Tuesday, May 19, 2020
When To Use The Tell Me About Yourself Pitch - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
When To Use The Tell Me About Yourself Pitch - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Job seekers often ask a question about when to use the tell-me-about-yourself pitchâ"like in an interviewâ"and when to use the elevator pitch: like in a networking situation. The confusion arises because some people donât understand the purpose or objective of each of the two pitches. How to properly answer when asked, âTell me about yourself.â Commonly, a job interview starts with an icebreaker, and once the interviewer is ready for business, he or she will say to the candidate, âTell me about yourself.â Why does the interviewer ask that? After all, the candidate has been invited for the interview, has already been vetted and highly scrutinized, and has been selected from a long list of qualified candidates that got whittled down to a handful. The true reason for the request is that the interviewer has to formulate an opinion about the candidate. Among other things, the interviewer is evaluating the candidateâs body language. Is it positive, is it full of confidence, and is there good eye contact? Or are there negative vibes such as slouching in the chair, often not looking at the interviewer, and at times, appearing so scared that the candidateâs body freezes like a sculpture whose lips are the only things moving. How about tone of voice? Is it unpleasantly loud? inaudibly quiet? Tone of voice is a highly important contribution in the interviewerâs decision-making process. Is the candidate a fast talker? an unpleasantly slow one? Maybe thereâs a strong foreign accent to the point that the interviewer just canât even make out what the candidate is saying. And last, the interviewer evaluates the content in the candidateâs delivery via the words the candidate uses. Do the words constitute proper English with good grammar, and are they mainly logical and in context? Here, a good answer to âTell me about yourselfâ catapults the candidate to the top of the list. A bad answer digs the candidate into a hole from which it would be challenging to reverse the interviewerâs poor opinion. So, whatâs hidden behind the question? Think for a moment. Why are you interviewing? No, itâs not because you need a job. Itâs because the interviewer is in the process of identifying which one of several good candidates seems to fit the companyâs organizational culture, has the specific skills sought, and can prove noteworthy accomplishments viewed by a third relevant party. Understanding the question behind the question The real question is, âTell me about yourself as it relates to your ability to help me solve my problems.â Thatâs the real question. Anything else in the answer is superfluous and irrelevant to the interviewer. Whatâs the right answer? The correct answer will contain a brief overview of what makes you a professional, such as your title, size of managed budget, number of direct reports, scope of your function, and anything else that is relevant. Remember that the answer should be short and focused; otherwise, the interviewerâs mind starts wandering. Next tell a brief success story with an example that has a very positive ending viewed by a third relevant party such as your boss or an important customer. And now the differentiation As soon as youâve finished your deliveryâ"and in the same breathâ"ask the interviewer, âNow that you know about my professional background, may I ask you a question? What would the hired candidate focus on in the first few weeks on the job?â That question begs an answer. And the interviewerâs answer will likely identify an area of importance to the interviewer. The closure Based on what you learned from the interviewerâs answer, offer an example from your past experience wherein you can prove you have the skills needed and that your success was recognized by a third party. The elevator pitch Different from the tell-me-about-yourself pitch, the elevator pitch has a different objective. Here brevity is very important; otherwise, you lose your audience. Within 30 seconds or so, you have to frame yourself by communicating who you are, what you do, and what youâre looking for. The key to success here is to be memorable and, even more important, to elicit from the listener a follow-up question. If you fail to do that, it means youâre boring, and that leads nowhere. The mistake people make is to raise the expectation that by delivering an elevator pitch, theyâll get leads and referrals. But very seldom does such a result occur. The true objective of the elevator pitch is to establish or initiate a relationship with someoneâ"a relationship that hopefully can be nurtured to become a beneficial and fruitful one. And now that you know the difference between the two pitches, start practicing them. The more you do, the more comfortable and natural theyâll get.
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