Friday, July 24, 2020
The Interview Process is Changing Fast. Are Your Students Ready
The Interview Process is Changing Fast. Are Your Students Ready pixabay Many years ago, the interview process was simplistic. I would still consider it nerve-wracking, but not as demanding of a process. Todayâs college students need to worry about more than aligning their skills, qualifications, and experiences with the job description. Now theyâre facing in-person, panel, and video interviews. Beyond these basic types of interviews, they need to understand and prepare so much more. From learning the companyâs mission and culture to finding a network using social media, staying professional while texting recruiters, and discovering themselves all along the way. The pressure of finding a well-paying job immediately after graduation is already toppling. Adding the weight of the changing interview process is overwhelming for many of your students. Hereâs how you can help them tackle those fears and effectively prepare for the changing interview landscape: 1. Discover their perfect work environment. Before your students can even begin building relationships with employers, they need to understand where theyâll excel. Knowing what type of environment makes them most successful will give them much needed confidence throughout the grueling interview process. Plus, since cultural fit and environment are more important to companies than ever, theyâll have an added advantage to impress interviewers. Unfortunately, many students havenât been fully immersed in the working world. So, they feel unable to make an educated decision on the work environment they would excel in. College students need help finding their perfect working environment #companyculture. Click To Tweet Help your students use classroom experiences to understand their ideal work environment. Ask them to write down the classes they both enjoy and are most productive in. Then, help them take note of their surroundings. Are they working in a group or independently? How involved is the teacher in giving them instructions? Use these answers to gauge what type of team and manager they need to be successful. 2. Teach them how to research. Because interviewers arenât simply looking for candidates to know what the job entails, students need to know the companyâs values and missions. Thatâs where their classroom research skills come into play. Even if your students are used to performing research, itâs important to guide them in the right direction. Employer brands are on the company website, blogs, social media, and career pages. Once students find all of these, theyâll need to understand how to interpret the mission and goals. This will help them understand how to tie their experiences in with what the company is looking for. Show students where to look for employer brands and company missions. Look into their extracurriculars, previous jobs, volunteer experiences, and coursework for connections. Explain how showing companies theyâve not only done their research but have the same values will set them above other applicants. 3. Provide networking opportunities. Networking gives students the opportunities to meet people who can open doors for their careers. However, this isnât the only part it plays in the interview process. Offering students networking opportunities means setting them up with important mentors. Those mentors and connections will set students up with meaningful guidance through the rest of their college careers and beyond. Setting students up with mentors now will impact their future #careers. Click To Tweet Offer students networking opportunities both in-person and on social media. When setting up in-person events, consider your studentsâ ideal working environments and cultural fit. Be sure to bring in various types of employers to help students become familiar with connecting to their future interviewers.
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