Before any interview, be it phone, in person or just networking, you want to prepare. You want to be very comfortable with the information on your resume, your list of accomplishments and your past work experience. This will help you navigate the questions in the meeting / interview more easily.
Prep for a networking meeting.
It is helpful to prep before a networking meeting or a one on one networking meeting. You want to be able to discuss your job goals and your strengths with ease and confidence. To prep for networking or one on one:
~ Take out your resume and your list of talking points
~ To help commit it to memory for ease in recalling key facts, write down on a blank piece of paper your top strengths and skills
~ Then write out by hand your goals and objectives with your job search
The exercise of writing these out by hand helps you commit them to memory so that you can recall them easily in conversation and also with confidence.
Prep for the interview.
When you are prepping for your interview, you have several goals.
~ You want to have confidence in answering any questions they may cover with you
~ You want to make sure you don’t leave out any key information you want them to know about you
~ You want to present in a professional light
To prep for the interview, you want to use the same steps as in preparing for a networking meeting, but tweak them just a bit. To prepare for your interview:
~ Print out the job description for the position you are interviewing
~ Highlight the skills and experience they are looking for in this job
~ Now take your resume and a blank sheet of paper
~ Write out by hand in one column what they are looking for
~ Then in another column next to that write out how you match that skill or experience
Now you want to write out highlights of your past jobs because they will ask you specifically about these:
~ Write out the job you held and title, and write a few accomplishments for each position
After you have matched their description to your skills and highlighted past work experience, write out a list at the bottom of that sheet of paper of the additional skills and strengths you bring to the job. For example, strong organizational skills, passion for your work, a team player, software and other program skills, etc. Make sure to include things you want to get through to them in the interview about you and your experience!
Then at the very end, write out general strengths and one or two weaknesses or areas of “growth”. So often they will ask about a “weakness” so you want to list a weakness that can be a strength – for example “I love work so much sometimes I work too hard.”
Review and repeat.
Many people will then take their sheets and the data they have written and rewrite it one or two more times. Just to make sure they have committed to memory all they want to cover in the interview.
Writing it out by hand.
It may seem a little tedious to write it out by hand but the practice and the exercise of actually writing it out by hand helps you commit it to memory.