Initial Screening
Interviews
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Screening Interviews
Screening interviews are usually undertaken
by HR / Personnel staff or by third party
recruiters like me.
The aim of the screening interview, which
can be undertaken by telephone as well as in
person, is to check your technical relevance
against the job.
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By technical relevance, I mean by way of your past
experience and training, though in a technical role, such as
computer programming, technical relevance is of course meant
literally.
The interviewer in this case is looking for the
strongest candidates and will therefore be looking for
good, solid reasons to take your application forward to
the next stage.
This is common in situations where there is lots of
competition for a particular role.
You will be asked questions that are geared around your
experience and training, though there might be a few questions
in there that are designed to catch you out.
A skilled interviewer will be looking for ways to disqualify
your application, since their role is to produce a short-list
of no more than three or possibly four well-qualified
candidates.
Be prepared to explain any gaps in your employment
history.
Make sure that your CV is up to date and doesn't have any
inconsistencies that could be used to trip you up, or that
could throw you into a panic.
Right from the start, your interviewer will be asking
probing questions that centre around your salary expectation.
If it's outside of their own parameters for the position on
offer, expect your application to be down-graded.
If your previous or most recent salary package was or is
more than is on offer, you will be quizzed at length. You'll
have to be extremely convincing in order to get past a thorough
interviewer, since most people, even when currently unemployed,
don't like accepting positions that pay less than they are used
to.
This means (to the employer), that they are likely to lose
you as soon as another position comes along - and recruitment
is expensive, so they don't want to get it wrong and risk
having to do it all again.
During the screening interview, try to concentrate on your
day to day duties.
The more you practice this beforehand, the better. Be
expected to be asked what you do each day - and don't, no
matter what, ever reply, "well, each day is different really".
Your interviewer just heard that one!
Don't get too personal and friendly with the screening
interview. You'll need to save your best smile and winning
personality for the final interview with the real decision
maker, as the chances are that this will be the person you'll
be working most closely with.
Remember, screening interviews are simply used as a tool to
prepare the most qualified candidates for the job on offer.
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