Proving Your Staying Power - Deepstash
Cracking the Interview

Learn more about personaldevelopment with this collection

How to showcase your skills and experience

How to answer common interview questions

How to make a good first impression

Cracking the Interview

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Proving Your Staying Power

There is currently a high job turnover rate. Employers are trying to see which candidates are likely to stick around.

Try to demonstrate that you see yourself staying within the company, learning, and adding value.

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3.87K reads

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Where you see yourself in 5 years

Where you see yourself in 5 years

A regular job-interviewing question is where you see yourself in 5 years.

The purpose of this question is to see if you would like to stay at the company for many years. Bringing on new employees is both time-consuming and costly. The company does not want to go to all the effort and cost ...

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5.07K reads

Being Realistic

You may be very ambitious to climb as high and as far up the company as soon as possible. If you shoot too high, you may alarm your interviewers and come off as over-eager or unrealistic.

Realize that advancing one or two positions above the one you're interviewing for is the most likely....

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3.02K reads

Don't Fight this Question

The question forces you to look at your future. Lean into the question instead of away from it.

Don't say, "I can't possibly know..." If you really haven't given much thought to your long-term career path, answer in a broad, nonspecific way while still showing a positive attitude.

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3.64K reads

What Career Path the Company Offers

You should answer the question honestly, but your answer should also reflect the research you put into the company.

Find out what training programs are offered through the firm while holding down your full-time job. Mention your goal to grow your skills, and you'll impress your interviewer...

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3.96K reads

Too Much Focus on the Future

The "Where do you see yourself in 5 years" question is about the interviewer wanting to see if you can draw a straight line from the future back to the present. A two-part answer works well.

  • " I want this particular job..." reinforces your desire for the position.
  • In part tw...

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4.86K reads

CURATED FROM

IDEAS CURATED BY

adalinew

Good communicator and coffee specialist. I also have a passion for music.

Related collections

Other curated ideas on this topic:

Staying at a job for at least a year or two

  • This conventional wisdom is not always realistic. You may need to relocate because of your spouse's job, for example.
  • Staying for only a short term no longer hurt a resume. 32% of employers expect job-jumping. Millennials are especially pr...

Let Your Passion For the Position Shine Through

Let Your Passion For the Position Shine Through

  1. Know What You Really Want: Most interviewers can see if your only goal is hierarchical or financial. Know why this job matters to you and be able to articulate your reasoning well.
  2. Have a Plan: If you are qualified for and interested in different positions, be able to e...

How to Amp Up Your Earning Potential

How to Amp Up Your Earning Potential

  • When negotiating a salary, get the company to name figures first, otherwise you can’t know if you’re lowballing or highballing. 
  • Try to negotiate more than just your salary. Work hours, official title, parental leave, vacation time, and which projects you’ll work on cou...

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