Greetings,
"Vocation is where your deep
gladness and the world's deep hunger meet." ~
Frederick Buechner
Capability Company
has teamed up with
NonprofitOyster.com,
a nonprofit job board, to help you match your deep
gladness with the world's deep hunger. We now offer a no
cost career profile center where you can tell us more
about you, what sorts of positions you are interested in,
where you want to work and how you want to further your
career. We want to be able to contact you about the
opportunities that are a real fit for you and your talents
-- your deep gladness. Let us help.
If
you take the time to fill out your online profile, we'll
enter you into a drawing for a $100 gift to the
organization of your choice or for a $100 gift certificate
for career coaching.
Even if you aren't actively looking,
this nonprofit professional's ezine is designed to keep
you up-to-date on the latest trends in nonprofit
employment. We hope you find it useful.
All the best,
Rebecca Worters
The Interview's Over:
Now What?
by
Laura Gassner Otting,
President, Nonprofit Professionals Advisory Group. This
article is reprinted with the permission of
http://www.execsearches.com,
for whom it was originally written.
With
an ounce of relief and a pound of pride, you step from
your interviewer's office exhilarated that you have made
it through yet another step of the job search process.
But, any good candidate knows that the job interview
doesn't end with, "thanks, we'll be in touch." So, what
do you do now?
I Woulda', Coulda', Shoulda'....
As you
exit the interview, and undoubtedly throughout the ride
home, you will begin to find yourself hounded by pesky
thoughts of things you forgot to say. Resist the urge to
pick up the phone and call your interviewer; until a
decision has been made, everything you say can and will be
held against you. You may come up with other things you
wish to say, and calling each time will only make you look
scatterbrained.
Instead, carefully debrief the interview. Think through
the questions that were asked and the questions that were
not asked. Review the list of points you expected to
make, and weigh them against the things that actually came
out of your mouth. Judge your performance and think
through what you could improve upon next time. Every
performance can be improved and until you accept a
position, you should always assume there will be another.
Emily Post Would Be Proud
Regrettably, the art of the personalized thank you note is
a lost one. In the age of electronic communication, it's
rare for me to get thank you notes from candidates I have
interviewed; and when I do, it seems that most are quick
notes jotted hastily and with typos on e-mail, sent off
without much effort or thought at all. I'd like to think
that your interest in the job at hand, not to mention your
respect for my time, warrants more than that.
A
personalized thank you note is not just polite, it's an
opportunity for you to give one last sales pitch, and a
chance to fill me in on those things you realized you
forget to tell me in the interview. Why so many
candidates forswear this golden opportunity, I'll never
know. A good thank you note doesn't gush; it expresses
both appreciation for my time as well as a forgotten (or
repeated) clarification of the candidate's skills and
experiences as they relate to the hiring manager's
organization's needs and challenges. A thank you note
gets my attention; a good one gets placed in the resume
book and is ultimately read, and duly noted, by the search
committee.
Door Number 1 or Door Number 2
Any
conversation with a headhunter or hiring manager after an
interview may contain an offer. Many will include
reconnaissance questions necessary so that when an offer
does come it will be one that is accepted. Like a
proposal of marriage, a job offer is a question not asked
without full knowledge of the response.
Keep a
list handy of any remaining questions you have about the
position or the organization; you would need to satisfy
any concerns before accepting a job anyway, so asking them
during follow up calls gives you more control over the
conversation. Don't feel pressured into answering
questions as they are asked from the headhunter; in fact,
putting them off with an excuse of a meeting currently in
progress in your office will give you time to catch your
breath and call back when you are cool, calm and
collected.
Every Investigation Needs an Autopsy
So,
you didn't get the job. You have two choices: throw
yourself a grand pity party or get working on improving
your interview performance. The best way to improve your
performance - after you've done your own thinking - is to
seek our feedback from the headhunter or hiring manager
who interviewed you or who worked with the search
committee. This person has not only seen your
performance, but witnessed the other candidates' as well.
S/He is the ideal person to help you reflect.
Keep in mind that we live in a
litigious society and many headhunters and hiring managers
are counseled to be as brief and evasive as possible.
They may just find a career experience that the successful
job candidate had that you didn't, i.e., ‘we wanted
someone who has managed 12 people instead of just 10.' If
you sense a blow off coming, get the hint and don't push.
You don't want to burn any bridges.
After you leave the
interview, it is essential to debrief about your
performance. See sidebar for questions to ask yourself.