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Boost Your Interview IQ

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How to become an interview genius and land the job of your dreams

If a job interview is an oral exam in which job seeker must give the right answers to a set of questions in order to get hired, then this is the ultimate guide to acing the exam. Written by The Interview Coach at Monster.com, Boost Your Interview IQ offers an enjoyable, interactive way to prepare for and succeed at any job interview.

Combining the features of a step-by-step guide and a skill-building workbook,

Shows job seekers how to craft job-winning answers to the 50 key questions interviewers askFeatures an Interview IQ Test, interview skill-building exercises, and other interview aptitude boosting toolsTeaches candidates how to shape their experiences into stories that showcase their skills, knowledge, and personalitiesOffers proven techniques for acing the behavioral interview--the popular new wave interviewing strategy

251 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 17, 2003

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126 people want to read

About the author

Carole Martin

20 books

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Paula.
157 reviews5 followers
November 18, 2022
I read prior to this, Carole Martin's book "What to Say in Every Job Interview: How to Understand What Managers Are Really Asking and Give the Answers That Land the Job." It was published in 2013 and I think that book was better than this one.

This book was ok. It's mainly a quiz time book where you select which answer you think is best. She gives 3 responses for each common interview question and the are labeled as Weakest Answer, Mediocre Answer, or Strongest Answer. Obviously with this quiz, you want to be able to select the Strongest Answer option.

Part 2 is where Martin goes into some of her principles for having a successful interview. As I said before, her "What to Say in Every Job Interview" book outlines the principles better. I think this book is nice to do as a way to test your ability to spot good answers.

The remaining sections of the book covers questions for Management & Executives, Career Changers & Reentry, and New Grads/Students.
Profile Image for Paulina Durán.
10 reviews4 followers
January 8, 2020
This is a nice book for interview preps. It basically contains questions that you might get at interviews and, with each question, you get 3 possible answers to choose from. On the back of each page, it explains why each answer is good or bad so you understand what are the weak points you might want to watch out for.
After reading it, this is what I learned: tell (short) stories where you state the situation-the actions-the results, be specific, mention endorsements, balance the 'I's and the 'We's, sound positive and do research of the companies current situation and where it's headed to.
1 review
June 7, 2007
This is definitely not your average book on job interviews. The book basically consists of many interview questions, each with three responses. The reader identifies which kind of response they would most likely give, and on the following page the author analyzes all three responses and rates them as strong, mediocre or weak in one paragraph each.

I found that if I answered the questions in my own words, I could compare them to the authors responses and see how well I responded. I've lent this book out numerous times, and many of the people who read my copy purchased a copy for themselves. It's really an invaluable reference tool.
32 reviews1 follower
November 13, 2014
Great book for rehearsing interview answer structures, but the examples can sometimes seem too impersonal. Must remember to add "yourself" into answering these questions, but the book definitely makes you more comfortable with various types and styles of interview questions, as well as leaves you thinking about ways you can answer them and situations in your professional and academic past that work for these questions. Gets you brainstorming.
Profile Image for Heather.
1,959 reviews24 followers
November 2, 2012
I really liked the style of this one. It took common interview questions, then listed three answers. On the next page the answers were rated and then listed explanations as to why the answers were good or bad (or good, better, best). I prepared (tried to) myself by trying to come up with my own 'best' answers so many of these questions.
Profile Image for Brian Black.
73 reviews1 follower
February 26, 2010
You can read 10 pages and get the jist of the book. This book is all about being prepared to answer Behavioral-based questions in an interview. Once you learn about it the book becomes very repetitive.
30 reviews
November 30, 2012
This was a particularly useful book to read for me. I didn't realize how poor some of answers were at interviews. The author reused some questions in the later chapters.
152 reviews
March 29, 2018
The book helps train you to learn the pattern of good interview answers and helps prepare you by developing your stories.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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