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Having experience from both the side of applying for jobs and running (some) job interviews I have to say that the delusions some candidates have shown have really surprised me. When I read comments online about application processes I wonder what our most delusional candidates might say about our extremely fair, one hour max interview process..

What I mean by delusional is that many candidates seem to not put in the work to research what we do, how we do it, etc. They then applied for a position that fits their own profile, not for the position we offered. Some even had a different companies name/address and the wrong date in their application letter. This combined with a display of extreme self confidence you can only wonder..

My number one tip for anyone applying is: Although it feels like interviews are about you, the way you should look at them is you solving a problem the people hiring you want to see solved. Your task is to know who they want and tell them why it is you, despite certain obvious flaws that you could anticipate them seeing, be it your age, your lack of big names in the CV, etc. But key is, that this is not a game where the higher leveled person automatically wins.

That means if they are looking for someone cleaning up their rubish database and you come across as The mega database expert that only picks the toughest battles and gets bored if he can't find a bigger mountain to climb, chances are that less qualified but more stubborn, more patient person will get the job, as they are more likely to be the lasting solution.

So the key questions for you should always be: "Who, exactly are they looking for?" and "Am I willing to be that person under the conditions of the job?". The first question is a research question for you before and during the interview, the latter a question you should keep in your mind throughout the whole process.

This is also why to me it is kinda a red flag if a candidate has no questions, because usually they should have if they wonder if they are the right person for the job and if the job is the right one for them. Especially since that is an interview-cliché already.



I agree with all of this except:

> This is also why to me it is kinda a red flag if a candidate has no questions, because usually they should have if they wonder if they are the right person for the job and if the job is the right one for them. Especially since that is an interview-cliché already.

…which seems like a non sequitur to me. I only apply if I think I'm capable of the role. If research ahead of the interview is positive, and how the interview process is handled seems good, I may not have any questions. Although, I admit I sometimes thought of some later, which I emailed if important.

But possibly where I interview worst is in refusing to exaggerating or puff myself up. I've come to wonder if some of the roles I didn't get were because there weren't any lies (such as "extreme self confidence") for them reduce to a guesstimate of reality.


this is very solid advice - I completely agree with you




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