Weather
weather forecast Friday: Cold and sunny everywhere. Heavy frost at night. Similar Saturday but thaw possible Sunday
    
Home| Opinion| Features| International| In Dutch| Dictionary| What's On| Jobs| Housing| Expats| Blogs| Books
 
 
««« previousnext »»»

70% fail to prepare for interviews

Monday 29 September 2008

Some 70% of people going for a job interview in the Netherlands do little or nothing to prepare, according to a survey by jobs site nationalevacaturebank.nl.

Only half do even the most minimum in terms of preparation and just 27% put on smart clothes.

The website says the tight job market in Holland has made interviewees lazy.

© DutchNews.nl


Subscribe Newsletter
Print-version
News archives

Readers' comments

Not preparing for an interview is a serious problem in the U.S. as well. A part of that not preparing involves job seekers assuming the interviewer is competent or properly trained in how to conduct job interviews! In my experience as an employment mediator, ill-trained job interviewers are all too common. Companies routinely find themselves in legal hot water promoting individuals into management and then “turning them loose” in job interview settings.


The one thing that has been consistent is the inconsistency of job interview questions. Job seekers should understand that the person doing the interview might not be the sharpest knife in the drawer. He or she may not have been adequately trained. Job interviewers routinely ask illegal or improper questions either out of ignorance or deliberately with the intent to discriminate against certain groups. That makes learning to give good job interview answers and asking good job interview questions so important. The questions asked at job interviews often hide what the job interviewer really wants or needs to know! One of the things in the job interview process for the applicant involves discovering what that is. As a job seeker, why am I being asked these interview questions?


For example, the interviewer asks, “Have you had challenges working in various cultural workplace settings?” From my experience, here is what the job interviewer is really asking. “Have you had trouble dealing with different racial groups?” When preparing for a job interview spend time investigating the business. You should learn about the company’s history and what it does for the industry. Review the company’s website and it’s about us page. I would be looking at how well it treated its employees with things like salaries, benefits and promotional opportunities. Ask the interviewer questions such as:

“What are the company’s goals?”
“Where does the company see itself in five, ten years?”
“Why is the company a good fit for you?”
“Why will the company be a good fit for me?”

Try to find out how well the company is doing financially. It would be to the job interviewee’s advantage to know if the company is going to be around for a while. You could do some research with the Chamber of Commerce and the Better Business Bureau. I would make inquiries with local, state and federal consumer advocacy groups for any complaints filed against the employer.

Is it on the verge of layoffs that could include the position applied for?
Is the business going to be sold in the near future?
Are their any bankruptcy issues?
Does the organization have a history of employment complaints on file with state and federal agencies?
Are there any employees that you know personally, who could give some insight into the “culture” of the organization and its management?


Interviewees should not just prepare to get a job; they should make sure the job and company prepares to get them!

By Yancey at You can learn basic employee rights | September 29, 2008 11:59 PM


It's a job interview, not meeting with royalty.

I never "prepare" for job interviews, because there's nothing to prepare for. I want the employer to meet me, not the fake me that has been preparing his act for a week.

And I've always gotten the job I wanted.

I think it's the other way around. It's the employers who are getting a bit too uptight.

If I were an employer, I would focus on the people who came as they are, not those who put up a fake act.

By xen | September 30, 2008 6:37 AM


Comments have been closed for this article.


 
 
 
Comments
 
Click here
 
 
 
Newsletter| RSS| Advertising| Business services| Mobile| Friends| Contact| About us| Tell a Friend
Website by
Stammeshaus.com
Stammeshaus.com
 
EasyToBook.com Apartments for rent Gardener in Amsterdam, maintenance and design
 
Hosted by Qweb.nl
Qweb.nl