Candidate Tips

Don't resign from your job unless you are really going to leave

Don’t under estimate the power of loyalty. If you are employed and you find a new job you will have to resign. Without question resigning is one of the worst things to do. It is a betrayal of trust, it shows that you put your career ahead of the company’s needs. It makes your boss look bad. And it does a lot of damage to your relationship with your current employer.

To replace you, your employer is going to experience upheaval, change and significant cost. So you don’t want to be resigning unless you are going to leave.

Once you resign it will go one of two ways:

You work your notice and leave

You are persuaded to stay

The people who stay, most often get a pay rise that matches their other job offer and a promise that things will change (training, promotion, new projects, new technology, new role), and they get a massive attack on loyalty, induced by being made to feel part of the team and company and that they are loved.

About half the people who are persuaded to stay are back looking for a job in 3 months, because whatever promises they were made didn’t happen. In most cases things do not change, but the damage to the employer / employee relationship is done.

So my advice is don’t look for a job, go and talk to your boss and say:

“I am paid less than market rate, I want a pay rise, but I don’t want to have to resign to get it.”

added on 22.09.2015

What is your motivation to change roles?

Recruitment is about finding the right job for the right person, so understanding a candidate’s motivation to change role is crucial to a good match. I am always very keen to hear why people want to change job, so I ask questions about it and I hear some interesting stories and amazing reasons; often I advise candidates to stay put because their motivation is not strong enough and they should be able to work out their issues without changing their job.

What is helpful, is an honest appraisal of your situation. If you hate your boss, fine. If you are stuck in a rut tell me that. If you haven’t had a pay rise in 3 years and your skills have vastly improved, I want to know. If you got caught photocopying yourself at the Christmas party, just tell me; if you are going to be made redundant, I want to know about it. But your motivation to change roles needs to make sense, it needs to be real, because you are going to get asked about it at interview and you are going to end up telling the truth, so being honest from the start will make you look better regardless of the reason.

My pet hates are these two:

"I want a new challenge" (But you don't know what the challenge is)

"It is time for a change" (But you can’t explain why)

added on 22.09.2015

HOW TO SHOW ENTHUSIASM AT INTERVIEW

The people that get offered the jobs are those that demonstrate enthusiasm, so here are a few tips on being enthusiastic:

  • Lean forward when the other person is talking, (just past upright)
  • Ask questions about the job that involves you (How will I…?)
  • Ask questions about the team that involves you (Who will I…?)
  • Ask questions about the interviewer’s career (When did you…?)
  • Ask questions about your first few days/ weeks in the job (What will I…?)
  • Look the interviewer in the eye
  • “Tell me about the team I will be working with?” (then smile)
  • “What can you say about the type of projects I will be working on?”
  • “Where will I sit?”
  • “Who will I work with?”
  • “Who would you say would be the best mentor I could have from the current team?”

If you want to really connect with the interviewer, make a connection between their background and your background that relates to when they first joined the company. For example, “When you first started you hadn’t done any training like me, how did you get past that?”

added on 22.09.2015

Preparation for your interview is the key to interview success

Preparation or practice is the key to success at interview. If you go for 3 interviews with 3 companies, then you will have learnt about the predictable questions. You will be in the swing of it and have every chance to shine at any subsequent interviews.

If however you only go for 1 interview, then you need to prepare so you are fluent in the easy and obvious questions. This will enable you to take your time on difficult questions without looking slow. Here are 4 questions that you are going to be asked:

  • “What do you do in your current role?”
  • “Why are you leaving?”
  • “What do you know about our company?”
  • “What do you want to do next?”

Your answers to these “easy ones” should be:

  • Fluent
  • Sharp and to the point
  • They must be positive; you need to take personal responsibility for what has gone wrong
  • Your answers should show off your strengths

The real trick is to practice the answers out loud, use the words, answer the questions and actually rehearse your answers out loud to yourself.

added on 22.09.2015

Don't smoke on your way to an interview!

Even smokers don’t like to hire smokers because there is a perception that they spend a lot of time outside the office smoking.

If you turn up smelling of smoke it is never going to help you get a new job. 

Try to avoid smoking in the car on the way to the interview. Have some nicotine gum or a fake cigarette handy.

Accept the fact that travelling to the interview is going to be stressful and the interview is likely to be nerve wracking. 

Think about how you are going to cope with your lack of nicotine and have a strategy ready.

added on 22.09.2015

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