All Basic Detailed Interview Tips

So your resume did the it's job to help you get a call from an interested company for a position that will hopefully accelerate your career.

Now you are having to either by phone or in person meet with the potential employer or recruiter, who may ask you some basic questions.

Here are a sleu of  Interview tips:


Tell me about yourself

If you are asked "Tell me about yourself" your only response should be "Where would you like me to begin?"  Reason:  Maybe they want to know about you as a person, maybe they want to get to the nuts and bolts of your professional experience - this response gives you the direction to take. The best way to approach this is to only discuss what your interests are relating to the job and why your background makes you a great candidate.

 

What are your strengths and weaknesses

Never talk about a real weakness unless it’s something you’ve defeated. “Many hiring managers are hip to the overused responses, such as, ‘Well, my biggest weakness is that I work too hard so I need try to take it easy once in a while.’ The best answer is to discuss a weakness that you’ve turned around, such as, you used to come in late to work a lot but after your supervisor explained why it was necessary for you to come in on time, you were never late again.”

 

Where do you see yourself in 5 years

What employers are really asking is, ‘Is this job even close to your presumed career path? Are you just applying to this job because you need something? Are your long-term career plans similar to what we see for this role? How realistic are your expectations for your career? Have you even thought about your career long-term? Are you going to quit after a year or two?’” Show them that you’ve done some self-assessment and career planning. Let them know that you hope to develop professionally and take on additional responsibilities at that particular company. “Don’t say something ridiculous like, ‘I don’t know,’ or “I want your job,” she says

 

Why should I hire you?

A hiring manager may not ask you this question directly but every question you answer in the interview should contribute to helping them understand why you’re the best person for the job. “Stay focused on why your background makes you an ideal candidate and tell them how you are going to contribute to that department and that company,” Teach says. “Let the interviewer know that one of your goals is to make their job easier by taking on as much responsibility as possible and that you will be excited about this job starting on day one.”

Salpeter suggests you print and highlight the job description, looking for the top three or four most important details. “Do they include terms such as, ‘cross-functional team,’ ‘team work,’ and ‘team player’ several times?” If so, your answer to, “Why should we hire you?” (asked directly or as an underlying question) should mention and focus on your abilities as they relate to teams.

 

Take Notes when the job/position is being described to you. 
Do this either mentally or by writing it down

Reason
When the interviewer has finished you can respond point-by-point.  "That's great because as you can see from my resume I have..."  You are letting them know you have exactly what they are looking for.  You might want to think about some projects that you've used the technologies they're looking for (SQL 2000/2005/2008 DBA experience, production experience, application support experience, VBscripting experience, security, clustering, mirroring, replication, high availability, etc.) and be prepared to give examples of how you used each technology.

 

Yes and/or No questions

When/if you are asked if you have a particular skill set make sure to elaborate. 

EXAMPLES:

"Do you have SCCM experience?  "Yes, and since I've used it extensively for more than 4 years I feel it is one of my strongest skills" 

"Do you have experience with SQL Profiler?" No, but I've used tools that are similar such as..." or "No, but .Net has been used on my projects."

 

Achievements/Challenges

Think of two professional achievements and two challenges that you've had and be prepared to talk about them - how you were able to achieve them and overcome the challenges.  If you can, think of projects you've had that have used the same technologies the client company uses.  Caution:  Be well-rounded not one-sided.  Think of examples where you worked independently AND within a team.  You don't want to portray that you work best independently or that you can't work independently.  Same with teamwork.

 

Questions
Have some prepared!  Here are some suggestions:

1.  Based upon what you know of me so far, how do you see me fitting in?  Again, the interviewer will be visualizing you in the chair and at the desk.

2.  What are the goals of the team/department?  When you get the answer be prepared to answer (for example), "Great!  I believe my experience/background will be valuable in helping you achieve those goals." or, "Great! You will find that I'm the kind of person that will do what it takes and is valuable in reaching goals on time!" 

3. "Did I answer your question to the right level of detail?"

4. Ask a technical question based on what the interviewer has stated to you or something you know about the position from the job description. Be sure to listen to the answer and give a response on how you can fulfill that.  For Example you may ask: How do you patch vulnerabilites in Operating System? When you get a response, oh we use SCCM to roll out patches. Say: That's great I use that tool and am very familiar with it or You may say I have never used that tool but I understand how it works, because I used a tool similar to it.

At the end of the interview - if you are interested let them know you want the job!!  By stating: Thank you for your time, and based on this conversation I am even more interested in this position, as I feel I am equipped to take on this role, and at the same time I would enjoy working with you and your company.