Sunday, June 14, 2020
Handling interview rejection
Handling interview rejection Itâs hard not to feel discouraged when youâre hoping for âyesâ but hear ânoâ . Whether youâre an interview veteran or a relative novice, rejection can be a bruising experience. It can also feel personal and strike at the very core of your confidence. Anger, frustration and resentment are all normal responses; there is no rule book for how to handle disappointment. Give yourself permission to wallow for a day or two, lick your wounds and then move on. Whilst itâs tempting to dissolve into self-pity (and weâve all been thereâ¦) it certainly wonât move you closer to interview success. Donât take it personally Easy to say, hard to do. Weâre all programmed â" or perhaps conditioned â" to seek approval, and the interview process can make you feel really exposed. After all, itâs an opportunity to project your âbest faceâ. Stop yourself at this point. The job interview is not a measure of your professional or personal worth. Start with the positives: you were invited to interview, others werenât. Youâ re already grabbing the attention of employers in a crowded, competitive job market. Yes, you may have fallen at the final hurdle, but you have to accept this is part of the process. Interviews are designed to eliminate the majority of candidates. Some you win, some you lose. Donât blame others Itâs easy to write off your interview failure as the employerâs fault. On paper you were clearly good enough, so what went wrong? Sometimes, nothing. The other candidate may just have been a better âfitâ. Recruiters are assessing candidates against job criteria, but they are also looking for individuals to complement their team. Often this is an undefinable quality and employers themselves canât always describe what âitâ is. You also need to be really honest with yourself and try to separate your emotional response to rejection from a detached, objective analysis of your performance. You may simply have interviewed below par. Feedback can be helpful, but donât feel too despondent if an employer says no â" you can always talk it through with us. Maybe a mock interview would help you to address any shortcomings and refine your technique? If you blame others for your failures, do you credit them with your success? Focus on the positives Acknowledge and âownâ your mistakes but donât ignore the positives. You may have felt the interview was a disaster, but this is often a heightened perception of events. If you dwell on the negatives, you can create a self-fulfilling prophecy of failure. Once youâve had time to digest the outcome, make a list of the things that went well. Perhaps you established a good rapport (a definite plus!) or the mental agility to think on your feet. Unless youâre incredibly lucky (or phenomenally goodâ¦) youâll probably be interviewed many times throughout your career; draw on your past experiences to help you shape a job winning formula. Keep it in perspective Yes, it can be a crushing blow particularly if youâve had a number of rejections in quick succession, but try to see it as a normal feature of your job search. If you are applying for graduate positions, then chances are youâre competing against people with a broadly similar profile. Thereâs a limited pool of âgraduate trackâ jobs for bright, ambitious individuals, so most of you will face initial disappointment. Make sure you have other applications in the pipeline and dont invest too much in one application or interview. And finally, plan a great comeback dont let the fear of rejection stop you!
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