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So,
you’ve got an interview, congratulations. Now,
don’t blow it.
In previous columns,
I’ve talked about how to put your resume together.
We’ve examined what to do in an interview and
we’ve talked about negotiating an offer.
We’ve looked
at what your skill set might be worth in the marketplace
and we’ve looked at a wide range of tips and skills
that you’ll find useful in developing you career.
And there’s much more to come.
But I still find
that some candidates blow it when they get in front
of a client. In November 2002’s issue of The Bottom
line, I wrote about the interview in an article entitled
‘The Interview – Sixty Minutes To Change
Your Life’, but in my work with clients, hiring
authorities with a need, I still get the occasional
feedback on candidates that really is unbecoming of
a professional man or woman.
Are these issues
that I, as a professional recruiter should have spotted
before they were put in front of an unsuspecting client?
At first glance
you’d say yes, and in theory you’d be right,
but sometimes certain things only come out when the
candidate is in front of someone who has the power to
hire them.
So this issue
I will talk about some of the cardinal sins candidates
make (it seems some people just can’t help themselves
from committing them) in the hope that the guilty and
potentially guilty will take heed.
Let’s look
at Jennifer. Jennifer is 32, a Chartered Accountant
with a ten-partner firm in the City, where she has worked
for the last five years. She’s content in her
present job but is getting frustrated at an apparent
‘glass ceiling’ in her existing firm. There
just aren’t the openings for her to advance beyond
‘Manager’.
She’ll sometimes
see outsiders hired over her head and wonder why she
wasn’t considered for promotion instead.
Her performance
reviews are ‘satisfactory’ and her salary
is a steady $75,000. She doesn’t feel that her
boss is being fair in placing more demands on her if
she wants to advance, after all, who would take care
of her young children?
She doesn’t
get as much client contact as she would like and hasn’t
received a bonus for three consecutive years. ‘They
always make excuses’ she says. Jennifer feels
ready to look at her options elsewhere.
Raymond is a Chartered
Accountant who, at 29, has been identified by his national
firm as ‘future partnership material’.
He arrives early,
leaves late and works very effectively. He’s very
popular amongst peers, superiors and subordinates. Everybody
loves Raymond. He is about to start the Institute’s
‘In-Depth’ tax course, paid for by his firm.
Raymond is already
a Manager and is earning $86,500, plus bonus. He loves
the direct contact with clients and he learned a great
deal from a Partner who recently retired. Raymond sought
out this person not long after qualifying and asked
him to mentor him during his last few years.
Jennifer answered
an advert on Workopolis, posted by Frank, a sole practitioner
looking for a Manager or Senior Manager (according to
the job posting) at a salary between $80,000 and $100,000.
He has fifteen staff and $1.5 million in billings and
is experiencing rapid growth. He needs an experienced
hand to help manage the growing workflow.
She sent in her
resume and covering letter, and Frank forgave the spelling
mistakes and typos in the resume and covering letter,
assuming that she was really busy and applying online
from her office.
He liked her background
in a bigger firm and thought that her salary expectations
represented good value, so he asked if they could meet.
Jennifer turns
up for the interview fifteen minutes late. Her hair
is untidy, there’s a huge ladder in her nylons,
her shoes are scruffy and there’s a ‘baby
vomit’ stain on the back of her cardigan.
She’s conscious
that the morning’s coffee might be on her breath,
so she chews gum throughout the entire interview.
When Frank asks
about her passion for public accounting she replies:
‘Well, I’m also looking at opportunities
in industry, after all, I’ve been in public accounting
long enough now’.
The interview
lasted thirty-five minutes.
Frank was, frankly,
looking for someone way more professional and certainly
wouldn’t want her to be his ambassador to clients
when he wasn’t available. ‘She might not
even stay that long if the right opportunity in industry
came along’ Frank muses.
‘I’m
not surprised that she isn’t getting the chance
for promotion’ Frank said aloud to himself after
she left.
Raymond meets
Frank after Frank has engaged a search firm, as the
quality of candidates he was able to generate on his
own efforts just weren’t cutting it for him. He
chose to work with a headhunter who only works with
public accounting firms.
Raymond arrives
ten minutes early. He visits the washroom and combs
his hair, wipes his nose and brushes his teeth. He puts
his washing kit away in his briefcase as he looks down
at the floor to see his reflection in his shining shoes.
After a confident
handshake, Raymond asks Frank what his clients thought
about his newly designed web site and how much traffic
was it getting?
Raymond explained
his passion for helping smaller businesses create and
protect wealth, how he loved meeting with clients and
earning their trust and confidence and how he really
got a ‘buzz’ out of helping clients achieve
more.
The interview
lasted an hour and three-quarters, and the time seemed
to fly by.
‘Wow’
thought Frank, as Raymond walked to the elevators ‘I’d
love to have him involved in my practice, I know my
clients would just love him’.
I’m pretty
sure I don’t have to point out all the difference
between the two candidates, and tell you who got a job
offer of $97,500…
Do I?
© 2004, MFA
Group Inc |