether or not I
might represent someone, I always ask, “Why should anyone hire you?” How they
reply will influence to what degree I think I can help them. You need to ask yourself this same
question. If you can’t sufficiently answer with anything compelling then you
have some work to do and this, ladies and gentlemen, is the starting point and
where to focus your self-improvement efforts. This is an aspect that can
quickly transform your interview performance results. I consider it to be so
important, that you should not even attend another interview, until you can
provide some compelling answers to that basic question.
Make a list if you
need to and refine it, practice it so you are ready when the time comes. Know
how to respond with something that results in a hiring manager nodding his head
in agreement when he or she hears your responses. If you make a claim be ready
to back it up with evidence. You can pre-empt them and also save time by
sharing some of the information when they ask, “So tell me about yourself?”
Don’t delude yourself into thinking you can breeze through an interview hiding
behind and simply reciting your resume. You’ve got to go beyond the resume and
elaborate, expound about that which they already have in their hands, they can
read too. That’s the difference between those who simply attend and interview
and those who participate in an
interview – know the difference, make a difference.
Your resume got you
in the door but it’s up to you to get invited back for the next interview. To
take it up a notch further, in addition to presenting (selling) your benefits,
point to examples using anecdotal evidence about a situation that encapsulates
and proves your claims.
Regular readers of
my blog know that I suggest you adopt a salesperson's role; you are product and
your resume is your product brochure. The hiring managers, the interviewers are
the customer. Sell the benefits as to why your product, you, are the solution
to their needs.
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