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Part II: Attitude could be the reason you
get a
better job either in your present company or for a new one.
By Pat Wiesner, ColoradoBiz Magazine
What makes a boss say,
“I really like this person, I want him/her working here,” after just 20
minutes
or so? What makes an interviewer who has prepared a list of 15 questions
for
you forget those questions and begin to tell you how much you are going
to like
working at this company? What
characteristic is perhaps more meaningful when it comes to getting a job than any skill you might have?
Attitude!
A positive “I like
life: can-do, team-player attitude that rings true and leaves no doubt
about
work ethic is hard to find. When a
boss searching for just the right person to add to his or her team comes
across
one, it’s hard to pass up.
We
won’t have nearly the success just sitting there properly and answering
questions. We have to grab on and live up to our responsibility as half
the
interview. There are a couple of
things you can try hard to communicate about yourself in a job
interview: the
effort you are capable of and your sense of team.
EFFORT
One
of the most memorable lessons I ever got came at an airfield in Kansas
many years
ago. I had gone to an air show,
which I often did in those days, and I remember being totally absorbed
in the
incredible flying the pilot was demonstrating in a small single-engine
plane.
His entire routine was outstanding, and his maneuvers were as good as
could be
done It was the first time I had
seen a stunt pilot do such a magnificent job of ‘hanging’ on the prop
and
seemingly flying the airplane sideways down the flight line. He was clearly very skilled and very
practiced.
When
he was back on the ground with his plane parked, I saw him cleaning some
windows on his bird and I went up to him.
“Congratulations
on
a great show,” I said. ‘Just a super example of skill and a fine
machine
coming together. How do you get that good?”
I’ll
never forget his answer. “Sir, I can’t do it any better. Every day I
leave it
all out there. I do my very best every day, each time.”
We
talked for a while but my thoughts were about this man’s approach to
life… his
attitude. I had a small company at
the time and would have hired him on the spot just to be around him, but
he was
a pilot and I was a publisher. But
I never forgot his attitude and ever since I have looked for people with
this
type of attitude to be around.
When
we are being interviewed we should remember that when answering
questions and
telling the interviewer about our attitude, our work ethic and how much f
ourselves we will put into our new job.
We need to put into true works just who we are and what our
values are
so that our prospective new employer can judge just how we will fit into
his/her needs. Ask questions about
how effort is important in this company and what kind of effort it takes
to
advance.
TEAM
A
good boss will have a strong sense of team. Again,
we must find our own words to communicate our sense
of team and just how important it is to us. Ask
questions about teamwork. Make sure this is an
environment you would feel good about
being a part of. Then if you like it, tell the potential new boss how
you feel
and how and why you like his ideas and his sense of team. If you can
have this
kind of discussion, you both will have a better chance of having a good
connection. And strangely, it is
more up to the person being interviewed to make it happen.
To
be genuinely excited, positive, can-do, etc, we have to find out enough
about
the way things work in the company we are interviewing to naturally get
that
way. The best advice is ask enough
questions to understand the company, and if you like it, tell them about
it,
and let your natural best self show.
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