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12 Tips To Survive Tough Interviews

You read the books, did your research, knew what to expect and impressed the HR recruiters and line managers equally. So much so in fact that they have now been elevated to a different level of questioning altogether; you have made it the final round, the lion’s ring, the platinum enclave, and the employer is now trying to determine if you really are as perfect, as unquestionably suited for the job as you seem to be. In the most professional behavioral based interviews you will often not even be aware of the exact behavior or history of behaviors the interviewer is probing for or trying to ascertain.
Below are some of the questions/tactics you might expect during a really tough interview as the employer struggles with the decision of are you really the right candidate for the job are have you simply memorized the latest Interview Skills Almanac and rehearsed at length with the Interview Brigade.

1. Silence

The silence left by an interviewer is not an invitation to babble or a license to ramble. In fact, it is a calculated tactic used by many a sophisticated employer to make you do precisely that. Avoid breaking the silence and above all don’t lose your cool. Stay casual and relaxed, maintain your friendly demeanor and wait for the employer to break the silence. Remember in an interview the nonverbal cues you give are being observed as closely as your words, tone and diction.

2. Tell Me A Little About Yourself

Stick to business and to those aspects of yourself that specifically related to the job at hand. This is not the time to pretend to enjoy soccer if you don’t know how many people play in a team, who won the last World Cup and what the rules of the game are.
Nor is it the time to reveal personal information that has no bearing to the professional setting and might impede your chances of success. This is your chance to really sell yourself and expound on all those character traits, accomplishments and success stories that have a direct bearing on the job.
Reassert why you are there and your interest in the position and reaffirm why you are uniquely qualified and suitable for the role at hand. Substantiate your claims with concrete and positive examples from your past experience that reflect on your abilities, aptitudes and values. Show that you understand the requirements of the role and portray yourself in the best light possible to occupy that role by virtue of your goals, interests,strengths, skills and past successes.

3. Tell Me a Story

Trust us, the interviewer is not interested at this specific moment in pop culture, nursery rhymes or the sequel to the latest blockbuster.
He is interested in his bottom line and in finding a candidate who can augment that while being a pleasant and welcome member of the team.
 Stay focused on why you are there and what the interviewer is looking for.
Asking a question to get the conversation back on the most relevant professional track is your best course of action.
“What would you like to hear about?” may narrow the parameters but then again the interviewer may not be forthcoming.
 You can then volunteer “Can I tell you about why I am here today and why I truly believe I am uniquely suitable for this specific job” and proceed to reiterate with passion and sincerity why you firmly believe you are unequivocally the best person for the job.

4. Why Should We Hire You?

This question delivered sometimes in a condescending manner may come at a late stage of the interview by which time you thought you’d already expounded on all your virtues or it may be used as a shocker right at the beginning. Either way don’t be discouraged or exasperated. Use it to drive home exactly why you believe you are uniquely and fundamentally and beyond any shade of a doubt qualified for the very specific role being discussed. This is where your homework comes into play and you need to really understand what the employer is looking for in terms of skills, strengths, values, track record and cultural fit. Align your goals and interests with the employer’s and reiterate that you are confident you can not only meet the deliverables and perform the requirements of the role but really excel!
Show confidence, enthusiasm and energy without being boastful or arrogant. Above all be sincere.
Your sincere and honest interest in the job and faith that you will perform beyond all your expectations will communicate itself to the employer better than any canned superlatives and coined metaphors.

5. What kind of people do you find it difficult to work with?

Every workplace has its unique personalities and character profiles, some less ideal to work with than others. This is not the time to point fingers, generalize, compartmentalize or wax lyrical about your ideal team environment. Show you are tolerant, flexible, easygoing and able to get along with practically anyone and resolve conflicts professionally and productively.
Say you understand everyone brings to the table their very own skills, strengths and experiences, that you enjoy the challenge of working with new people and can really appreciate the differences.
 Emphasize that you are a team player who enjoys interacting with and bouncing ideas off of others and thrives on the feedback and reinforcement, the energy and vitality inherent in effective and collaborative teamwork.

6. How do you handle stress?

Stress is an inevitable part of life and the employer needs to hear you realize that and have already mastered the art of recognizing stress and coping with it effectively.
 Mention that you take time to really think through a situation before reacting and never allow matters to blow out of proportion or lose your calm. Give an example of a particularly stressful project you worked on and how you managed to reduce the stress level through proper planning, organization time management. Show you have an arsenal of real stress-busting habits too which successfully serve you in ameliorating stress whether they be yoga, running once a week, meditation at night, swimming, meeting up with friends, or some other sport, hobby or activity that shows you positively for the well-rounded person you are.

7. What was your biggest failure?

Obviously this is potentially your opportunity to talk yourself out of the job so be very careful and above all don’t bring up a failure that has any impact or ramifications whatsoever on the job at hand.
You may bring up something relatively insignificant that happened very early in your career and turn it into a story of remedial action and great success as directly affects and impacts your potential for contribution to the present job. Demonstrate that you have dramatically learned and grew from that experience. You may mention for instance a formal training program you really wanted to get into that you were not permitted to join and how that forced you to pursue your own learning tangent which actually proved much more rich, fruitful and relevant to your chosen career path.
Or talk about an account you lost very early on in your career due to sheer inexperience and how you instantly took remedial action, learned from your mistakes, took the counsel and advice of your boss and mentors and won the account back and have since made them into one of your biggest customers.

8. To what do you attribute your success?

The interviewer probably wants to verify that you really are successful professional at this stage by gauging your sincerity when you respond to this question. He/she is also interested in your value system and character. Mention some of the values you hold most dear to you – honesty, integrity, character, discipline, and mention that you are an energetic, ambitious “doer” who has always been very persistent, organized and disciplined in setting and meeting goals.
Don’t be arrogant or over-confident when answering this question or ramble on endlessly as this is also a “likability” question. Remember to attribute some of the success to the wonderful people you have been blessed to work/ learn with – whether it is a unique boss, mentor, teacher, peer or group of people.

9. Describe a situation where you were faced with a problem that had no precedent?

This question probes your problem-solving and analytical skills.
How well can you think outside the box, wrap your mind around a particular quandary, get the full measure of it and formulate the means and method to resolve it in an exemplary fashion?
 This question is especially relevant in the case of start-up companies or divisions, consultancy roles and many positions which require braving uncharted territory and designing new systems and procedures and operating apparatus.
You need to show creativity, clarity of thought, confidence in your analytical and problem-solving skills and willingness to take a risk and create your own precedent.

10. How do you deal with difficult customers?

Give an example of a difficult client you had to work with and how you maintained the relationship and made it profitable by really listening to him, respecting his needs, issues and constraints, following-up rigorously, maintaining very high professional standards and not allowing ego to get in the way.
Chose an example where you were able to really turn the situation around to everyone’s advantage.

11. What has been your greatest accomplishment?

Choose a significant success story and make sure you position it in terms of how it positively impacts your potential for success in the new role. Give facts and figures to elaborate if possible.
You may want to talk about winning the most important account in the industry if that is relevant to the job at hand, about your relationships with clients which have won you an unrivaled track record at client retention, or about exceeding ambitions goals through hard work, perseverance, client follow-up, effective communication and cohesive teamwork.
Show how you mobilized resources and gained approvals and how you then carried through to successful implementation and follow-up without losing sight of either the big picture or the details and while effectively negotiating several difficulties on the way.

12. What is your ideal work environment?

Emphasize your flexibility and your ability to be productive, happy and efficient in any number of environments. This is not the time to demand the corner office with the park view or uninterrupted close-door policy.
Versatility goes a long way in today’s fluid workplaces and you need to show that you are able to focus on the job at hand and “fit in” seamlessly regardless of extraneous factors be they the physical surroundings, team dynamics or general level of noise and activity in the office.
Indicate examples of how you have managed to excel in the past in sub optimal work environments and done so quite happily. Convey that you like the challenge of fitting into a new role and know from your history and track record that you can adapt immediately regardless of the environment.

6 Steps To Start Your Price Action Trading Journey

So you’ve acquired an interest in price action forex trading and you want to get started as soon as possible, but you aren’t quite sure how to begin, or perhaps you aren’t quite sure if what you are currently doing is getting you started on the right track.

Does this sound like you? If so, read on, because today’s article is going to take you step by step through the very beginning stages of learning to trade forex with price action.

 I am going to lay out in very clear terms exactly what you should do to get your forex trading career off and running to a solid start. Let’s get started…

After Reading – Please Remember to Make A Comment Below to Show Your Support.

The first thing you need to do after deciding you want to learn how to trade the forex market, is find a trading strategy or trading setup that makes logical sense to you and that you know has worked for other traders.

Once you find this strategy, study it intensely, focus in on the main concepts and don’t deviate from your chosen strategy; genuinely focus and embrace it.

Too often beginning forex traders will switch trading strategies after not really giving the current one they are using a serious effort.

 No trading strategy is going to bring you instant success without any study and effort, and the ones that claim to do this are almost certainly scams.

If you want to learn how to trade the forex market with price action strategies, then you need to truly commit to this trading strategy and embrace it completely, don’t get distracted by the myriad of other trading systems and strategies out there, you must put all of your focus and mental energy into mastering the art and skill of price action if you want to be a consistently profitable price action trader.

2. Begin your forex education and begin demo trading…

Now that you have picked your forex trading strategy it is time to find a quality source of forex trading education on the particular strategy you want to learn to trade with.

Once you find a trusted and genuine forex trading education source, you should begin to absorb and learn from all the materials they offer.

While you are studying this material you should be observing the charts, watching the price action, and generally studying how the concepts you are learning apply to real-time price movement.

You can open a demo account to get this process rolling; begin taking notes and logging any demo trades that you take which are in-line with the concepts of the forex trading strategy you are learning.

You can record your demo trades in a spreadsheet or notebook, include a snapshot of the chart containing the demo-trade setup that you took, save it in a folder on your computer or print it out to use as a reference later on.

3. Begin to morph your demo-trade observations into a draft forex trading plan…

As you build your demo-trading track record and you get a decent amount of trades logged, you will begin to notice that some trade setups worked better than others in certain market conditions.

Keep record of the types of setups that you see working most often, record the specific setup and the market conditions that it formed in (trending/consolidating/quiet/volatile), make sure you note all important factors in these records; the type of signal or setup, the direction of the market at the time of entry and exit, nearby levels that acted as turning points, note the time frame, and make sure you record the potential risk / reward that these setups are providing.

By doing this you are building the basic foundations of your trading journal that we discussed in step 2, this will become your actual trading plan later on as you progress and master the trading strategy you have chosen.

This 3rd step of building your trading journal and drafting your trading plan is essentially just about you making and recording observations of things you see working in the market, according to the concepts you have learned in your trading strategy educational material.

Record as much as you can and keep it all for later reference, this step is about learning to use the concepts of the trading strategy that you will employ, so figuring out what works and why, is very important in building your final forex trading plan.

4. Start trading with your draft plan…

Now that you have a draft forex trading plan, it is time to start logging your demo trades officially; as if you were trading them for real.

At this point you are training yourself to stick to the basic concepts in your trading plan, during this period you will also be tweaking and improving your trading plan; adding the finishing touches.
 This means you will really be focusing on and recording the concepts that you see really working and that you understand clearly, this will work to solidify your trading plan.

There is nothing wrong with asking questions of your trading mentor or trading peers at this point, if you feel like you need to study more and go back and re-read or re-watch the educational materials that you learned from, then by all means do it, you want to make sure you thoroughly understand all the concepts now and that you are completely happy and confident with your trading plan.

5. Finalize your trading plan…

At this point you want to finalize your draft trading plan and trading experiences into a final forex trading plan.

If you are a price action trading student your plan should focus on one or two core price action setups, after you finalize your trading plan you should repeat the process from step 4; log demo trades and keep up your study and discussion with peers and mentors.

By this final step you will likely have simplified and condensed your thoughts and ideas from the earlier stages of your forex trading educational journey; at this point it is time to begin implementing and testing risk reward and money management techniques on the trading strategies in your trading plan.

6. Making it all work…

Implementing all of the steps above will not mean much if you are not using an effective forex trading strategy like price action.  

Learning to master the charts by gaining a thorough understanding of daily price dynamics in the forex market will allow you to clearly see what is happening in the market at any given point in time.

The simple and realistic approach of learning to trade off naturally occurring price action setups is a trading strategy that has been effectively used for hundreds of years.

 Once you are properly trained in the unique and proprietary way that I personally have successfully traded price action for years, the setups that I teach will begin to “jump” off the chart at you; practically begging you to trade them.

 There is no confusion or doubt once you become a proficient price action trader, this is because you are trading with the first-hand data of the market; pure price action.

SOURCE:http://www.learntotradethemarket.com/forex-currency-trading-blog/how-to-start-your-price-action-trading-journey

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