Why Gimmicks Are No Good In a Job Search

September 18, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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A very successful sales representative once revealed his secret. He said that he would listen carefully to learn a prospect’s needs and wants. He would then describe the pros, cons, and price of his product. His wrap-up involved asking—and I’m paraphrasing here—if the would-be customer felt the product would be a good fit.

No games. No trickery. All was done very low-key. He let them know that he wanted their business, but did so in a way that was respectful and professional.

Contrast his approach with the hard-sell types who overpromise and ooze insincerity. It doesn’t take long to learn that they are seeking nothing beyond a quick sale.

It can help to remember the sales rep’s story when you go in for a job interview. Despite the poker game aspects of the interview process (“Keep your cards close to your chest!”), a less stressful approach is to seek to clarify. You are not after the job at all costs. You are there to see whether you and the employer are a good fit.

[See 17 rules for job seekers.]

Are you going to try to impress the interviewer? Sure, but be wary of any answers or job search techniques that smack of gimmickry. For the most part, people are not fools. They know when they are being gamed. The second they sense a hustle, trust shoots out the window.

And trust, more than competence and eloquence, is the coin of the realm.

Michael Wade writes Execupundit.com, an eclectic combination of management advice, observations, and links. A partner with the Phoenix firm of Sanders Wade Rodarte Consulting Inc., he has advised private and public-sector organizations for more than 30 years.

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It's very very lock to get a job. For Career Counselling and Job Advice please visit http://www.angstcorner.com/

Angstcorner of AK 5:08AM September 23, 2009

It's been my experience that many employers don't really care about the specifics of how you would do your job if hired. I'm interviewing for teaching jobs, and they never ask me how I would teach a lesson or how I would organize a fund raiser or other activity. They are more concerned with how I would fit in with the school, whether or not they can trust me with the students, and determining through personal interview and analysis of my confidence therein if I really do know what I'm talking about or if it's all just fluff. Don't get me wrong, I would love to talk to potential employers about how I would teach a lesson or what kinds of things I would have my students doing in class, but the subject just doesn't come up.

Marzec of IN 9:24PM September 22, 2009

The reason all these games are on the rise is because such few employers actually bother asking one main question: how would you do the job if hired?!

Many employers don't know what it takes to actually do a job. That's why their job postings are so cryptic. They really don't know what they want as exemplified by their contradictory job requirements, e.g.,

* must be a team player and independently minded

* must be a great visionary and concentrate on day-to-day tasks

Expect both candidates and employers to become great gamesters, since neither one will focus on true competence.

Greg of CA 3:22PM September 22, 2009

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