Four tips to articulate your career goals effectively in an interview
Here are four important tips to help you articulate your career goals clearly and effectively in an interview.
The new age college students are savvy and ambitious. They want their academic years to be fruitful in their quest for their chosen careers and plan to land a placement by their graduation day, not just a degree. Most of them are ardently pursuing an extracurricular interest and looking to build their profiles beyond their academics.
And almost every job description these days calls for relevant exposure or demonstrated passion and interest for the career stream, even in starting out roles. With the interview process becoming more detail oriented, recruiters now spend a lot of time analysing the candidates overall profile, reducing the focus on academics in the entire hiring process. They may want fast thinkers, or quick learners, or detailed oriented folks.
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They might be looking for analytical skills or creative thinking neither of which is clear from one’s grades. In short, now, good grades aren’t enough to crack that coveted career. The information era clearly calls for “enabled employability” via adding to the repertoire of skills fresh college graduates are likely to have.
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Even for colleges, in a highly competitive career landscape, placement and employment metrics are what can help them attract the right students to their campuses. There is a set path that students need to follow to excel in academics.
There is the skill development, concept based learning, course curriculum, employability training pogrammes and information from your peers and seniors. However, time and again, students have realised that the gap from academic success to employability is hard to bridge. The four key requirements are as follows:
Individuals need to understand the relevance of both quality and quantity experience. If scanned through the recent updates, not only degrees with higher grades but also skill based learning has been laid an equal importance. This has given a huge amount of scope to e-leaning that enhances skills and practical knowledge rather than theoretical and bookish languages.
At a first level, one needs to have a familiarity with the chosen career — what are the nuanced differences between various roles? What are the career paths? What is the lifestyle and worklife balance like?
At a second level, a student needs to have an informed, equipped and unbiased decision to ace their chosen careers. The engagement can be as brief as sharing a podcast with relevant insights, or as intense as multiple hours of workshops on skills training, depending on the candidate’s need.
(The writer is founder, Perspectico)
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