Attitude is more important
then expectations or a past...
Motto for 50-Plus Interviewing: Be Prepared......
John Rossheim
If you're an older worker heading for an interview at a new company -- maybe for the
first time in a decade or so -- it can feel like there's someone else in the room with
you. Who is this doppelganger? It could be the hypothetical perfect candidate the interviewer
believes he must find: A hard-working, eager to learn, street-savvy, not-set-in-his-ways
type. Someone who is half your age.
Many job seekers age 50 and older get discouraged by their situation, haunted by the
ghost of their vanished, youthful working self. This discouragement, of course, is a
self-fulfilling prophecy.
The secret to avoiding self-sabotage is to present yourself as
an optimal combination of what you are and what the employer is looking for: An
energetic, lifetime learner who knows his industry, keeps up with technology and
can communicate effectively with colleagues of any age. Here's how to
prepare.
Be a Positive Candidate
"Attitude is the maker or breaker in an interview," says Sarah Hightower Hill,
CEO of Chandler Hill Partners, a career search strategies firm. "A combination of
fear and ego most often causes older job seekers to fail."
To overcome the intense interview anxiety some older job seekers feel, you need
to realistically evaluate your standing in the labor marketplace.
"The most important ingredient is to feel good about who you are and what you offer,"
says Kevin Ecclesine, a senior vice president for Lee Hecht Harrison, a career consulting
firm. "You need to do a self-assessment and a job-market assessment to survey your
professional environment." Talking with trusted peers, a career coach or outplacement
counselor can help you with this.
Know the Company's Needs
If you do have that ego problem ("I'm all they want and more"), you can transcend it
by learning enough about your prospective employer to package your experience for maximum
value to the company -- and as a result, take the focus off yourself.
"Whatever you do, don't say, ‘I've done your job before, so you'll never have to tell
me what to do,'" says Peg Hendershot, executive director at Career Vision, a nonprofit
counseling service.
"Really doing the homework on an employer is something older workers aren't always
savvy about," says Linda Wiener, a consultant to employers on the aging workforce and
expert on Monster's Age Issues message board.
Gather Intelligence on the Interview Situation
Over the past decade,
interviewers have gotten tougher
, and interview formats have diversified. So it's critical to understand interview situations
before the big day, says Marci LeFevre, coordinator for workforce issues at
AARP.
"Before the interview, ask the employer, ‘What can you tell me about the interviews?
Who will I be interviewing with? Will I meet with them individually, or in a group?'"
says LeFevre.
Don't Stumble into a Generation Gap
When you show up for an interview with an HR representative or hiring manager who's
significantly younger, one of you may well be unnerved. Make sure it's not you.
"If you've written the functional resume well, there's going to be some shock when
you walk in the door," says Karen Riggs, a professor of telecommunications at Ohio
University and author of
Granny @ Work: Aging and New Technology on the Job in America
.
The solution is to emphasize what you have in common with the interviewer, regardless
of your ages. Identifying professional challenges you've both faced is a starting point.
Speak Your Interviewer's Language
"Interviewers want somebody who speaks the language," says Wiener. Whether you're painting
your industry in broad strokes or getting down to technical nitty-gritty, you've got to display
your knowledge through the language of your occupation.
Reading trade publications, attending conferences and going on informational interviews
are ways to keep your lingo up to date.
Prepare to Look the Part
Older workers know that physical presentation matters. They just need to remember to take a
look in the mirror -- literally and imaginatively -- before they head out for that first interview.