by Adam Seabrook
If you want to nail your introduction and the whole interview follow these steps:
1. Exercise on the morning of your interview
This does not need to be a marathon but 30 minutes of exercise will give you a buzz that will last most of the way through the day.
2. Be presentable
Other than clothing which is a given also check your appearance. This goes for ladies and gents. Use your phone to do a video selfie and check for food in teeth, lipstick on teeth, clumps of mascara etc. People definitely notice when you are poorly presented and even something small like this can distract the interviewer.
3. Arrive in the area early for your pre-game ritual
A trick I learned in sales was to turn up 20 minutes before my meetings and hang out in the lobby (or one nearby if they don’t have one). If it was a hot day I want to cool down so I am not a sweaty disaster. I also used to bring my headphones and listen to a few songs I like that helped me get into the zone. You will see many athletes doing this which is where I stole the idea from.
4. Hit the bathroom before you get to reception
Nothing worse than needing to take a break in an interview. Do a final appearance check and also make sure to wash and dry your hands. Clammy handshakes are worse than death. If you have chronic clammy hands hide a handkerchief in your pocket and dry you hands on that closer to when you expect to shake hands.
5. Bring your own water
Reception often do not offer you water. The interviewer might but they are often just being polite and don’t expect you to say yes anyway. If the interview is going to go for a while a dry throat can really start to impact you.
6. Be amazingly nice to everyone
I had one sneaky client who used to go out and ask the receptionist how the candidates had acted pre-interview. If he came back with a thumbs down then they would reject the candidate. Be rude/dismissive to the receptionist and expect that to get passed on to whoever you just met with.
7. Get off your phone
If you are waiting in reception or the interview room read your resume first. If you did not bring it then read a magazine if one is available. Tapping away on your phone when they arrive can be distracting and some interviewers find it rude (especially the older interviewers who did not grow up with smartphones).
8. Don’t sit with your back to the door in the interview room
A caveman trait we have not discarded yet but if you feel your back is unprotected you will naturally be on higher alert and be more uncomfortable. Sit where you can see the door. The other side effect of this is the interviewer is facing you and there are less distractions behind you.
9. Stand when the interviewer enters the room (if you are able)
This was an immediate rejection for me. I might be a bit old school but this is a great way to show respect and makes an excellent impression. Two people shaking hands whilst standing is a great dynamic. One standing and one sitting is an odd dynamic and starts the interview off wrong. Obviously if you are not able to stand then shaking hands sitting down is 100% fine.
10. The introduction
And now we are finally at the actual answer to the question. Nearly always it will be the interviewer who makes the introduction.
A simple response of: “Great to meet you X, I am really looking forward to our chat today” is all you need.
Then the normal small talk.
Good luck!
Thank u for d info.
This will be of help to my brother that was slated for an interview on Monday. Thanks