As a professional resume writer, I have
seen hundreds of interview books on the market and while many of them are good solid reads, I know that most jobseekers want clear, concise, contemporary, and real advice before exploring the history of interviews down the ages!
Not exact matches
The memory may have faded, but movie studios can still feel the sharp barb left behind by 2014's release
of «The
Interview,» the James Franco and Seth Rogen - starring slapstick comedy that
saw the duo assassinate Kim Jong - un;
hundreds of Sony's e-mails were leaked by hackers in the aftermath, causing their own controversies, while even the brief threat
of all - out war seemed to hang strangely in the air.
I've
seen thousands
of resumes, taken even more phone calls, and conducted
hundreds of interviews, and I have been accountable for hiring 1000 - plus new scientists for several major companies.
But you can look through literally
hundreds of pages
of broadcast - news
interview transcripts and not
see a single case where an interviewer says «Uh-huh» or some such thing in response to anything an interviewee has said.
The classic example
of the canned
interview response — I've heard this
hundreds of times — is when the interviewer asks the applicant to describe their greatest weakness, and he or she replies with a version
of this old
saw:
We have over a
hundred podcasts
of interviews with healing professionals and survivors, all
of who talk about how to heal and — and the results that they're
seeing.
The primary
interview for this documentary is Steve's wife Barbra Minty McQueen who, as a New York model and amateur photographer, took
hundreds of never - before -
seen candid photographs.
Told thru fresh, candid
interviews with its key staff, and illustrated with
hundreds of outrageous images from the mag itself (along with never -
seen interview footage from the magazine's prime), the film gives fans
of the Lampoon a unique inside look at what made the magazine tick, who were its key players, and why it was so outrageously successful: a magazine that dared to think what no one was thinking, but wished they had.
I've workedin a publishing house and
seen the huge amount
of promotional work that goes into it, like sending out a
hundred books to different media outlets for reviews and a hopeful author
interview, and that's extremely difficult for self - published authors to do — many places will totally ignore a press release for a book that has the author name and no publisher (i.e. self - published).
It got me thinking about how we — players, critics, journalists — really struggle to appreciate that these games are created not just by the one or two people we
see in a dozen pre-release
interviews and profiles, but by dozens if not
hundreds of people, each with some small say in what the final creative work will look like.
Among the
hundreds of songs sung by Odetta, who died late last year (
see the captivating video
interview with Odetta in our «Last Word» series), there's one based on a poem by Ms. Roberts.
After
interviewing and speaking with
hundreds of people grappling with this issue over the past few years, these are the concrete first steps I've
seen work for others that will build your confidence and get you started on the path to building and living in a tiny house
of your own.
We have
seen hundreds of students who looked excellent on paper getting bungled up in the
interview due to poor preparation, and as a result, miss out on that esteemed college admission.
I would, however, take a fresh look at your resume and cover letters to
see if those are the issue — because when someone isn't getting
interviews after
hundreds or thousands
of applications, it's usually those two things that are to blame.
Recruiters have tens if not
hundreds of resumes to review before selecting the individuals that they feel merit an
interview, this means that they will not be spending long searching through your resume to
see if you match their needs.