Interview Skills: Sharpen Them Like A Pencil

August 25, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Job Interview

You should treat your interview skills like you treat a pencil and sharpen them on a repeated basis. The people who will be interviewing you are there to weed out anyone who they feel isn’t the real deal. So you want to go in their like you know your stuff while at the same time being yourself. Sharpen your skills by using some of these basic guidelines.

Prepare for tough questions:
You have to be prepared for tough questions, if you are not you will be thrown off guard and made to look like a fool. Some questions you can prepare for and some you can’t, but this is all a part of the game. The interviewer wants to see how fast you respond when thrown out of your depth. The better you are at this, the better you will be able to handle similar situation if you were hired.

Research the company:
I guarantee you will be ahead like secretariat in a horse race if you do a little research on the company. Most people don’t do this, by showing you know about the company’s history you will be able to take a detour from the interview and throw the person out of their grilling element. They will see you as a real person and not just a face behind an application.

Doing both of these things shows a company that you actually care about the job and are not just trying to get hired. Master these two steps and you’ll go into any interview ready for anything.

For lots of advice on how to prepare for even the toughest of interviews check out this site, it will be sure to help put you above the rest of the candidates you are sure to be up against.

Work At Home Career?

August 22, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Career Change

To lots of people the idea of working from home is like a dream come true. They have visions of closing deals on the phone, being busy on their computers, and best of all packing up work for the day in the early afternoon. What is not always thought about is the pure hard work that goes into a work at home career.

If you think that you would like a work at home career then ask yourself a few simple questions to find out if you have a work at home personaility.

1. To be successful in working from home you need to be very self motivated, as therer will be no-one looking over your shoulder – you will be your own boss. You will need to do all parts of the job yourself, even bits you don’t like. You will need to be good at managing your time efficiently, and strict with yourself over the time you spend on surfing for the sake of surfing, on Facebook and online Games. Do you feel you can do all this?

2. You need to be able to put together a business plan. This will be a step by step plan of how you are going to get from no income to a good income in the shortest possible time. If you are a dreamer, and don’t like to follow directions, even if they are your own, then working from home may not be for you.

3. It can be quite scary leaving a job where you’ve always worked for someone else – it takes courage and confidence. Do you feel you possess these qualities?

4. Will you get support from your partner? Truth is, especially in the beginning you will be working a lot of hours while you get your busines established. If your partner is not behind you, they will soon start to feel left behind. If you can get your partner on board by sharing your plans and dreams you will stand a much better chance of succeeding.

5. Have a close look at your own personal skils and what you want to achieve with your work at home career. You may not have all the skills you need yet, so you may have to take some time out for further training. You will no doubt be attracted to a work at home job that uses skills that you already have, but you need to be prepared to learn other things as well.

If you have read through all of this, and you still feel that it’s the right thing to do, but you still have a few lingering doubts, then why not look at trying to make a part time income first, before you take the plunge and make a change to a work at home career?