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Interview Perspectives: 2 Stories

What an Incompetent Interviewer Can Do To Ruin Your Interview Success

In my experience these two interview perspectives stand out as being something that you should know about in case you come across anything similar and in my career coaching practice I’ve come across all sorts of interview feedback from my clients.

What do you do when the interviewer simply won't interview you? It has happened and there is an answer.

What do you do when the interviewer won't stop talking, how do you make your case for consideration? This is what to do...

The Right Interview Preparation

With all of my clients we cover the importance of interview preparation; knowing what you have to offer and being able to discuss why you want the job and are the most suitable candidate. In addition having the confidence to conduct the interview on an equal footing with the interviewer so you can make your decision about whether the job is right for you.

All of this depends on actually taking part in the interview of course and if the interviewer – through incompetence or other reason – doesn’t allow that, what can you do? What I’ve outlined here are two real interview perspectives situations (I’ve changed the names) where things were so unusual, so if you come across anything like them you’ll know what to do.

1. The Interviewer Who Wouldn’t Stop Talking

This first of the two interview perspectives is an account of John’s interview and the interviewer who wouldn’t stop talking.

John came back from his interview appointment totally perplexed.

“I arrived 10 minutes early and was shown in to meet Mr Lowden, the Office Manager, exactly on time. I thought everything would go the way we discussed in our pre-interview talks and I knew I was fully prepared; the job sounded absolutely right for me.”

But it wasn’t exactly the interview he expected because once the introductions were made, the interviewer Mr Lowden started talking and didn’t stop until he said:

“Thank you for coming, I’ve enjoyed our meeting, I’ll let you know the outcome as soon as possible.”

So John arrived to talk it through with me. What could he have done?

Many hiring managers simply do not know how to conduct an interview, and it would be wrong to write off the job because of this manager’s ineptitude. Although quite unusual this was an extreme example of the manager who talks because they don’t know what questions to ask.

John had done his preparation very carefully and knew what the requirements were for the job and the successful candidate, so he had the keys to this dilemma in his hands.

To break into the interviewer’s monologue you have to ask a question and this can be difficult without appearing too rude.

Break Eye Contact And...Interrupt

What you do first is break the eye contact – look away – then while you are looking away, you say “may I ask you a question?” and on the last syllable of ‘question’ you re-engage firm eye contact which will elicit a positive response. The eye contact is crucial for you to seize control at that moment.

You can then use your knowledge to ask a relevant question such as:“Is it true that the most important area of this role is meeting monthly deadlines?”

When you have your response you then immediately say:

“May I tell you how I am able to meet this most important aspect of the job?”

You shouldn’t have to repeat this ploy as the interview will now open up; but you know what to do if this ever happens to you.

2. The Interviewer Who Wouldn’t Interview

The second interview perspectives story is about the interviewer who sent my client, Chuck, away without any discussion whatsoever.

When Chuck returned, he was really down.

“I did everything right and I know I am the best person for this particular Field Sales role, but he just wouldn’t talk to me, and sent me away; what a waste of time!”

What happened was that when Chuck was shown into the interview room, the Field Sales Director barely looked up from what he was writing and just said:

“Thanks for coming – you’re not what we want, check with the desk for your travel expenses, goodbye.”

Most firms don’t intentionally waste your time, so you have to ask yourself what is going on.

What happened here was the Field Sales Director’s way of putting Chuck to an immediate test – how would he react at being rejected?

Rejection is the greatest problem for Field Sales people to overcome, but Chuck never expected to encounter it at his interview.

When I got Chuck to think about this he realised that he should have applied his sales skills to the situation to find out if there really was a problem.

So what he should have done was ask “What is it about me that makes you think I’m not right for the job?” This way if there was a genuine problem he would have the chance to deal with it, or if it was just a test he would have passed the first stage. This is generally known as ‘objection selling’ and is a powerful technique.

First identify if there is a real problem (objection) and then you have the opportunity to minimise it or make it go away altogether.

In this case Chuck would then be able to offer up some solid reasons why he was right for the job. And once he got started he would be on the way to securing the job he knew was right for him.

I wouldn't expect anything like these interview perspectives stories to happen to you, but if it did, you now know what to do.

More Help For Your Interview

killer interview secrets

These two interview perspectives may sound completely barmy, but they are something that you should know about in case you come across anything similar.

When the interviewer simply won't interview you you need to know how to play it because it has happened and there is an answer.

When the interviewer won't stop talking, you need to know how to deal with it so that you can make your case for consideration.

Top of Interview Perspectives

Back to interview questions so you can get your answers to interview questions sorted out or go on to interview preparation and learn how to beat the interviewer by being better prepared for your interview.


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