3 Top Tricks of Successful Job Seekers

In a decade of recruiting for countless sales and marketing jobs spanning numerous industries and locations, there is a reliable stable of tricks I've seen job seekers use to put themselves ahead of the crowd in any interviewing situation.

Below are the top 3 tactics to take your interviewing to the next level, bringing you more and better employment offers.

1. Do Meaningful Research -- Once you've secured an interview, everyone knows the basic rule "do your research." But keep in mind that anyone can read a company's website, and your interviewing competition will do just that.

The idea of doing research on the company prior to the interview isn't so you can rattle off factoids you gleaned from their website or list their major competitors to prove you read up a little on the industry.


Set yourself apart by digging into as much recent history of the company as you can find (e.g. recent earnings reports for public firms, press releases and social media profiles, articles in the media about the industry).

By learning about the company's recent direction and plans for the future, you gain a key piece of insight as to how you can help build momentum in the position.

2. Take Cues From Your Interviewer -- By far and away, the most consistent feedback I hear about successful job seekers is that they were able to follow the interviewer's cues and provide the information the interviewer sought.

By and large this is about listening and watching (when not on a phone interview).

For instance, job seekers with spot-on qualifications lose out on the next interview by never answering the question being asked, and instead monologuing on the topics they feel show them in the best light.

At the other end of the spectrum, candidates who perhaps seem like less than perfect fits on paper come through interviews with flying colors when they successfully engage on an interpersonal level with the interviewer.

Whether you are dealing with a by-the-book HR associate or an off-the-cuff Director of Marketing, you are interviewing with the person through whom you take the next step to getting an offer, and adaptability is the name of the game.

3. Treat Interviewers Like Clients -- Approach the interview process as if it were any other client-facing project and you will usually find the steadiest footing. You would never dream of not following up with a client or potential client, or not thanking them for their time.

Likewise, it ought to be second nature to ask clients for their priorities for the project (or in this case, the position) and to find out about the main challenges they want you to tackle as a vendor (or in this case, as an employee).

In many ways, skilled sales and marketing job seekers come into the job search a step ahead. Use those skills to your advantage.

In the End

Whether you are after an entry-level marketing role with a multinational CPG firm or an executive-level business development role in a startup software company, these are the major steps you can take to ensure your success in the interview process.

There are no guarantees in interviewing, but the above tactics are the most sure-fire ones to land you that next step in any interview process.

Dewey Burchfield

Certified Substitute Teacher at Huntsville City Schools

9y

Ken, this is a great article. I especially like #3, as it kind of balances the scale and empowers you, at the time when you need it the most.

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Olaide Ogungbesan

Marketing & Business Development Manager, Asia

9y

NO.3 is really great, I'd really start doing more of these. Thanks for the write up

Ken Sundheim - Very useful ideas to be applied for any Interviewing project or assignment. Good job Ken.

Jeff Campbell

Retired after a career in corporate communications…best years were in workplace safety. OBTW, on the side I painted weekly window posters for stores in 6 states AND wrote and edited as The 27th Character Communications.

9y

Ken, thanks for this. I've been there before and I'm there again! About research, it seems to me doing as you suggest makes an interviewer see more clearly what it would be like to have you on board. The questions you ask can indicate where your interests/strengths lie... so consider what you ask about.

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D P.

Engagement Specialist

9y

Ken: great article, and I particularly want to thank you for #3 "Treat Interviewers Like Clients" -- which is truly brilliant. Why has this never occurred to me? Such a simple and creative way to maximize effort/engagement while also giving the job seeker a more empowered perspective on the process (which, lets face it, can at time feel very disempowering, if that's even a word). Really, thanks for that useful tip; I look forward to your next post.

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