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Prepare for Your Interviews
You’ve brushed up your skills, dialed in your resume, and finally found a job you want. Now all you have to do is wow them in the interview. Any job interview can be a nerve-wracking experience, but if you go in prepared and confident, you’ll give yourself the best possible chance to land the job you want. With that in mind:
Be honest. If you misrepresent yourself during an interview, you’ll likely end up harried and miserable even if you do land the job. Likewise, be yourself during the interview, and if you’re nervous, let your interviewer know.
Do your homework. Nothing turns off an employer more than a job candidate who doesn’t know what they do or what industry they’re in. Visit the company’s website and familiarize yourself with their business and especially with any products you’re likely to be working on.
Come with questions. Part of doing your homework is coming up with some questions to ask your interviewer. All businesses want employees who care about their products, and asking intelligent questions during your job interview demonstrates that you care.
Remember, you’re interviewing them, too. A job interview is usually the first time you get to evaluate the work environment you’re attempting to join. It’s one of the first times you get to meet your potential co-workers in person, and one of your first chances to ask questions about the job you’re applying for. So while you’re busy trying to impress your interviewer, take some time out to consider whether you actually want to work at this place. You don’t want to go in looking to grill your interviewer about whether this office is worthy of you, but if you remember that you’re still evaluating this opportunity as well, it’s often easier to relax.
Once you’re past these job interviewing basics, check out this guide for some more tips:


yoddel
4 days ago
232 comments
best topic
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Phreadd
about 1 year ago
8260 comments
Set up your resume as a website, with various pages for various catagories, then burn it to CD's to send out to prospective employers.
My guess is this would be a real attention getter, and noone you send it to will forget you.
bhamdesigns4u
about 1 year ago
24 comments
This is all good and well, but after you have the degrees in hand and the certifications - how then are you supposed to prove to the perspective company you are capable if they are not willing to give you a chance? Simple..don't depend on companies like Monster.com and Career builder.com to do your hunting, why waste money when you can freelance? Get your name out and get noticed - the real companies want to see what you can do, how you operate and your overall temperament. You went to school, you got the degrees now kick the walls of defiance and find that job!