Friday, July 3, 2020
Go from Great to the Ideal Job Candidate - Melissa Llarena
Go from Great to the Ideal Job Candidate Go from Great to the Ideal Job Candidate Itâs the one question every job hunter wants answered:How do I make myself stand out from all the other applicants?How can I outsmart everyone else?The answer lies in being able to present a profile of yourself as a candidate who âchecks all of the boxesâ of your prospective employerâs candidate wish list. So, where do you find this wish list? Itâs right in the job description. Your ability to expertly decode itâ"or solve the mysteryâ"will allow you to put yourself at the top of that employerâs list. Letâs unpack how to access your inner Colombo.TIP #1: Critically assess the job descriptionApply critical-thinking skills to uncover overarching themes about the skills the employer is seeking in a candidate. This step is a key part of your sleuthing activity. You want to breakdown the description along the key skill areas listed, and then figure out how you can exceed expectations along those areas. The best way t o do that is to look at the background and experience of people who already hold the job, and draw parallels from your own experience and skills base to theirs. This can be done through creative use of LinkedIn. Hone in on the themes where you fall short and think creatively about the ways you have come closest to using those underutilized skills. Your job is not to disqualify yourself out of a position. Your job is to come up with all the ways that youâve already come closest to the role youâre seeking â" let someone else ding you; donât do it for them!TIP #2: Use online resources to investigate the position and companyLinkedIn is a great resource from which to do a deep dive on employees of target companies. Youâll want to find the profile of someone doing the same job youâre applying to, in the same office to which youâre applying. LinkedIn even helps your search along with the âPeople Also Viewedâ link. It pulls together other profiles which are cl osely-matched to the one youâre currently viewing. Click here to learn how to strategically âdeep diveâ into essential details using LinkedIn. Outside of LinkedIn, you should research for company YouTube videos to hear and see a companyâs leaders speak. These dynamic materials will help you evaluate a companyâs culture. Youâll hear jargon. You will get a better sense of how a firmâs employees behave and carry themselves. You will stand apart if you leverage these insights in the way you present yourself and your ideas.TIP #3: Benchmark yourself against current employeesClick here for the Career Outcomes Matter tool, The Winning Benchmarking Matrix⢠(WBM), which will help you to perform this exercise.The WBM will allow you to take the information youâve gotten from the targeted LinkedIn profiles, pull out the key experiences and skill sets, and help you to find connections in your own background. It will also show you where there might be holes in your expe rience and your target companyâs model candidate profile, and will give you the tools to figure out a way to creatively fill those holes. You want to know your competition and the competition of your target company; WBM will help you to access that knowledge.Completing the WBM will leave you with a strong sense of what you bring to the table as a candidate. Some of the data youâll emerge with includes:Incorporating the five key job requirements within your marketing materials.Crafting interview-ready stories that address each point.Peppering relevant examples from your matrix into your elevator pitchUse your unique value-added capabilities to your advantage. Name your core strengths. Put an emphasis on the skills that make you unusual yet relevant to the job.TIP #4: Apply the intelligence youâve gatheredThe last step involves pulling together all the information youâve garnered from your sleuthing and applying it to become the top candidate. Itâs both a preparatory a nd a performance step as it involves you (a) preparing a story for each skill set you want to demonstrate by using the S.T.A.R. Method to answer interview questions; and (b) successfully executing your message during the interview.Preparation â" Use the S.T.A.R. (Situation, Task, Action, and Results) method. Itâs a template used to filter out the uninspired responses that some interviewees would otherwise offer up to prospective employers. Using S.T.A.R. stops you from falling into the generic answer trap. It forces you to share a specific example that illustrates your leadership qualities or problem-solving skills. Click here for a breakdown of the S.T.A.R. Method.Execution â" The interview is your opportunity to bring your resume to life and leave your interviewer with zero doubt youâre the one that they want. The best way to ensure that youâre making the best possible impression with your presentation is to coach yourself towards success. You want to f ind someone who can ask you any hard questions, and help you rehearse the âlook and soundâ of you at your best. Additionally, you know those last five minutes during any interview when the interviewer asks you, âwhat questions do you have for me?â you have to use that opportunity to ask killer questions. 9 out of 10 interviewees fill that opportunity to standout with mundane questions that do not further their candidacy. The ultimate way to beat the competition is by asking refined, thoughtful, substantive and smart questions. Your job is to close the deal, and posing thoughtful questions to your interviewer will propel you light-years beyond competing candidates.
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