All
job interviews have the same
objective, but employers
reach that objective in a variety
of ways.
You might enter the
room expecting to tell stories
about
your professional successes and
instead find yourself selling
the interviewer a bridge or editing
code at a computer. One strategy
for performing your best during
an interview is to know the rules
of the particular game you are
playing when you walk through
the
door.
The Screening Interview
Companies use screening
tools to ensure that candidates
meet minimum qualification requirements.
Computer programs are among the
tools used to weed out unqualified
candidates. (This is why you
need a digital resume that is
screening-friendly. See our resume
center for help.)
Sometimes human
professionals are the gatekeepers.
Screening interviewers often
have honed skills to determine
whether there is anything that
might disqualify you for the
position. Remember-they do
not need to know whether you
are
the best fit for the position,
only whether you are not a
match.
For this reason,
screeners tend
to dig for dirt. Screeners
will hone in on gaps in your
employment
history or pieces of information
that look inconsistent. They
also will want to know from
the outset whether you will
be too
expensive for the company.
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