informational interviewing part i

16
Lisa Mauri Thomas, M.S.

Upload: lthomas01

Post on 16-Apr-2017

537 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Informational Interviewing Part I

Lisa Mauri Thomas, M.S.

Page 2: Informational Interviewing Part I

An interview designed to collect valuable and immediately useable information about a job, career field, industry or company. An informational interview is NOT a job interview.

Rather, it's an interview YOU CONDUCT with an individual working in a career of which

you would like to learn more about.

Source: About.com; http://jobsearch.about.com/od/infointerviews/g/infointerview.htm , retrieved Aug 2, 2010

Page 3: Informational Interviewing Part I

To go beyond generally available, printed information and gain specific, first-hand perspective about:• Nature of the work in a particular environment• Career pathway of an influential professional• Insight, advice, and career navigation tips• Referrals: identify others to speak to further

This is a WEEKLY NETWORKING activity!

Source: About.com; http://jobsearch.about.com/od/infointerviews/g/infointerview.htm , retrieved Aug 2, 2010

Page 4: Informational Interviewing Part I

Find People to Talk To:

Professional Networking Groups Linked In: People Search, Groups Professional Organizations HR Professionals & Hiring Managers Recruiters Authors of Specific Career Path Books

Page 5: Informational Interviewing Part I

Dear Contact,I was referred to you by (first & last name) from XYZ company. She recommended you as an excellent source of information within the healthcare industry. (You might also indicate you found their Linked In profile and was intrigued to learn more about them and their career journey or area of expertise).

My goal is to secure a mid-level Quality Assurance position within a hospital setting. I would appreciate hearing your advice on career opportunities in this area, on determining current and critical industry keywords and qualifications, and on how best to navigate the current healthcare hiring landscape. Thanks so much, in advance, for any insight and advice you would be willing to share. I look forward to contacting you early next week to set up a brief telephone informational interview. Thank you for your consideration.

Source: About.com; http://jobsearch.about.com/od/infointerviews/g/infointerview.htm , retrieved Aug 2, 2010

Page 6: Informational Interviewing Part I

Make your request by:PhoneEmailStandard MailIn PersonThrough an Introduction

Page 7: Informational Interviewing Part I

Conduct the Interview by:PhoneEmailIn Person

Informational interviews can be as short as 5 minutes or as long as 1 hour or more

Page 8: Informational Interviewing Part I

Don’t:

Ask for a job or say you need one soon

Complain about lack of success so far Indicate you’ve encountered age or

gender discrimination Vent negatively about being laid off Discuss your salary requirements

Page 9: Informational Interviewing Part I

Remain positive, curious, and open to new ideas and constructive

criticism.

GOAL:Start and maintain an effective,

professional dialogue that leads to new contacts, mentors, and other people of

influence within the hiring process.

Page 10: Informational Interviewing Part I

Commonly-used job titles and levels across different yet related settings that align with your career goals

Day-to-day duties and projects Status types: FT, PT, contract, freelance Notable challenges Desirable versus required qualifications Employment prospects in this area Names of influential persons in the field

Page 11: Informational Interviewing Part I

Types of technology used Typical chain of command Career pathways, traditional and other Industry and career field growth rate Where best job listings are found, best

recruiters for the industry, etc Best professional organizations to join

and persons of interest with whom to connect and network

Page 12: Informational Interviewing Part I

Ask OPEN versus CLOSED questions

Closed questions require a simple yes or no answer and once answered the dialogue can end abruptly, i.e. “are there”, “do you”, etc.

Open questions keeps the dialogue moving forward and focuses on “who, what, why, where, when and how” items.

Page 13: Informational Interviewing Part I

Gain perspective and insight Strengthen your decision Determine a specific niche-area Choose an alternate path Make professional contacts among

management-level personnel Gain confidence Improve your presentation skills Improve your professional visibility

Page 14: Informational Interviewing Part I

1. Determine a career focus of interest, including job titles, level or rank, and preferred environments

2. Create a 15-20 item “question bank” that hones in on “need-to-know” information – must be OPEN-ENDED Q’s

Page 15: Informational Interviewing Part I

The next segment on Informational Interviewing will involve testing your open-ended question bank with a partner prior to formal use.

We will also discuss specific ways to reach out to the potential strategic allies you’re able to identify.

Page 16: Informational Interviewing Part I