Search

 

 

New Page 1 New Page 1

Informative Articles

Domain Name and Web Hosting Hell
Does GoDaddy really suck? I am in the process of registering more and more domain names so it seems natural to look for the best pricing deal. Registering multiple domain names can add up quickly, especially if you register both the ...

Riding The Sales Rollercoaster
Riding the Sales Rollercoaster By Mark Wardell It's one of the biggest frustrations in business. One month you're busier than you've ever been, and the next month you're wondering if you'll make payroll. Why is it that so many businesses...

The Keys to Buying Motivation: Unlock the Door to Sales Success
Copyright 2005 Lexien Management Consultants, Inc One of the key things that we teach salespeople is that your job in sales is to understand what it is that people do, and then to help them do it better. For only by understanding what people do;...

The Sales Trail.....
The Sales Trail.......... www.motivatedentrepreneur.com Sales & Marketing The Sales Trail.......... By Ryan M. Hoback, Motivated Entrepreneur Incubation & Consulting Everybody’s going selling, selling U.S.A…….. The sales...

The Six Most Common Barriers To Sales Success
There are a variety of reasons and excuses behind poor sales lead management because the $10 to $2000 companies spend to generate each business to business inquiry largely go to waste. I call them Barriers To Sales success. Here are six of the...

 
Phone Interviews: Prepare to Ace Them!


More companies are saving time and effort by doing initial telephone interviews before committing themselves to hours of time assessing and evaluating applicants. They are doing this because, frankly, it's a good way to save a team's time from interviewing obviously unqualified people. From your standpoint, this means that you need to develop an additional interview skill.

One of the disadvantages of doing a phone interview is that they can't see how well you look or what a great suit you're wearing to the interview or that you own terrific ties. It also means that you can sit in the comfort of your home, rather than trudging to their site. With this opportunity, comes problem. The major problem is that they can't see how well you look or what great clothes you own. All they can do is listen to your voice and the energy that you convey and listen to the answers to your questions; you, on the other hand, can't see when you've lost their attention or when you've bored them. There are no visual cues for either of you.

But with preparation, you can do a fabulous job and get in the door. Here's a few pointers.


  1. For any interview, go to the company's website and learn about the firm. Also, if you can read a job specification on their site (or elsewhere) do so. After all the spec is the road map to what they are going to assess your abilities for.

  2. Take some notes to remind yourself of points that you may want to make or about things that you might forget. Sometimes people get nervous, just like they do in person. Have a few notes nearby about your role, responsibilities and accomplishments as helpful reminders. Support your statements with detailed examples of accomplishments when possible. Remember, they can't see if you have a manual open to something you might be a little rusty in! They can't see that you have your resume in front of you!

  3. Rehearse. Have someone call you and listen to your voice on the phone. Maybe your cordless phone makes your voice sound tinny. Maybe you speak too softly, mumble or speak too quickly to be understood by others. Ask someone you trust to critique you.

  4. Pick out a place in your house where the kids won't interrupt you or the tv won't make noise in the background. I hate interviewing people who have the stereo playing in the background (it happens more often than you can imagine).

  5. Write down their questions so that you can stay on purpose. Too often, people forget the original question and go rambling about something far a field. Stay on target.

  6. Your voice is your only sales tool. Don't allow yourself to sound tired or blasé over the phone. Sounds energetic and excited, even if they've asked you the same questions

    Associated Websites

    Associated Websites

     

    Our Blogs are on UK small business and being a UK freelancer or contractor as well as website marketing and web design. If you are a biker we can help with your motor bike insurance.

     

    We have a site for contractors  and sites for HomeloansUK and PR-Help. We provide Branding help and offer Free-Marketing-Help and help for IT contractors. For E-commerce information, visit Small-Business-Web. We offer Page Rank Web Links and Cheap Home Loans Direct plus 0-BadDebtLoans and more Cheap Home Loans Direct. Our sites also help with Negotiation of any Personal-Secured-Loans. Our site called Management-Today can help you Innovate-Today, but for more loans go to 1st4HomeLoans.

     

    Our HomeLoansUK site is affiliated with Branding and TrafficBuilding sites and Sales technique site. Also on offer is Beauty-Online and FreeNetDesign. If you are a  contractor and need help with a Small-Business-Web then our E-Commerce site is great. If you want Easy-Mortgages or even 1st-4-Tenant-Loans go to 5-Star-Mortgages. We help find Cheap Kitchen Appliances and Low Rate Home Loans. For the IT contractor, EstuaryFinance can refer you to our Online IR35 Compliance site for help with IR35.


    that every other interviewer has for the last six months!

  7. At the time of the phone interview, log off your computer (If you can't definitely get off of instant messengers and other services that chime. These may sabotage your concentration just when you need it most.

  8. Rehearse. Rehearse. Rehearse. I can't emphasize enough that you need to practice phone interviews, just as you have in person one.

  9. Don't use your cell phone if you can avoid it. Cell phones rarely allow your voice to sound as clear as a standard land line. Try to avoid using it for interviews.

  10. Be courteous and try not to speak over the interviewer or cut them off. If you do, apologize and let the interviewer continue.

  11. Do not hang up until the interviewer has hung up.


Follow these pointers and I'm sure you'll do better on your interviews.

Jeff Altman has successfully assisted many corporations identify technology management leaders and staff since 1971. He has effectively worked with industry leaders and start-up firms in professional services, financial services, consumer products, healthcare, e-business, transportation, and a host of other sectors. He has successfully completed searches for positions in applications development, infrastructure, support roles and business operations roles, management and staff positions.

Jeff has his Master’s degree from Fordham University and post-graduate training at the Institute of Modern Psychoanalysis (IMP), where he developed an expertise in organizational development that makes him uniquely qualified to evaluate a potential employee for their “fit” into an organization.

Jeff Altman has more than thirty years of experience in technology search and joined Concepts in Staffing in March, 2002 after more than six extremely successful years with another New York-based search firm. Throughout his career, he has developed and managed client relationships, internal recruiting staff and successfully completed numerous engagements.

Jeff is also co-founder of Your Next Job, a networking group focused on assisting technology professionals with their job search, a certified leader of the ManKind Project, a not for profit organization that assists men with life issues, a practicing psychotherapist with a successful practice in New York, a husband a father of a terrific little boy named Jack.

For help with a search assignment in any sector, email Jeff at jeffaltman@cisny.com. for information about searches he is involved with, go to www.newyorkmetrotechnologyjobs.com.

nymtj@optonline.net