1. There are a number of different interview settings you may encounter and it is essential to see and know how to respond in every scenario. Do one interview with a friend or colleague, where you speak to this one individual. Then answer the questions in front of five to ten friends or colleagues. And finally, answer the same questions speaking straight to the camera. Notice how each can take on a different tone, but try to keep up the trust and likeability you portray in each scenario.
2. No matter what the interview, the most common question is in reference to you and your personal traits. Practice describing yourself with language and tones that come across as confident but not cocky. Make sure you know your strengths and key characteristics you’d like your audience to know about you.
3. Ask a friend to put three random topics in a box. Pull one out at a time and practice your impromptu responses. Have the friend include one question in which you might not know the answer. It is better to rehearse how you will handle an answer you don’t know before you are in a critical interview.
4. Watch a taped interview of a polished interviewee and pause the video before they give their responses to the questions. Try your hand at the answers and see how your responses differ from the actual subject. Look for differences in dialogue, eye contact, body language and expressions.
5. Your body language can often tell more to your audience than your words do. Take one of your practice
videos and watch it through with the volume turned off. See what your expressions and body language is
portraying to the public. Ask a friend or colleague to watch the muted video as well and see if they can
interpret the mood and impressions of your interview. Try playing around with different facial and body
expressions in your next test interview from the feedback you receive.
6. In many interviews, you can’t control what the interviewer is going to ask you, but you often have an
agenda you want to accomplish or a point you want to make. Have a friend ask you an obscure question
and try to work in a natural sounding transition to incorporate the point you want to make. Politicians are
experts at this. Watch a few of their interviews to see how they always work an answer in the direction
they want it.
7. Try being the interviewer and ask someone else the questions. It often helps to be on the other side of the
microphone. It gives us a new perspective on how to answer questions.
8. Have fun! Even when you practice, put a smile on and try to focus on the positive aspects of your answers
so you always portray an affable demeanor. Your good mood can influence others so keep the positive
energy coming.
Interviews can be extremely important and can be quite influential in the outcome of your career. Knowing how
important an interview can be, isn’t it worth putting in the time to perfect your skills? Your interest in the
improvement shows you are already halfway there.
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