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The Key to Landing A Job - The Interview: Interview Secrets that Employers and Headhunters Don't Want You to Know

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What would it be worth to you to learn three things that would significantly increase your chance of getting hired?

Are you tired of going to job interview after job interview and not landing the job?

Hiring decisions are primarily based on the interview. Yes, you need a good resume, education, and job experience but what happens during the interview determines whether you get the job offer. A good interview can often outweigh a weak resume and experience. Yet most job seekers have very poor interview skills. Even professionals and highly educated candidate perform poorly in interviews. The good news is that you can learn how to excel during interviews.

The Key to Landing a Job - The Interview is your source for all the techniques and strategies you need to ace the interview and get the job you want. Over the last 40 years as an executive working with more than 100 management teams the author has interviewed over 1,000 job seekers. He knows the techniques recruiters and headhunters use to eliminate candidates, and he knows what successful candidates do to get the job.

Do you want to get the best job available? The ones that pay the most money and have the best working conditions? Buy this book, put its techniques to work, and land the job of your dreams.

Download a free chapter from any of the author's books at professormanahan.com.

98 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 2, 2020

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
413 reviews
September 13, 2021
This book was ok to me. I didn't learn much that was new, but it was a good refresher on a few tips. I like the chapter on questions to ask at the end of the interview. I also found it helpful how the author emphasizes that the interview is a conversation; that builds my confidence. However, I'm uncomfortable with the suggestion to turn questions around by questioning the employer instead. Every interviewer I've had has written down my answers, so I don't think someone would appreciate me getting Socratic every time in asked a question. (Interviewer: "How do you get along with people?" Me: "How do people at this company generally get along? It sounds like that's a problem for you.")

I'll hang on to it for a while and incorporate some tips. But if I end up moving and have to reduce my book collection, I will have to say farewell.
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