“Tell me about your biggest weakness,” I recently asked a job-seeking client in a practice interview to help her prepare for her upcoming job interview for an administrative position. She smiled confidently, and gave me a predictable answer, one often heard from job seekers and which I call “the perfectionist answer”: “When I am given a task, I work very hard at getting it completed, and will not stop until it is perfectly done.” “So,” I said, taking a devil’s advocate role, “are you saying that you get really stressed out about it and that you compromise all other work to get it done?” She straightened up uncomfortably, looked me in the eye, and answered “No. Of course not! I always make sure all my work gets done.” “So, how then, is it a weakness? I would love to hire someone who sets high standards for themselves.“, I challenged her gently. Looking confused and mildly annoyed, she struggled to answer my challenge satisfactorily, eventually looking at me imploringly, “What do I say, then? What do I say that won’t make me look bad?”
Ask the Employment Specialist: Turning Your Hobby into a Career
I love to write and blog. I would love to get paid for my passion. However, I have to work and am unhappily employed as a receptionist. It’s full time and I have little time for my hobby. How do I turn my hobby into paid employment and a career?
Signed: Writer’s Block (WB)
Dear WB,
I will refer you to read the fantastic blog written by columnist Jacquelyn Smith who provides some useful tips to turn your hobby into your job. It includes the following particularly useful suggestions:
Become an expert: teach your passion.
Blogging is a skill. You have figured out not just how to write, but to edit and publish too. It’s possible that there are many out there who would like to learn these skills.
Ask the Employment Specialist: The Biggest Interview Turn-offs
I had a interview coaching session with a panel of JVS job developers just before my upcoming interview for an office manager position that I am 100 percent qualified for. Their feedback upset me. They said that I was scaring them with my responses. Is this possible? How can the interviewer or hiring manager be afraid of me?
Signed: Fear Factor (FF)
Dear FF
You are lucky that you received this honest feedback. You can be sure the hiring managers or HR staff would never dare to give you such critical information on your interview. Employment blogger Maggie Graham presents the following ways that job seekers can scare the hiring manager at the interview. I have included my own advice, based on my frontline practice as well with my clients:
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