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Informational
Interviews
by ResumeEdge
How should
I set up a meeting?
- The three main ways
of making contact are telephone, email,
and snail mail. If you call your potential
interviewee, it might help to write
down what you plan to say ahead of
time. If you send something written,
be sure to proofread your missive.
It is especially important that you
do not say or do anything that makes
it sound as though you're trying to
get the person to hire you. While
that would be nice, it's not the point
of the informational interview.
Telephone calls, emails, and letters
basically follow the same structure:
- 1. Introduce yourself
2. Explain that you're interested
in the field in question, but that
you would like to learn more about
it through someone like your potential
interviewee, who has a lot of experience
and wisdom.
3. Give a specific reason you're interested
in talking to the potential interviewee
- you'll show you're serious and focused
when you, for example, tell the head
of a public relations firm that you
know her organization does a lot of
work for environmental groups, and
you're specifically interested in
that aspect of PR.
4. Ask if the person has time for
a 30-minute meeting during which you
could learn more about the interviewees'
work and thoughts about their career.
- This whole process
of contacting interviewees might make
you a little nervous - if you're new
to the working world and low on the
totem pole, calling up a business
executive can be a little frightening.
You may be especially hesitant because
you feel like you have nothing to
offer in return for that executive's
time. Relax. Most successful members
of the working world have an intimate
understanding of the networking system.
They know that when they were inexperienced,
seasoned professionals helped them
out. And now that they're the high-level
executives, they'll talk to you at
a business conference or grant you
a 30-minute meeting - with the understanding
that when you're a big shot, you'll
take a few minutes out of a busy day
to advise a newcomer about your line
of work. And, if that answer doesn't
satisfy you, remember that most people
love talking about themselves and
relish the experience of feeling like
an important expert in their field.
Whom
should I Interview?
How
should I set up a meeting?
How
do I prepare for an informational interview?
How
do I conduct the informational interview?
How
do I follow up after the informational
interview?
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