Thursday, May 21, 2020
We Judge with Our Eyes - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
We Judge with Our Eyes - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career I am on vacation and not even on American soil. It is a vastly different milieu in almost every respect. I find myself continuously comparing, contrasting, judging, and labeling people. Of course, this continuous chatter is only in my head. I donât share it with anyone, God forbid. But isnât that what we do in all instances when we see people? Itâs even more critical when you go in for an interview. As a career coach, I counsel people every dayâ"not only on how to answer interview questions correctly and how to avoid interview traps but also on how to let your body communicate the message you want to convey. Hiring managers and human resources folks read your body language and can tell whether thereâs congruence between what you say in words and what your body says in motions. Part of my coaching covers how to dress properly for an interview. I use an evaluation system to make sure you convey the right image. Men are faced with less of an issue on this subject than women are. It doesnât cause me pleasure to tell clients to upgrade their clothing to fit the 21st century. Or to replace their large-sized eyeglass frame with something more contemporary. Or to rethink their outdated hairstyle. Or even simply to get a haircut. An intervieweeâs shoes need to be polished, and socks better match. But all of that is only part of the image a job candidate leaves behind and which will heavily influence the impression made on others. The words the interviewee uses are important too, but even that is not all. The overall imageâ"the total impressionâ"is what will be remembered. My advice is that you ask a trusted source to tell you the truth about the impression you make and the image you leave behind. Family members are not the right people to ask. And donât jeopardize a friendship by asking the wrong question and causing unease or embarrassment. Itâs best to hire a career coach who is paid for giving such advice. Author: Alex Freund is a career and interviewing coach known as the âlanding expertâ for publishing his 80 page list of job-search networking groups via his web site http://www.landingexpert.com/. He is prominent in a number of job-search networking groups; makes frequent public presentations, he does workshops on resumes and LinkedIn, teaches a career development seminar and publishes his blog focused on job seekers. Alex worked at Fortune 100 companies headquarters managing many and large departments. He has extensive experience at interviewing people for jobs and is considered an expert in preparing people for interviews. Alex is a Cornell University grad, lived on three continents and speaks five languages.
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