Well, my sister’s modified résumé (see 78% of Job Seekers Skip Staffing Firms) did get her successfully to the next step in the hiring process. Her recruiter called her and said they would like to interview her on the phone (which is what we call a “phone screen”). She sounded so thrilled on the phone when called to tell me. So I asked her if she had a chance to ask the recruiter any follow-up questions that might help her prepare for the phone screen, she said, “Eh, no, was I supposed to?” Frankly, I think the recruiter wasn’t providing her the best service possible, but anyway, here are a few things I suggested to my sister:
1) Call the recruiter and ask:
- Who is doing the phone screen (name, title, role in the hiring process)?
- What are the major concerns with phone screens for candidates in the past?
- The date, start time and scheduled end time of the call (my sister needs to set a time when she can get out of the office and go to a quiet place to take the call, take notes and focus).
2) My sister needs to prepare for the phone screen based on the recruiter’s feedback, just like an in-person job interview:
- Research the company and the interviewer by name on the Internet
- Review the list of key abilities/attributes/experiences and specific examples of how she matches those requirements
- Focus on potential concerns and develop the best answer. Practice giving it with conviction.
- Generate a list of questions for the interview that are job position or company related (current challenges, company culture, who she would report to, etc.)
3) Finally, she needs a closing statement written out and rehearsed that could set the stage positively for the next step altogether.
Though my sister didn’t get a whole lot of support from her recruiter, by having a recruiter, she’s given an intermediary whom she can get her pre-interview questions answered, which is a real advantage for her compared to candidates without the help of a recruiter.