Thursday, November 14, 2019
The One Way Youre Sabotaging Your Chances for a New Job
The One Way You're Sabotaging Your Chances for a New Job The One Way You're Sabotaging Your Chances for a New Job Of course there are lots of ways you can sabotage an interview. But weâre going to assume you know better than to lie on your resume , bash your previous employer , or perhaps worst of all, show up totally unprepared . So letâs talk about one thing you might not realize is hurting your chances of landing a new job: being inconsistent. Being inconsistent in an interview: think, ânot having a consistent story about your background, experience, the reason youâre interested in this company and position, and your motivation for leaving your current one,â lists Glassdoor human resources expert Jamie Hitchens- can crush you during the interview process. Thatâs because âthe recruiter, hiring manager and interviewers all share notes from their time with you,â Hitchens explains, and, âso, you should be telling them all the same thing.â In other words, you donât want to tell one manager youâre leaving your current job because youâd like more flexible work hours, only to turn around and tell the VP of the company youâre saying sayonara because youâd like to move up the corporate ladder. Neither answer is wrong, in and of itself, but when those two higher-ups talk, your different answers could inspire confusion, and call into question your honesty. Saying different things to different people isnât the only way you can be inconsistent in an interview. As Sharlyn Lauby, founder of HR Bartender , and author of Essential Meeting Blueprints for Managers , points out, you can be inconsistent on a resume. For example, letâs say youâve held many titles over your career . Your most recent move wasnât lateral- like going from a customer service representative role at one company to another- but instead, is something that doesnât make a lot of sense on paper- like moving from a marketing director to a social media manager. That kind of inconsistency on your resume, Lauby says, âmight need some explanation.â Same goes for listing skills that donât mesh, or listing some accomplishments but not all . All of these inconsistencies can be a red flag to a potential employer. When youâre inconsistent, in any way, âit shows a lack of preparation and in turn a lack of interest or commitment to this role,â warns Hitchens. âIt shows a lack of attention to detail, and [a] potential lack of integrity.â After all, she says, âif youâre telling the hiring manager one thing because you think itâs what they want to hear and then telling other interviewers something else, the truth likely lies somewhere in the middle.â Instead, you need to show a hiring manager three key things with what you write in your resume and what you say- to everyone involved in the hiring process- during your interview: trust, communication skills, and decision-making skills, Lauby says. âInconsistency can erode trust,â Lauby warns. âIf a manager gets a different answer every time they speak to [you], they donât know which response is the right one, and that can impact working relationships.â So, always try to give an honest answer. When it comes to communication skills, âconsistency doesnât mean that a personâs response will follow a set of norms,â Lauby explains. âIt means that the candidateâs responses are explainable and donât contradict other answers.â In an interview, try to make sure what you say on paper and out loud follows the same story, always. Lastly, inconsistency wonât let you show off your decision-making skills - a trait employers value in employees. âCompanies want to know employees are going to make the consistent decisions when it comes to customer service,â Lauby says. âBeing inconsistent can send the message that those skills are not well defined.â
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