Here's The Best Way To Answer When An Interviewer Says 'Tell Me About Yourself'
Oct 28, 2014, 00:45 IST
"So, tell me about yourself."
"For the next step in my career, I would like to move away from contract work and find myself as a direct employee of a large firm where I can join a substantial IT team and be involved with a group that focuses on email and network security applications, while having access to the knowledge base that would come with a large, diverse IT group." Instead of giving the hiring manager a broad overview of who you are, show why you'd be a great fit for the position. "You will clearly and quickly brand yourself as a true professional, someone who knows the value of what you have to offer a potential employer," Freeman says. Click here to read the original LinkedIn post. Want your business advice featured in Instant MBA? Submit your tips to tipoftheday@businessinsider.com. Be sure to include your name, your job title, and a photo of yourself in your email.
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It's one of the most ubiquitous interview questions, and often one of the most difficult. With such a wide breadth of possible answers, it can be overwhelming to know where to start.
Hint: If your go-to response includes a run-down of where you grew up or what you studied in college, you've probably already lost your interviewer.
While the hiring manager does want to get to know you, at this point they are only focused on figuring out if you're the right person for the job - and your most critical task is showing them that you are, writes Skip Freeman, the CEO of executive search group Hire to Win, in a recent LinkedIn post.
To prevent hurting your chances before the interview even warms up, Freeman breaks down this question into a simple three-part response that will hook the interviewer without inundating them with unnecessary details. Here's his technique:
- Part 1: Start with a condensed version of your career history. Try and keep it as concise as possible, Freeman suggests.
- Part 2: Next, give a brief summary of a specific achievement to capture the interviewer's interest. "It must be an accomplishment that can easily be explained and/or illustrated," Freeman says. "Plus, it must also highlight a 'bottom-line' impact for the potential employer."
- Part 3: Conclude with a few definitive sentences about what you hope to accomplish next in your career - but make sure it's relevant to the position you're interviewing for, Freeman warns.
"For the next step in my career, I would like to move away from contract work and find myself as a direct employee of a large firm where I can join a substantial IT team and be involved with a group that focuses on email and network security applications, while having access to the knowledge base that would come with a large, diverse IT group." Instead of giving the hiring manager a broad overview of who you are, show why you'd be a great fit for the position. "You will clearly and quickly brand yourself as a true professional, someone who knows the value of what you have to offer a potential employer," Freeman says. Click here to read the original LinkedIn post. Want your business advice featured in Instant MBA? Submit your tips to tipoftheday@businessinsider.com. Be sure to include your name, your job title, and a photo of yourself in your email.