Financial Feminist - 55. Step-By-Step Guide to Nailing Your Job Interview
Episode Date: November 10, 2022When it comes to finding a job, getting in the door is half the battle, but what do you do after you finally get that interview you’ve been dreaming of? In this episode, Tori Dunlap shares how she c...oaches women through a successful interview to help applicants put their best foot forward. You’ll learn everything from how to prep beforehand to how to follow up after your interview. Learn more about our guests, read episode transcripts, get resources from the show, and more on our show notes page: https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/interview-prep-tips Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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pru dash disclaimer. Hello yet again, financial feminists. Welcome back. Welcome back to the show. We're so excited
to see you. If you are an oldie but a goodie, welcome back. If this is your first time, hi,
I'm Tori. I'm the host of Financial Feminist. I'm also the founder of Her First Gender K.
And we fight the patriarchy by making you rich. So we give you resources to better your money,
including how to pay off debt,
how to save money, how to invest, how to get compensated fairly at a job, and so much more.
We have this podcast. We also have a lovely money personality quiz that you can take to get all of
our resources in one place that is the best for you. So if you've frantically Googled how to save
money question mark at two in the morning, or if you're just wondering where to start and you're
feeling super overwhelmed, you can go to herfirst100k.com
slash start to take that quiz and get all of those resources for free. Thank you for joining us as
always. Today we are talking about one of my favorite topics, which is the job interview.
For many people, that terrifies them. I get it. Job interviews are a little scary. However,
I kind of love the job interview. Like, especially when I was a candidate, I love the job interview. Especially when I was a candidate, I loved
the job interview. There's something about a job interview that feeds my pick-me-girl energy.
That's really what I'm doing, right? I'm just like, pick me. Let me do everything I can to
convince you that I am the person that you've been looking for, right? Pick me, pick me.
I'm just a girl standing in front of a boy begging. But that's what it feels like, right? Pick me, pick me. I'm just a girl standing in front of a boy begging.
But that's what it feels like, right? And now as someone who employs people and someone who actively interviews, it's very interesting being on the other side. So I've had a lot of experience
as a candidate. I've had a lot of experience coaching other people through job interviews
as a negotiation and career coach. And now as a founder and CEO of a company,
we've done a lot of job interviews here at Her First 100K. So we are going to give you the guide
to job interviews today, what you can do before, during, and after to make sure that you are
setting yourself up for success, preparing correctly, and giving yourself the best shot you
can to make sure you're getting this job.
We've said this before on the show, but I also want to reiterate,
job interviews are as much for you as they are for the company. As much as I am interviewing
a candidate to determine if they are right for the job opening, the candidate is interviewing
me and interviewing the company to make sure that it's a
right fit for them. That is the kind of energy you need in a job interview. You need to roll up
knowing your worth, knowing what you expect of an organization, and also being committed to saying
no if it's something that doesn't work out for you. Okay, let's talk about all of the things that you can do before you show up for the interview.
One, explore the company's website. This should be so obvious, but we can tell at her first 100k
if you have no idea about the company, you have no idea about our story, you haven't read our
about page, right? You don't know our mission and our values and our goals. We can tell. It's very
obvious. You might think it's not obvious. It's obvious. Poke around. One of the easiest things you can do is actually
go to a company's press page. That is where they're going to post all of the news or exciting
updates. These are great things to weave throughout your job interview. It shows that you've done your
research. You can also, again, go to the team or about page to see who you're going to be
interviewing with. Their name and photo are probably there. Might be a good idea to look
at their LinkedIn to see where they've worked before, see what their experience is, right?
Do some research starting with the company website. Another piece of research you can do
is if the company has Glassdoor reviews, if they have information from other organizations, right?
If you Google her first 100K, you're going to find info about the company on CNBC or on Entrepreneur.
Best way to research a company beyond their website is to see what other people are saying about them.
Glassdoor is going to give you what previous team members said, and other news outlets might give you an idea of what sort of challenges the companies had or what sort of wins they've had
recently. So do your research. The second thing you can do is you can practice answering common
job interview questions with your partner, with a friend, with a family member, or you can just do
them on your own. The more practice we get at answering these questions, the more comfortable we'll be. We will do a whole
podcast episode about common interview questions, but some good places to start. Having stories or
narratives that demonstrate that you know the skills and the necessary requirements needed for
this job, great place to start.
Knowing your general timeline, because unfortunately, companies still ask the like,
where do you see yourself in five years question. One other way we can prep is practicing potential job interview questions with someone else, with a friend, with your partner, even with yourself in
the mirror. The more you practice responding, the more comfortable you're going to get and the
more confident you're going to be, right? It's like knowing your lines in a play. If you know
them really well, you remember them when you're nervous, as opposed to you having a general
understanding and then blacking out on your monologue. Not like that's ever happened to me
before. We will have a full podcast episode with different common interview questions and how to answer them.
But in the meantime, a good Google search will get you there. You also, in addition, need to prep
questions of your own. One of the biggest red flags is when I'm interviewing somebody and I go,
do you have any questions for me or any questions for us? And they go, no, I think I'm good. No,
you have questions. You should have questions. Questions about the
benefits, questions about the pay, questions about the company, questions about how you can be
successful here. Again, we'll do an episode about this. My favorite follow-up question to ask is,
quote, is there anything about me or my experience that gives you pause? If so, I would love to
address that. What a power pose of a question. It shows that
you're open to feedback and it also shows that you were about to shoot down any potential qualms or
any concerns they have about you, right? So that is one potential question, but get your response
questions prepped. And also throughout the interview, this is the time where, you know, things are going to come up. We'll talk about during the
interview in a second, but you can also, of course, think of an interview question as you're talking.
We kind of talked about this already, but you also want to look up the people you're going to
interview with on LinkedIn. If you don't know the people you're going to interview with,
that's a quick email. Hey, I would love to know who I'm chatting with tomorrow so I can feel well
prepared. Look them up. Did you go to the same college maybe? That would be convenient. Do you
have a mutual connection with them? Where did they work before? What are they good at? It'll help
give you an insight so you can, again, showcase all of your skill sets, but also find some common
through lines. One of the most important things
you can do to prep is review the job description again and format your experience around the job
description. So if, for example, there's a bullet point that says manages time effectively,
make sure you have a specific example of a time in your past where you managed time effectively,
right? Or if it says for me, like I was a managed time effectively, right? Or if it says,
for me, like I was a social media manager, right? So if it says like increases our Facebook account
likes, which who's using Facebook anymore, but if it says something like that, I will have a
particular example of a way that I've done that at a previous organization. Now, if you're thinking
to yourself, well, I don't know if I have that experience. I don't know what stories I'm going to tell.
I'm kind of applying for this job and it's outside of my regular skill set or it's kind of beyond my
current scope of work. We have a free workshop called How to Land the Job When You Don't Meet
the Requirements. We'll link it down below. It's very useful for that. Okay, a couple logistics things. One, send a confirmation email. Say, hey, looking forward to
chatting with you tomorrow, making sure that time still works. Nothing more embarrassing than either
showing up on Zoom or driving, God forbid, actually like driving to the interview and either you
fucked up the day or they canceled and the email didn't have like confirm, confirm it. You also want to
compile any portfolio examples or other supporting documents, your resume, your cover letter, right?
Samples of your work. You can send that off in the confirmation email if this interview is happening
digitally or remotely. Get a good night's sleep. I did not do that last night. So this
podcast recording has been rough.
Imagine if I was interviewing right now. It would not be great. So do everything you can to get a good night's sleep. Rest up. Also, eat some good food. Don't eat the thing that you know is going
to trigger your IBS right before you get on a job interview. I'm going to eat like a nice salad.
I'm going to have some soup. Because again,
the last thing you want is that mid-interview, oh shit, I have diarrhea moment. Can we keep this?
I don't know. We're keeping it. Doesn't matter. Okay. Eat some soup. Eat a salad. If you're
lactose intolerant, don't eat the fucking dairy. Don't do it. You also need to ask for a glass of water
before you interview or get a glass of water if you're interviewing remotely. One, water's always
good. You're probably going to have a dry throat. You're going to feel a little parched. You need
some water. Two, this is the thing that a lot of people don't realize. You need to give yourself
something to do to think over a question.
So when someone asks, where do you see yourself in five years?
And you need a little bit of time.
Well, actually, right?
I just took five seconds and you can't see it, but I just took a sip of water.
Perfect opportunity to gather your thoughts, to take a breath in a way that doesn't look like you've just like malfunctioned for a second, right?
Giving yourself something to do, giving malfunctioned for a second, right? Giving
yourself something to do, giving yourself even something to hold, right? If you're the antsy
person who kind of needs something to play with, you can hold your glass of water on the table,
right? You can sip your glass of water when you need a little bit of time or you need a breather.
So pour yourself a glass of water or ask for a glass of water when you show up. When they say,
can I get you anything? You say, yes, a glass of water. You don't say, no, I'm fine. It's not bothersome. They're asking. Ask
for a glass of water. The other thing you can do is when you arrive, again, assuming this is in
person, go to the bathroom. One, will clear up any worries. Two, is that you're going to be able
to take some time to compose yourself. Check your teeth, make sure there's nothing in them, straighten your outfit, and take a couple of really big deep breaths.
You can power pose if that's your thing. However, power posing, I think, according to recent studies
has been debunked. But like, if you need to feel strong and powerful, do it. Great. Amazing. I will
sometimes turn on Beyonce and my AirPods when I need to do something strong and powerful.
It's very similar to the water thing,
right? You're taking time to gather yourself before you go. And if this is a remote interview,
don't schedule, try not to schedule a call or something right before the interview. The last
thing I want you to do is feel frazzled going into this potentially stressful situation.
Give yourself some time. Give yourself some time to go to the restroom. Give yourself some time to take some deep breaths. All right, let's talk about during the interview. You want to do the
exact opposite of what I've done in this podcast episode, and you need to speak slowly and
deliberately. You're going to be nervous. You're probably going to start talking faster.
This is, again, the perfect time to take some deep breaths and to slow way down.
As a theater major, as someone who did theater my entire life, one of the frequent pieces
of feedback given to actors is you need to slow down.
And weirdly, what ends up happening is if you slow down twice as much as you need to slow down. And weirdly, what ends up happening is if you slow down twice as much as
you need to or you think you need to, you will be at the perfect pace. Even now, I'm telling myself
slow way down and I feel like I'm talking slowly. I know I'm talking at a normal pace.
I'm talking at a digestible pace, right? So constantly be reminding yourself
that this is not a race. You don't need to get all of the information out in just one breath,
it isn't a contest. Speak slowly, deliberately, and with as much power as you can muster.
You also want to smile and make eye contact as much as you can.
I get for a lot of people that's hard. Eye contact's really intimate. It's really vulnerable.
Eye contact's really important. It's kind of like going on a date, right? Is making eye contact, again, speaking slowly and deliberately and looking fully at the person
is going to show that you're confident and show that you're well prepared. You also want to avoid
saying a couple things in a job interview. We'll talk more about this also in an upcoming episode,
but we never ever want to apologize for not having experience. We don't want to say,
oh, I know I don't have the experience, but we never want to say that. There are ways that we
can highlight our experience and to show that
we're qualified even if we don't meet the necessary qualifications on paper. Again,
we literally have a free workshop an hour long to teach you how to do this. The other thing you
don't want to say is anything about your last job or previous work experience that is negative,
even if your boss was awful. So even if you had a
terrible experience, I know I did. I had a lot of toxic jobs. I had a lot of toxic, I worked at a
lot of toxic companies. You don't ever want to say, I'm leaving because I hated my job. I'm leaving
because of this, right? We always want to position it in an honest but good way, right? So if you're
asked something like, why are you leaving your
previous job? Or why are you looking for work? You don't want to lie, but you want to highlight
something that maybe contributed to your negative feelings, right? So if you're leaving because
your boss was terrible, you don't want to say, I'm leaving because my boss is terrible. You want
to say, I didn't see a clear path for growth and development on my job, and both of those are very important to me. Right? That is a perfect way of saying what you need to say while also
positioning yourself well. Your interview is not a therapy session. It is not a time to complain
about previous sucky situations, even though I feel you. Sucky situations, especially at a
workplace, are awful. The other thing is we want to feel confident discussing money. Again, we've discussed this before in job interviews,
but we don't want to give the first number. So in questions like, what is your desired salary?
We would like to say, at this point in the process, I don't have enough information to
determine that, but I would love to know your budget. Nine times out of 10, they'll give you your budget. I have made countless TikToks using that script. But again, they ask your desired
salary or like, what are your salary requirements? Put the ball back in their court. Don't get
flustered. Don't be like, well, at my last job, I don't know, right? Nope. At this point in the
process, I think it's a little too early for me to accurately
price myself, but I would love to know your budget. Put the ball back in their court.
All right, let's talk about after the interview what we can do.
One, call me old-fashioned. I still think a thank you note is so important.
Now, I sometimes like still send a handwritten thank you note. I like four years ago,
three years ago when I was coaching people, that was like a non-negotiable for me is like send a handwritten thank you note.
I think in 2022, especially if it's like a remote job, just a handwritten thank you note might not
even get there in time. So I know I've been most impressed as someone interviewing candidates when
they've just sent me a message after that recapped what we talked about, that thanked me for my time,
and that mentioned what they were excited about.
So do send some sort of follow-up note.
A very impactful follow-up note is not just a thank you,
but an outline of what you're going to do when you come on board.
This is also called a 90-day plan.
This has probably come up actually in your interview. And this is something you can on board. This is also called a 90-day plan. This has probably come up actually
in your interview, and this is something you can prep beforehand, but will be even more impactful
after the interview because you know what their needs are, right? You listened to your potential
boss talk about what this role could be. So the 90-day plan is exactly what it sounds like.
How are you going to hit the ground running? What sort of projects are you going to spearhead in the first 90 days?
What sort of problems do you see within the organization and how can you provide a solution?
As someone who, again, who hires people, that is so compelling.
It shows that this person actually heard us, actually knows what problems can be
solved, and feels like they can take the initiative to be successful here. So incredibly impactful.
So a thank you note, a good thank you note, is not just one that of course thanks the person
for their time, but also sends that 90-day
plan. Hey, I really appreciated our conversation and based off the information, here are a couple
things I think we could implement in my first 90 days. The other thing we want to do is we want to
reach out if you can to other team members and ask about their experience. You can find them on
LinkedIn and just say, hey, I'm applying for this
particular role and I'm in the final stage of the process and I would love to know your experience.
How do you like the company? Do you feel supported? Do you feel like you've been able to be successful?
One, you're going to get a lot of good information. Two, hopefully those employees go, oh, this person's really impressive. And then they
go tell your potential boss, hey, Tori Dunlap reached out to me and asked me a lot of good
questions and we should hire her. It works on two levels. Gives you more information about if this
is a company you actually want to work for and if there's any red flags, but also demonstrates,
again, that you're going after this job.
And finally, breathe. Take some deep breaths. If you haven't heard from the company in a day,
that's probably pretty normal, especially if they've told you at what point they're actually
going to get back to you. Take some time, deep breathe, keep applying for other jobs,
keep doing your work. They'll get back to you when they're going to get back to you. Now, if it has been way past the time they said, or if it's been like two weeks,
three weeks, a month, that's the time when you follow back up. But also a red flag because they
should have reached out to you if they wanted to give you the job, right? Also a good thing.
Again, like I said at the very beginning, job interviews are as much
for you as they are for the company. You want to be noticing how the company behaves themselves.
Do you feel supported by your potential boss or by management? And does this feel like a role
where you can be successful, where you can actually make some solid change and get compensated fairly.
We have so many job interview resume resources. We have a full resume template. We have a job
interview guide. We have a whole course about negotiation. And we also have an entire chapter
about earning in the book Financial Feminist. All of those will link in the show notes.
We also, again, have that free workshop called How to Land a Job When You Don't Meet the
Requirements that is going to be so impactful and useful for people who are either just graduating
college, transitioning careers, transitioning industries, or just going for a job that's
slightly outside of their skill set. As always, Financial Feminists, we hope this information was
helpful. We appreciate your support of the show. Subscribe, leave subscribe leave us a review tell your friends and we'll catch you later
thank you for listening to financial feminist a her first 100k podcast financial feminist is
hosted by me tori dunlap produced by kristin fields marketing and administration by karina
patel olivia coning sharice wade alina Hilzer, Paulina Isaac, Sophia Cohen,
Valerie Oresko, Jack Koning, and Ana Alexandra. Research by Arielle Johnson. Audio engineering
by Austin Fields. Promotional graphics by Mary Stratton. Photography by Sarah Wolf. And theme
music by Jonah Cohen Sound. A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100K team and community for
supporting the show. For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100K, our guests, episode show notes,
and our upcoming book, also titled Financial Feminist, visit herfirst100k.com.