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Job
Interview Center
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Know
Yourself: themes and trends
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After
you spend an evening or afternoon
reflecting on your life, you
might wish to have others explore
your responses with you. Look
for themes and trends in your
responses, finding information
that overlaps. Focus on what
energizes you and what saps your
spirit. Notice your preferences.
Consider for example what we
can discover about Suzanne's
professional aspirations and
tendencies from her responses.
Five accomplishments
that I enjoyed include:
- Launching an
anti-drunk driving campaign
in high school.
- Training an intern
in critical thinking.
- Negotiating with
diverse teams to get creative
projects completed.
- Finding the overlap
between different company's
interests so that they can
establish mutually beneficial
relationships.
- Seeing my college
students think in new ways.
Five things that
make me proud include:
- Going to France
by myself to learn French.
- Setting a high
performance goal for myself
and meeting it.
- Having vision
for what needs to be done in
different situations.
- Being in shape.
- Listening to
the concerns of my friends
and honoring them.
Three times that
I felt highly motivated to accomplish
something include:
- When I had tons
of work to do to meet a product
launch deadline and had to
stay extremely organized and
focused in order to complete
the work.
- When I came up
with an idea for panel discussions
at my church, which led to
much improved communication
and many new friendships.
- When I worked
on projects with colleagues
and had to complete my work
so that we could discuss things
and move to the next stage.
Three scenarios
in which I lacked motivation
to accomplish something include:
- When I worked
all by myself after my boss
died and my new supervisors
were not accessible.
- When I had to
process details all day, day
after day-entering data, completing
forms, and other rote tasks
that only challenged my patience
but did not engage my mind.
- When I felt like
my employer was making decisions
that sacrificed his employees.
I felt appreciated
by people when:
- I got a significant
raise after having my value
to the company reconsidered.
- My supervisor
and colleagues verbally praise
my efforts and thank me for
my way of working.
- My supervisor
expressed confidence in my
abilities and did not micromanage
me, but spent time helping
me when I needed support or
ran into problems.
By analyzing even
these first five questions, we
get a sense of what kind of job
would fit this person well. For
example, we see that Suzanne
enjoys influencing people; each
of the accomplishments that she
enjoyed includes affecting the
way that other people think or
act. She also feels gratified
when she is able to bring people
together for a common purpose
they might have overlooked.
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The things
that make Suzanne proud are a bit more
diverse. Some include a sense of meeting
difficult challenges-like learning
French through immersion and raising
the bar of performance or being in
shape. Having vision means that she
has something to offer that affects
common purpose. Acting ethically toward
people also seems important to her.
It already begins to make
sense, then, that she would feel motivated
to accomplish things when she initiates
them, when she is accountable to other
people, or when she needs to meet a
specific goal. Deadlines appear to
affect her in positive ways by helping
her to focus when she might not otherwise.
Contrarily, her energy and drive are
sapped when she works in isolation
without gaining feedback, when the
tasks are rote and do not require creativity
or initiative, and when she perceives
that people are treated badly. She
feels appreciated by her employer when
her supervisor recognizes her vision,
drive, and ability to focus and gives
her the space she needs to excel while
still staying connected with her. She
feels appreciated when her company
gives her a raise for good work, but
also when others verbally praise her.
And, even though she likes to work
without tight supervision, she feels
appreciated when her supervisor has
time for her.
Intriguing as these
discoveries might be for Suzanne,
she cannot unload her personal psyche
on the interviewer. She still has
to formulate professional responses
to specific questions. Knowledge
about the company provides guidance
for how to craft these materials.
Self-knowledge provides the raw materials
for devising compelling responses.
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