It’s so easy to be misunderstood. Especially in job interviews. I wrote this list for myself. Maybe someone can use it.
The most common reason people leave companies: what was said at the beginning was not respected later.
Below you will find a couple of tips to help you talk, write and express a little better.
- Honesty is a superpower because people so rarely hear it in job interviews.
- There is no chance for an long term relationship by telling people what they expect to hear.
- You can’t explain a position you don’t understand and you don’t understand a position you can’t explain.
- Use the language your audience uses.
- Before you tell someone they’re wrong, tell them they might be right.
- All problems in communication are problems in attention. Turn off your phone
- Leave your ego at home. The most important person is the person you want to hire.
- A lesson learned from comedians: Good ones get laughs, great ones get silence between the laughs.
- Assume you’ll be misunderstood.
- The more interested you are, the more interesting you’ll be.
- Every word is a choice and every choice has a consequence.
- Synonyms don’t mean the same thing. Avoid complex language and jargon.
- If your counterpart doesn’t understand you, it’s not their fault – it’s yours. The problem is, they don’t tell you that they don’t understand.
- The point of an argument isn’t to win.
- Not only listen, try to understand.
- The one who asks the best questions wins.
- Don’t ask questions you don’t want answered.
- Sometimes what’s boring to one person is fascinating to another.
- Memorable conversations have one thing in common: Surprise.
- It might sound crazy, but: It’s easy to convince if the other person believes you have their best interests at heart. The problem: you need to take it seriously.
- The better you listen, the better you communicate.
- Communicate warm. If you can get someone to laugh and relax, you can get them to do anything.
- People notice if you describe something you believe — the opposite is also true.
- Don’t say words you don´’t understand
- Don’t write words you don’t speak.
- The words you saying are different than the words others understand from you.
- Knowing when stop talking is a skill.
- BONUS: The whole interview can change when you change its start or end point.
Photo by Work With Island on Unsplash