Jobs & Career
What to say when the interview panel asks: Who are you?
Posted Wednesday, October 27 2010 at 00:00
Daily Monitor Correspondent
Nairobi
One of the surest questions that a job seeker will be asked at any interview is ‘tell us about yourself?’ As common as this request has become, many people still grapple with what is expecte of them.
This is one question that people are unable to rehearse for, since it could be posed in a variery of ways. It is however necessary for every job seeker to be prepared with the appropriate responses should the panel start off the discussion with a request for you to explain more about yourself.
The following may be some of the issues you may want to focus on when asked this question. First, indicate your personal details. This could include your name and a brief summary of your resume. Make sure that all the information you provide at this point is helpful to your job search process.
Be keen not to overdisclose about yourself as this may work against you. Don’t be seen to boast about the place you hail from. You could also keep issuess related to your religious or party affiliation to yourself just in case they are used to block the minds of panelists.
Do realise that this opportunity is used to break ice at the interview hence the need to be precise. Secondly, present a brief about your education background. On this brief, focus on the qualifications that relate to the job you are being interviewed for. You must not mention all the courses you have gone through.
Training opportunities
Be keen to mention all training opportunities that would present you as the best candidate for the job. Always remeber that this is an opportunity to market yourself. It helps to influence the panel’s decision on the panel’s decision on whether to listen to you for longer or to encourage you out of the door with little engagement. You want at this point to whet the panel’s appretite to hear more about you.
Thirdly, seek to dwell on your work experience and how it gels with the requirements of the position. This speaks to the need for proper analysis of the requirements of the job so that you can be clear on what experience bits to withdraw from your catalogue.
Be brief and to the point on your experience, ensuring that you emphasise on the components that you realise resonate most to the panel. Mention the actual acievements, not what you had been employed to do. Get actual figures that speak to achievements that can be quantified. In all these, be careful to show attribution. What was your role on the various achievements to that your personal role can be clarified?
Finally, never give false or fabricated information at this point. It is good to realise that panelists are keen on background and reference checks these days hence the need to tell the truth. Falsehood or exaggerated information can easily disqualify you from a very early stage of a recruitment process.



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