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4.2: Preparing for Interviews

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    133016
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    Just as preparation is important for exams in college, preparation is key to success in interviews. Many of the principles are the same, but in an employment interview, the subject is you. Just as in an exam, the first step in preparation is to know your material.

    • Learn about the organization. In almost every interview situation, you’ll be asked, “What can you do for this company?” Practice your answer. Research press releases, stories in the Wall Street Journal, annual reports, blogs, Web sites, the news, and so on. Know the company’s philosophies, goals, plans, new products, targeted customers, new executives, and major directional changes.
    • Use your network. Do you know anyone who works for or has worked for this company or organization? Call or have lunch with them before your interview to learn more. Your competition likely won’t have done their homework as well as you have. Your prospective employer will notice.
    • Review the job description. Be prepared to explain how your background qualifies you for the job. Did you find the job posting online? Be sure to have printed a copy, and bring it with you to the interview. Some companies take weeks to start calling people in for interviews, and by then the job description may have been removed from the site where you saw it.
    • Review your résumé. Think of examples that describe or illustrate your accomplishments. You will be asked about items on your résumé, and you need to be able to support them and go into more detail.(5)

    4.2: Preparing for Interviews is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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