Archive for the ‘Interview Tips’ Category



The “Money” Question

Posted On: Monday, July 6th, 2009 - Posted By: Online Resume Builder

Effective Responses for a Tricky Question


How do you respond to questions about salary?
You may be asked to discuss salary in your cover letter, in screening interviews by phone, in person during a formal interview, and during offer negotiations.  There are several ways to handle this touchy subject.

#1 Rule:  Get the prospective employer to state a figure first.

When asked to state your salary requirements or history in your cover letter – don’t – unless you actually know the salary range of the desired position.  If you do not know the range, indicate instead that you would be happy to discuss salary in an interview.

What is most important is the extent to which your skills will be a great fit within the prospective organization.  When the interviewer wants to focus on your current salary, confidently reply that you would not consider your current salary as comparable to the scope of the position currently open for hire and should an offer be made you trust that the offer will be fair.  Then turn their attention back to the skills needed, the expectations for success, the company culture.  Show them that salary is a secondary consideration to be tabled for later.  The first order of business is to fully understand the scope of the new position.  Without it, you cannot adequately assess what would or would not be a fair compensation package.

If the interviewer pushes hard for you to respond directly to salary questions (be prepared for this to happen), turn the question back upon them by asking for both the hiring range of the position and the full salary range (the hiring range may be a subset of the salary range).  If you are still pressed for a range, have a prepared response based on prior research.  Do not provide a range that is truly less than what you can legitimately accept.  If you feel unduly pressured or intimidated, think twice about what this tells you about their management style or company culture and whether or not you really want to work there.  If all else fails, provide them with a range of 10K-20K more than your current salary, or more if your research supports it.

Summary: do your research, prepare a range of responses, and do your very best to get them to provide the first number or range.  If you require more than they are willing to give, continue to counter as long as you can, and make the best decisions for yourself based upon what you learn.

Lisa has 14 years of résumé coaching experience.
She currently directs day-to-day operations and programming of a career center at a two-year technical college. From 2006-2008, she served as State Chair of a national organization to support women leaders in higher education. She remains on the Board. Previously, she served as HR Director of a legal services firm and specialized in worker’s compensation issues. From 1996-1998, she worked as a graduate assistant in the career services office of a large four-year college.

Need More Advice?

Get the resume help you need!

Build your resume with the GigTide Online Resume Builder and visit the CYJ website at www.changeyourjob.us.

Advice for the Over-Qualified

Posted On: Monday, July 6th, 2009 - Posted By: Online Resume Builder

Balancing Pride with Relevance

Definition of Over-Qualified:

American Heritage Dictionary, fourth edition, defines overqualified as “educated or skilled beyond what is necessary or desired for a particular job”.  Here is a list of the perks and challenges associated with being overqualified for jobs for which you are applying.

Perks to take advantage of:

  • You are able to ramp up quickly, contributing at a high level within 30/60/90 days.
  • You will apply a wide range of talents to the job.
  • You can problem-solve and brainstorm complex issues.
  • You can demonstrate that your networking, resumes, cover letters, and interviewing skills put you ahead of others competing for the same jobs.

Challenges to overcome:

  • Jobs are focused on particular skills sets needed at a particular level.
  • You might be perceived as bossy, a know-it-all.
  • Employers assume you will have higher minimum salary requirements than they have budgeted.
  • You may feel the need to “dumb down” their resume.

Re-vamp Your Approach:

There are two primary obstacles in play for the over-qualified job-seeker.  Pride and demonstrated scope.  Pride becomes an issue when your sense of identity and level of achievement is at odds with your current situation.  The choice of words you use to describe your situation has a big impact on your attitude and approach.  Is it “dumbing down” your resume to target a job and demonstrate your relevant qualifications?  No.  That is what all resumes need to demonstrate, for jobs at any level.

Choose your descriptive entries carefully.  What do you know about the company, its mission, and culture?  Use suitable entries that help prospective employers know that you understand where they are at, what they need, and that you are ready, willing, and able to help them at that level. Don’t “dumb it down” but do be relevant without going over the top and forcing them to acknowledge that you will run circles around half their employees right out of the gate.

Opportunities are out there and employers are hiring.

They’re Your Qualifications!

  • Action words are powerful.  Choose them wisely.  Use the same action words in your resume that a prospective employer highlights in a job posting.
  • Use your advanced level of creativity and problem-solving skills to tackle the opportunity to create a highly relevant resume that fits the employers’ needs without coming across as bragging.
  • You want a prospective employer to hire you and pay you to apply skill sets they need in order to grow their company according to their strategic plan.  They set the direction, not you.
  • The economy will turn around.  Many people are working “survival jobs”.  Be realistic and realize these are stepping stones to help you reach your larger goals.

Lisa has 14 years of résumé coaching experience.
She currently directs day-to-day operations and programming of a career center at a two-year technical college. From 2006-2008, she served as State Chair of a national organization to support women leaders in higher education. She remains on the Board. Previously, she served as HR Director of a legal services firm and specialized in worker’s compensation issues. From 1996-1998, she worked as a graduate assistant in the career services office of a large four-year college.

Need More Advice?

Get the resume help you need!

Build your resume with the GigTide Online Resume Builder and visit the CYJ website at www.changeyourjob.us.

Dress for Success

Posted On: Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 - Posted By: Adam C.

Whether You Are Employed Right Now Or Not

Dress for the occasion; whether it is for a job interview, a full day of business meetings, or casual Friday!  You can view your wardrobe choices as a uniform, a costume, or a creative expression.

Dress the part even if you are unemployed and job searching.  Dress today for the promotion you hope to get tomorrow.  Present yourself in a way that pushes you, and those around you, to get the job done.  Doing so helps you to reinforce the role you are playing today.  Confidence and expertise are strengthened by your professional clothing choices.  In other words, dress like you mean it and do not skimp on professionalism or credibility.  Choose wisely each day, plan ahead, and always strive to look your best.

It’s Your Life!

  • Present your best face to the world; be polished and bold.
  • “The best color in the whole world, is the one that looks good, on you!” -Coco Chanel
  • The world is a stage and the lights are on; dress for it!
  • Change happens.  How you work with it and adapt to it is up to you.
  • “Fashion fades, only style remains the same.” -Coco Chanel

Lisa has 14 years of résumé coaching experience.
She currently directs day-to-day operations and programming of a career center at a two-year technical college. From 2006-2008, she served as State Chair of a national organization to support women leaders in higher education. She remains on the Board. Previously, she served as HR Director of a legal services firm and specialized in worker’s compensation issues. From 1996-1998, she worked as a graduate assistant in the career services office of a large four-year college.

Need More Advice?

Get the resume help you need!

Build your resume with the GigTide Online Resume Builder and visit the CYJ website at www.changeyourjob.us.

Don’t Blow Your Interview: Feedback from HR Professionals

Posted On: Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009 - Posted By: Adam C.

What Interviewers Want From YOU:

  • Your understanding of the company and the duties of the job for which you are applying
  • A great attitude – this will usually put you ahead of another candidate with stronger skills but a poor or arrogant attitude
  • To see how well you present yourself; because if hired, you will be representing the company
  • Technical aptitude – let’s face it, you have to be able to DO the job, and be able to prove it

What Makes Interviewers Reject You:

  • Lack of appreciation for diversity in the workplace (makes you look like a complaint or lawsuit waiting to happen)
  • Lack of focus on the job at hand and how good of a fit you will be within that job and within the company
  • Bad attitude, especially nonchalance or arrogance
  • Bad hygiene (happens more often than you’d think)

It’s Your Moment!

Most interviewers know if they want to hire you in the first 2 minutes of an interview.  They spend the next 30 minutes or so justifying their original perception of you.

An interview is akin to your 15 minutes of fame – don’t waste it. Be ready for it!

The desire to interview you starts the moment a recruiter looks at your resume.  Be prepared for phone screens.

If you are being interviewed by several people at once, make eye contact and be engaging with ALL of them, even the most “junior” person in the room.  Be nice to everyone you encounter there.

Lisa has 14 years of résumé coaching experience.
She currently directs day-to-day operations and programming of a career center at a two-year technical college. From 2006-2008, she served as State Chair of a national organization to support women leaders in higher education. She remains on the Board. Previously, she served as HR Director of a legal services firm and specialized in worker’s compensation issues. From 1996-1998, she worked as a graduate assistant in the career services office of a large four-year college.

Need More Advice?

Get the resume help you need!

Build your resume with the GigTide Online Resume Builder and visit the CYJ website at www.changeyourjob.us.



GigTide 3788 Park Blvd. Suite 2, San Diego CA 92103
© Copyright 2009 Chief Ingredient, Inc. / GigTide.com - All Rights Reserved.