How do you prepare for a job interview, or do you just wing it?
Well, I am normally on the other side of the table these days. And with retirement looming, I am not sure I will be interviewed again.
For my part, I review the resumes and HR phone screen notes, make notes of questions I want to ask or things in their background I want to clarify, and discuss any possible concerns with our HR department's recruiter (or the HR person who is joining me on the interview if he isn't around).
Do you have any tips for interviews that you've learned along the way?
Please learn something about the employer you have applied to so you give a straight, honest answer to the question, "Why do you want to work for us?"
"Because I want a job," doesn't cut it. We want to hire someone who wants OUR job, who wants to work for US, not just any old job they happen to get.
Similarly, if there are obvious concerns or discrepancies between your situation and background and the requirements of the job, be able to intelligently address them and why you are still a legit candidate for the job.
e.g. I had someone from another city apply for a position on my team. When we interviewed him, we pointed out that we run on a 50-50 hybrid home-office model and asked about how he was going to be available for the in-office part. His answer was that he would commute. We are 2 or more hours from where he is depending on how bad the traffic is. That was the wrong answer. The recruiter just wrote "NO" on his notes and showed it to me. Fortunately, the next candidate was well-prepared, local and spot-on for what we wanted. He starts next week.
Have you ever had a bad experience at an interview?
I don't think I have ever had a really bad experience as a candidate. As a hiring manager, there's pretty always one in every crowd who is clearly unsuited for the job and just did a good job of puffing up their resume. Those are bad because you kind of have to go through with the exercise even knowing that as soon as they leave the building or disconnect from the Teams meeting, you and the recruiter are going to look at each other and say, "Not a flipping chance."