Monday, May 25, 2020
Personal Brands Answer This - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Personal Brands Answer This - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career I imagine thereâs some lunatic that weâre calling a âthought-leader,â who is passing out some horrific job-interview ending advice, including: âNever answer a question about compensation.â I did not hire five people in the last week because they would not answer this question: âWhat are your expectations for salary, bonuses, and other compensation as an employee of our company?â I am hiring up for one of my firmâs business units. It should be easy to find great people, because this economy has unfairly displaced thousands of quality employees â" including those with the specific technical skills my firm requires. It is easy to get resumes in my email box, but nearly impossible to get answers in the actual interviews. When I ask this very important test of their character: âWhat are your expectations for salary, bonuses and other compensation as an employee of our company?â They ârespondâ by telling me how motivated they are. They tell me they want to âcontributeâ to our organization. They say, âWhat is the salary range?â This is all I need to know about their personal brand. Evasion is one of the brandâs defining qualities. Build trust Donât be stupid. This is not only a question about the money you expect to earn, your participation in profits, or your desire for particular benefits. Itâs a question that reveals how you are going to conduct yourself during the many difficult moments that are a part of a growing, revenue-generating, and profitable business. Hereâs the thing. Iâm not a waiter with a menu. Iâm not presenting you with choices so you can decide who you are for purposes of this interview. Iâm a potential colleague who wants to work with people who can be trusted and who are sincere, while they also have skills and experience to do the jobs that are yet unfilled. Before you meet me, you have seen the job description and requirements. Iâm going to ask you questions that lead me to understand if you have the qualities my firm requires: good character, self-motivation, and the ability to collaborate with others. Those are qualities of the personal brands that sync with my business one. Be straightforward The one paramount brand identity I require isnât something you can âcustomizeâ for the job interview. I want to work with people who are straightforward. I donât play cat and mouse. I want people whom I can trust for a truthful, accurate, and reliable answer to all the questions Iâll have in the months and years ahead as we grow this business unit. I need people who will ask the hard questions that reveal our weaknesses so we can build what we now lack. So, just answer the questions we are asking in job interviews. Donât use diversion tactics. Donât take fifty words when five will do. Show what type of person you are. Think of prospective employers as a personal brand polygraph test. If you are a person who is typically evasive, loathe committing, or are generally dishonest, itâs clear from your discernible dry mouth and sweaty hands. While youâre destroying your chances with your workaround responses, you are doing one person a favor. The trials of meeting bad candidates make a good candidate glow. Let it glow. Author: Nance Rosen is the author of Speak Up! Succeed. She speaks to business audiences around the world and is a resource for press, including print, broadcast and online journalists and bloggers covering social media and careers. Read more at NanceRosenBlog. Twitter name: nancerosen.
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