1 / 52

INTERVIEWING

INTERVIEWING. THE OPPORTUNITY. Always Be Ready to Interview Could Be Casual or Formal Could Be in a Store or On a Street Corner Could Be at Work or a Social Affair Could Be at a Professional or Fun Event First Impressions Really Count Your Next “ Boss/Subordinate ” May Be Beside You

chet
Télécharger la présentation

INTERVIEWING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INTERVIEWING

  2. THE OPPORTUNITY • Always Be Ready to Interview • Could Be Casual or Formal • Could Be in a Store or On a Street Corner • Could Be at Work or a Social Affair • Could Be at a Professional or Fun Event • First Impressions Really Count Your Next “Boss/Subordinate” May Be Beside You - At An Unexpected Time Or Place

  3. TYPES OF INTERVIEWS Categories • Employment • Appraisal • Counseling • Disciplinary • Persuasive Types • Layered Questions Interview • Series of questions designed to gather information about the “Three Employer Concerns”

  4. TYPES OF INTERVIEWS • Performance/Role Play Interview • Candidate role-plays job functions to assess specific skills • Stress Interview • Intended to put candidate under stress and assess reactions • Informal Interview • Intended to get the candidate to reveal more information than they might otherwise

  5. TYPES OF INTERVIEWS • Reverse Role Interview • The candidate becomes the interviewer • Assessment Instruments Interview • Various types of techniques are used to determine if candidate is a good fit • Combination Interview • A combination of two or more interviews

  6. MODES OF INTERVIEWING • Telephone Screenings • On-Campus Interview • On-Site Interview • Off-Site Interview • Third Party • Facility Visit

  7. Planning The Interview • Purpose • Information Gathering • Structure • Possible Questions • Plan physical setting • Anticipate problem

  8. CONDUCTING THE INTERVIEW • Opening • Body • Interviewer’s role • Respondent’s role • Closing

  9. THREE EMPLOYER CONCERNS • Skill Concerns • Can you do the job? • Personal Characteristics Concerns • Will you do the job? • Will you get along well with others? • Are you manageable? • Money Concerns • Can the company afford you?

  10. Before the Interview: • Research • Rehearse • Relax

  11. Research: • The workplace-the physical setting • The company • The nature of the business • The company culture and philosophy • The management style • The name(s) of the interviewer(s) • The location and how to get there

  12. Rehearse: • The questions the interviewer might ask • The features and benefits you bring • The stories or evidence that prove you can address the employer’s needs • The physical aspects of the interview-your handshake, your body language, your attire

  13. During the Interview • Be on time or a few minutes early • Call if you will be detained • Dress appropriately- conservatively for the first meeting • Be professional and courteous with everyone you meet in the office, especially the receptionist • Make a good first impression • Show the interviewer that you are the perfect fit

  14. During the Interview • Professional and firm handshake • SMILE • Maintain eye contact • Positive attitude and confidence • Enthusiasm and a good posture • Focus on skills / accomplishments / success stories • Active listening is the key - make sure you understand the reason for the question

  15. During the Interview • Ask for clarifications and / or paraphrase the question to make sure you know what the interviewer means • Refrain from criticizing others (including your past employer / workplace • Thank the interviewer and arrange a follow-up

  16. After the Interview Review • Assess how you did • What questions you answered well • Which responses need improvement • Fill in interview checklist Relax • Do something pleasurable

  17. POST INTERVIEW ACTIONS • Follow-up Communications • Oral and written • Position Acceptance/Rejection • Oral and written • Human Resources Organization • Do not circumnavigate them unless you have prior approval from them

  18. ETHICS OF INTERVIEWING • Guidelines for the Interviewer • Don’t make unrealistic promises • Don’t reveal confidential information • Don’t ask illegal question • Don’t be overbearing • Don’t be overfriendly • Guidelines for the respondent • Don’t be dishonest • Don’t waste interviewer’s time

  19. GROUP COMMUNICATION & EFFECTIVE MEETING

  20. Characteristics of Groups • Groups Range in size from 3 to 15 people. • Members know each other by name or role. • There is a considerable amount of interaction. • Members are interdependent. • Common goals, interests, benefits of membership are shared within the group.

  21. ROLES - Group Communication • Effective groups establish cohesiveness and norms. • Roles (Every member plays at least one role). • Task Roles • Information agent: offers facts and asks for input • Elaborator: offers further clarification • Personal Roles • Harmonizer: smoothes over tension in the group • Gatekeeper: controls communication channels • Problem Roles • Blocker: negative and stubbornly resistant behavior • Avoider: displays noninvolvement in the group

  22. FACTORS AFFECTING GROUP COMMUNICATION • SIZE • Longevity • Leadership • Self-concept • Status

  23. PROCESS • Orientation Stage • Conflict stage • Emergence stage • Reinforcement stage

  24. Styles of Decision Making • Authoritarian • Two situations call for this style: • Crisis situations • Lack of group knowledge • There are major disadvantages to this method.

  25. Styles of Decision Making • Laissez-Faire Decision Making • Valuable time and resources can be lost. • This group operates without guidance from a designated leader.

  26. Styles of Decision making • Participative: • The leader makes decisions with the group. • Benefits are noted from research: • Members are more committed to outcomes. • Quality of decisions is improved. • Limitations revolve around time issues and perceptions of the leader’s expertise.

  27. EFFECTIVE MEETINGS

  28. ANSWERE THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS • Why • Which • Who • Where • When

  29. THINGS TO REMEMBER • Notice • Agenda • Minutes • Opening • Execution • Conclusion • Follow-up

  30. Types of Meetings • Informational (or instructional) meeting – formal – informal • Problem - solving and decision - making meetings • Change Facilitating Meetings

  31. “The P3 Model” Plan a Meeting

  32. Nature Plan Expectations a Effective Effective Agenda Meeting Meeting Meeting Time Extra Resources Plan a Meeting Plan the meeting prior to its assembly using the “N.E.A.T.E.R.” acronym.

  33. FOLLOW - UP

  34. Making, Organizing and Presenting the Speech

  35. Getting Started • What is being requested of me? • Logistics of the event • Where • Travel Plans • Schedule Travel Times • When • Plan on arriving at least 30 minutes early for set up • Are there other speakers? You may need to coordinate. • Equipment Available • LCD, Microphone, Extra Handouts, etc.

  36. Remember • Purpose • What is the goal of this speech? • Inform • Change Minds • Academic • Etc.

  37. PURPOSE • Informative • Persuasive • Entertaining

  38. ANALYZING THE AUDIENCE • Age • Sex • Occupation • Intelligence • Background • Culture

  39. Research the Topic and Audience • Grasp the Objective • When requested to speak, be sure to make sure that your understanding of the topic is THEIR understanding of the topic. • Research the topic thoroughly. This helps prepare for questions. • Interview the inviter if necessary

  40. Research the Topic and Audience • Know the audience • Formal – (First Impressions Count!) • Informal • Students • Audit Committee • Understand the Type of Speech • Persuasive, Informative, Demonstrative, Commemorative(remember), Other

  41. Methods of Speaking • Using Manuscript • Memory • Impromptu • Extemporaneous

  42. Organizing Structures • The Introduction • The Body • Chronological pattern • Spatial Pattern • Causal order • Topical pattern • The conclusion

  43. Draft the Presentation • Outline the Major Points • Introduction (Tell them what you are going to say) • Body (Tell them) • Conclusion (Tell them what you told them) • Build in the Detail within each major point • Make the presentation appropriate for the audience • Once “completed”, set it down for 48 hours, then revisit. • Have someone else review it if appropriate.

  44. Present • Dress Appropriately • Use the restroom immediately before presenting • Make sure you are healthy. Postpone if you are ill (if possible). • Make sure your language is appropriate • Start with a story or an appropriate joke. This draws in the audience.

  45. Present (Continued) • Expect to be a bit nervous • Be sure to meet with the meeting’s “chairman” so they know you are there. • Check to make sure equipment works and is available • Have paper copies as a backup

  46. Present (Continued) • If you make a mistake, laugh at yourself, make the correction, then move forward. • Avoid jargon. • Avoid overuse of acronyms. • Interject interesting information to “keep” your audience • Money • Anecdotal Stories • Take off your watch, but place it where you can see it. Watch your time.

  47. Present (Continued) • Address your audience, not your shoes or the slides. • Speak clearly and slowly and with appropriate volume • Note : If a Microphone is provided, use it. Sometimes presentations are recorded or off-site people will not be able to hear unless you speak through the microphone. • End conclusively!

  48. Persuasive Speech • Problem – solution order • Motivated Sequence • Deductive and inductive structures

  49. How To make Speech effective • Supporting Idea • Illustration • Statistics • Expert Testimony • Analogies • Anecdotes (real life characters), Fables (animals), Parables(fictitious stories)

More Related