Friday, May 8, 2020
Following Sochi Olympics is Like Watching a Bad Interview Unfold
Following Sochi Olympics is Like Watching a Bad Interview Unfold Ive been hooked on the #SochiProblems hashtag on Twitter where journalists and athletes are tweeting about mishaps related to the Olympics including the malfunctions during the opening ceremonys light show, unfinished buildings, trashed hotel rooms, unusual bathroom layouts, stray dogs, potholes, and crumbling sidewalks.Ok, weâre all human and we all make mistakes. But in some situations you are going to be judged more harshly than others. If a toilet seat in a hotel room bathroom is put on backwards under normal circumstances, you might have a chuckle and that would be the end of it. But when you are at an event as special as the Olympics being hosted in a a city that has had years to prepare for the event, you may become more frustrated by such a mishap. And even if the hotel has provided excellent accommodations to every other guest in that hotel, the person who had that experience will always associate that hotel with poor accommodations.Job search is a situation where your a ctions are under a microscope. Errors that might be passed over in your day to day work are scrutinized much more diligently when hiring managers are reviewing applicants. When you start the job search process, an employer doesnât know you and they donât trust you yet. They donât know if you are competent to do the job so each of your interactions with them either builds that trust or destroys it. Here are a few errors that job seekers often make and are frequently judged by.Resume typosâ¦Itâs very rare that I receive an email without a typo. And I see typos on websites and blogs all the time. And it doesnât really color my opinion of that person. But in job search, typos on the resume make a red flag go up for many hiring managers. The concern is that if the applicant wasnât detail-oriented enough to catch the typos in their resume, they may make other, more costly errors for the company.Fashion Faux-pasâ¦Everyone has showed up at work at some point in time in some ou tfit that was far from flattering, too casual, inconsistent with the companyâs corporate culture, or even offensive. In most cases the fashion faux-pas becomes fodder for the water cooler for a day or two and then just goes away. But on an interview, the candidate quickly turns into âthe applicant in the fishnet stockingsâ or âthe guy with the really bad tieâ and again a judgement is passed. The concern is that based on the applicantâs dress they wonât fit in with the companyâs culture or perhaps lack sound judgement in other areas.Arriving late to the interview⦠Just about everyone has been late to work at one time or another. And unless it becomes a chronic issue, it is generally accepted and not a big deal. But on an interview, arriving late can signal to a hiring manager that you are not reliable or dependable or that you donât manage your time well.Electronic whoopsâ¦Weâve all been in situations where someoneâs cell phone rings during a presentation or important meeting. And maybe itâs a bit embarrassing but itâs quickly forgotten. However, if your phone rings during an interview, the interviewer notices and may pass a judgement about you or even your consideration of others.When you apply for a job, you are a lot like the host country for the Olympics. Everything you do is obvious. Everything you do gets noticed. And little errors in your job search strategy can quickly turn into detrimental ones. The people working on anything related to the Olympics should have checked and double checked their workâ¦because itâs the Olympics and people all over the world are watching. Job seekers need to check and recheck all the little details that go into an effective job searchâ¦because itâs your career. Both are really big things that you donât want to screw up.
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