
"If you demonstrate great enthusiasm toward your past and current job, recruiters will be more willing to hire you for a new job you can really get enthusiastic about."
Most job
search candidates are either unaware of, or undervalue their strengths. Most
play down the potential strengths that come with experience in fast food,
retail or jobs that demand physical labor.
You were exposed to a lot more than you think.
Imagine two
candidates walk in to an interview with identical experience. Each worked 2 years at McDonalds.
The first
candidate is asked about the experience and responds, “I just flipped burgers, that was pretty much it”.
Then the
second candidate walks in with identical experience but responds:
“My first
job was at McDonalds. It was the
greatest experience of my life. I still
have friends that I made while working there.
I’m no-where near the person I was when I started there. I’m grateful for everything they taught me.
I learned
how to work with the public.
I learned
how to be responsible.
I learned
how to show up on time.
I learned
to work under adverse conditions.
I learned
how to handle irate customers.
I learned
to be good at solving problems and putting out fires.
I learned
how to be good at making people feel
comfortable.
I learned
how to work as a team member.
I learned
how to be accountable.
I learned
about the importance of repeatable systems.
I learned
about efficiency.
I learned
about the value of organization,
planning and set up.
I learned
to display ordinary items and make them
look extraordinary.
I learned
to do payment processing.
I learned
to upsell…do you want fries with
that?
I learned
that any job can be turned into an art
form.
The training was amazing…I learned a few of
the secrets that made Ray Kroc a billionaire…and if you hire me…I’ll share them
with you.
It was great…
It was wonderful…
I would do it all over again…
The second
candidate painted a picture of what they experienced and how they grew.
Same
experience… who gets the job?
You can learn to understand your
strengths and give quality responses!
No comments:
Post a Comment