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How
To Know When You Are "Really Ready" to Give A Good Interview
Don't Deceive Yourself And Inadvertently Create An Interview Choking
Situation.
Success in giving a good interview is 90% preparation. Your goal
is to prepare so extensively in advance that the interview seems
easy and predictable in comparison. If you practice correctly and
diligently, you will gain a sense of high confidence and deservedness
to succeed. People tend to deceive themselves about how ready they
think they are for an interview. This article describes six major
ways people deceive themselves into thinking they are ready, and
25 ways to know when you are truly ready to give a great interview.
1307
words.
How To Know When You Are "Really Ready" to Give A Good Interview
Don't Deceive Yourself And Inadvertently Create
An Interview Choking Situation
Bill Cole, MS, MA
Founder and CEO
William B. Cole Consultants
Silicon Valley, California
Now you have had some interview coaching sessions
with your interview coach. You worked on learning skills for handling
stress from a mental, physical and breath control perspective. You
understand how stress reactions and the fight or flight response
happens. You learned many secrets of interview preparation and behavior
and how the interview game is played. You gained mental toughness
and much personal insight.
Let me compare this interview process above to taking a golf lesson.
You go to your golf pro and learn some new golf skills-perhaps a
new grip, stance, swing and mental cues for all that. The pro showed
you how to do all the moves, had you try them and told you how to
practice all of it. Your job now is to go off and rewrite your notes,
practice with awareness, make notes on your progress, record additional
questions or roadblocks to address, and be a great student as you
negotiate the learning curve, and ultimately, master the material
and the new skills. Of course, no one takes a single golf lesson,
expecting to master everything. The reality is that it takes additional
lessons to continue improving.
Improving your interview skills is almost identical.
To make everything you did with your interview coach come together,
you need to spend serious time practicing all you learned. You need
to handle the learning curve, and go past that to the mastery phase.
That takes time.
You need many mock interviews. You need to craft great answers.
You need to be able to use the stress control skills seamlessly.
It may take up to a month or more of hard work for it all to come
together. Remember, "Hope is not a strategy". You need to be intentional
about what you want to have happen. Focus on what you want to have
happen, not on what you are trying to avoid.
How People Tend To Deceive Themselves About How Ready They Think
They Are For An Interview
It's really a predictable, yet unfortunate phenomenon
I see every day in my office. I am referring to how people think
they are ready for an interview, but are not. I can speak with a
client for 35 minutes or so, and they can be highly conversant,
articulate, relaxed, natural, and give great answers to my casual
questions about them, their career and the upcoming job they are
seeking. But once I say, "Let's do a mock interview", everything
shifts. They sit up stiffly, look tense, and take on all the characteristics
of choking that they told me about over the phone. They become very
self-conscious, halting and second-guess and edit themselves as
they answer. And of course their answers and performance is sub-par,
to say the least.
I am not judging them in the slightest. I can empathize. When I
do television work, seeing that red camera light come on, and hearing
the Director say "And... action!", makes me also feel I am in a
rather surreal situation at times. But I have a mental system to
overcome it and give a solid performance.
Most of my clients come to me having deceived themselves about how
hard it is to give a good interview. It's a lot of work. Here are
the six major ways people delude themselves into thinking they are
ready to interview, when they are not.
- They avoid facing the questions that scare them.

- They avoid doing the hard work of crafting great answers, and
instead settle for the obvious, feel good, top of mind answers.

- They avoid doing actual mock interviews, and instead, simply
read the answers in their minds, or out loud.

- They avoid replicating the actual interview conditions, by
not wearing the same clothes they will use, sitting in similar
chairs, doing the interview for the probable length, not breaking
character, etc. Hence, once in the interview, they are surprised,
and feel off balance.

- They under-practice and hope for the best.

- They don't solicit independent perspective from others on the
quality of their interview skills.
25 Ways To Know When You Are Truly Well-Prepared For An Interview
Just as in school when you went into certain exam
situations "knowing" you were completely ready to nail the test,
you can have those same feelings when interviewing. Here are 25
ways to tell if you are truly ready to go into the interview and
give a solid performance.
- You know your material inside and out.

- You know exactly what you are going to say for each question.

- There are no questions that scare you any longer.

- The material flows out of you easily.

- You don't need to "remember" the material. You own it.

- You are fine with your mind answering differently each time
you are asked the same question, as long as the essential material
is covered correctly.

- You don't second-guess yourself as you go into the interview.

- You trust your answers are "good enough" and don't attempt
to improve them as you are answering.

- You have stopped judging and evaluating yourself as you answer.
Your inner critic has gone away.

- You have stopped judging and evaluating the progress of the
interview, and simply accept what is happening, as you hope for
the best.

- You have dropped your belief that to give a solid interview,
you must be perfect. Instead, you go for excellence.

- You lose the obsessive-compulsive feelings that you must practice
non-stop, intensively right up to the interview.

- Your mind easily stays on what you are doing, and does not
slip back into the past, nor project into the future.

- You can relax and simply "let it happen".

- You have well-learned stress control techniques integrated
into your interview skill set.

- You know how to manage your anxiety and deeply relax an hour
or so before your interview.

- You have your thoughts and mental images under control, so
they are positive and helpful to your cause.

- Any previous filler words, awkward pauses and fidgeting have
virtually disappeared.

- There are no more memory lapses. You don't get "stuck".

- Your mock interviews go very well.

- You can give the same quality answers, with the same quality
performance, as you look at a human being asking you the questions,
as you can when you speak into a tape recorder, or when you are
alone.

- You no longer have a need in mock interviews to editorialize
or comment on your answers, or "break character". You "play along"
and maintain the pretense that you are in an actual interview.

- You believe you are completely prepared and have attained the
peace of mind that comes from that knowledge.

- You look forward to an interview as an interesting mental challenge.

- You see interviews as an adventure.
Success In Giving A Good Interview Is 90% Preparation
Your goal is to prepare so extensively in advance
that the interview seems easy and predictable in comparison. If
you practice correctly and diligently, you will gain a sense of
high confidence and deservedness to succeed.
You will also get the peace of mind that you have left nothing to
chance, and that there is nothing that can happen in the interview
that you can't handle. The military has a saying regarding training:
"The more you sweat in peacetime, the less you bleed in war". An
interview is at least a battle of wits, a game to be contested.
Train for that game before it even begins.
Just as you studied hard for school tests and left no stone unturned
in your quest for an "A" grade, you can do the same for an interview,
and show up feeling great that you are fully prepared. That prepared
feeling, of being fully competent, converts into high confidence.
Good luck!
This
article is an excerpt from the Interview Success Guide, an indispensable
tool you need to make your interview campaign a big success. This is a 216-page
blueprint containing over 400 questions you could be asked in an interview,
listed by category. There are over 1200 interview task reminders, questions
and guidelines in checklist form so you leave nothing to chance. This guide
gives you a step-by-step approach to mastering the interview process. Everything
you need to do, from the moment you begin your job hunt to when you accept the
position, is covered. We have thought of everything you could possibly need
to know to conduct a comprehensive, smart job hunt campaign. Learn more about
The Interview Success
Guide.
To learn more about how interview coaching can help you improve your abilities
in media situations, oral test and exam situations, and job interviews visit
Bill Cole, MS, MA, the Mental Game Coach, at:
www.mentalgamecoach.com/Services/InterviewCoaching.html.
Copyright ©
2011-2012 Bill Cole, MS, MA. All rights reserved.
Bill Cole, MS, MA, a leading authority
on peak performance, mental toughness and coaching, is founder and
CEO of William B. Cole Consultants, a consulting firm that helps
organizations and professionals achieve more success in business,
life and sports. He is also the Founder and President of the International
Mental Game Coaching Association (www.mentalgamecoaching.com),
an organization dedicated to advancing the research, development,
professionalism and growth of mental game coaching worldwide. He
is a multiple Hall-Of-Fame honoree as an athlete, coach and school
alumnus, an award-winning scholar-athlete, published book author
and articles author, and has coached at the highest levels of major-league
pro sports, big-time college athletics and corporate America. For
a free, extensive article archive, or for questions and comments
visit him at www.MentalGameCoach.com.
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