PANEL INTERVIEW
When you are facing a
panel of interviewers, make your best moves.
Whether you are searching for jobs,
looking for career avenues or climbing the corporate ladder, you can't escape
team interviews these days. The problem is that such interviews don't have a
pattern to them. They come in different forms. You could be facing your
prospective team members. Or you could be up against the top brass—HR
vice-president, the section head, the operations chief. Or you could also be
sent to a recruitment assessment centre for multi-parametric evaluation
(psychological tests for pressure-handling abilities, team-player skills and so
on).
Try these ten tips for surviving, and
scoring, in a team interview.
GIVE VARIETY TO YOUR ANSWERS
Remember you might be interviewed by
different panels. Don't give a stock answer to all of them. They'll be comparing
notes.
Repackage your skills so that they
sound different. If you're showcasing project X as your major achievement in
your present job before one team, talk about project B before another interview
panel.
A technical team will tune in to techie talk; an HR team would rather hear about
your interpersonal skills.
FINE-TUNE INTERPERSONAL SKILLS
Pull out the stops on your group management and group presentation skills.
Interviewers are people after all. Look
for the personality type underscoring each interviewer. Then try and connect
with each one of them without getting personal. Usually the best way to make
contact is to project values that you feel you can share with your interviewers.
DON'T QUAKE IN YOUR BOOTS
- Interviewers are not ogres. They are
looking for excuses to hire you, not spill your guts.
- Don't be obsequious. That conveys
low self-esteem.
- If you face your interviewers with
fear in your eyes, they won't like what they see. They are NOT sadists.
PREPARE FOR STRESS
- You'll be up against a time crunch
in a team interview.
- In one-on-ones, the interviewer
might be taking notes, allowing you little breathers. No such luck with four
people firing questions at you. Use stress control techniques to soothe your
nerves. You might even use the extra adrenaline to sharpen your responses.
SHOWCASE THE IMPORTANT THINGS
- List seven important things that fit
the job description of the advertised post. Prepare to present skills that fit
such traits.
- It helps to talk to friends familiar
with the job description. You can even ask them to prepare tests that you can
take from them.
REHEARSE WELL
- Put together three family members or
friends with diverse personality traits.
- Recreate the formality of a team
interview situation and ask them to fire nonstop questions at you. That will
serve as a useful practice session.
- Ask for serious feedback, especially
about weak areas in your answers. Questions about qualifications and work
experience are usually generic, so what your mock team asks you is bound to be
pretty close to the real stuff.
CREATE A MENTAL PICTURE OF YOURSELF
Boost your self-confidence by seeing
yourself as star performer who's a cut above. See yourself answering with elan
the questions you expect. Then replay your answers and ask yourself these
questions:
- How interesting were your
observations?
- Did most of your responses begin the
same way?
- Did you use 'we' often, suggesting
team-player attributes?
- Are there traces of humour in your
responses?
ASK GOOD QUESTIONS
- Research is integral to a good
interview performance. Find out as much about you can about the company
concerned. Browse the Net, check company reports, put together news clips.
- Armed with your background brief,
ask relevant questions about the company.
- If you think you have a bright idea
about any ongoing activity, try this: "Did the company consider this option
..."
LOOK BEYOND THE OBVIOUS
- Your interview team has some core
queries about you. It's these they want you to address. Try and look beyond
the upfront questions to decipher their exact intent. Then respond to fill in
what the team is really looking for.
- Flesh out your answers to focus on
the team's concerns. If they ask you about your perception of the company's
ESOP policy, they want you to present your expectation from a stock option
plan.
- Answer in sync with the general
tenor of the interview. If your work involves individual research besides team
work, don't go overboard about team-player abilities. Balance your answer.
Mention how sometimes individual work is more productive though team work is
needed to put into action ideas generated by individual research.