About this lesson
When an interviewer asks a question like this, make a great impression with the right response.
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So tell me about yourself.
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Many people dread that question in a job interview,
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and it's not even a question, it's just a statement.
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Tell me about yourself.
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But hey, you know it's coming, so don't act scared, don't act surprised.
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And don't say, well, as you can see from my resume, I graduated from
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Duke University last year, and I majored in such, they've already got your resume.
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So don't just go over your resume.
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When someone says, tell me about yourself, what they really want to know
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is tell me about your life experiences that are relevant to why you might
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possibly be interested in this job, and why you might be good at this job.
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So the job is actually a good fit for you and a good job for us.
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So it doesn't really matter what the first question is in a job interview.
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It doesn't matter if they say, can you tell me about yourself, or
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why do you want this job, or why is it a good?
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It doesn't matter what the questions are.
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Now, this isn't because I'm trying to teach you to be a phony baloney politician
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who ignores the questions and just goes right into the message points,
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I think you should hire me.
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No, you need to listen to the questions.
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You need to answer the questions.
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But you do need to realize your fundamental job is getting
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this person to think that you are highly qualified,
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that you can do this job, that you want to do this job.
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And that you would be a good fit around here,
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that you would be a welcome addition, an asset to this organization.
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That's your job.
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It's not to read to them from your resume when they already know how to read.
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It's not to simply restate basic qualifications.
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So for example, many, many years ago, I was on a job interview with a member of
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Congress in a communications position, a press secretary position.
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Now, my resume said, communications experience,
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strong passion for communicating.
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But when the member of Congress said, well, tell me about your interest in
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communication, I didn't just go through the bullet points.
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I said, I have a passion for communication, and
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I think I can do it creatively.
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For example, I was working on a political campaign for
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a candidate who wanted to draw attention to the pollution in a particular river.
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So I call all the media,
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I have the candidate stand at the river and hold up dead fish.
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And he said, vote for me, and I'm going to do everything I can, so
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we don't have more dead fish.
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It made every single TV newscast,
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it got in every newspaper in that town, and it really drove home
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the message visually that this candidate cares about the environment.
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Later, when I asked the member of Congress why she hired me,
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she said it's this, it was the fish, is what she said.
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It stuck, it stuck in her memory.
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And you've got to find something that sticks for you, too.
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What you need is a story.
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I don't mean something made up, I don't mean something fictitious,
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I don't mean something creative, but
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you've got to tell people why it is you're in this particular field.
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What drove you there?
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What motivated you?
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The whole point of this is you've got to take this resume and blow life into it.
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People have to see and understand and visualize what it is you've done.
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Now, if you're only 16 and this is your first job interview,
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you perhaps haven't done that much.
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But certainly, you've done something around your home,
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you've done something for your school,
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perhaps with extracurricular activities that demonstrate a particular skill.
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You need a signature story that is just a way for
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you to talk about what it is you've done.
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You need to talk about a particular person, a place,
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what the exchange was, and how you felt.
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I can tell you, I felt very good about getting that job on Capitol Hill for
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a member of Congress.
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There are certain jobs that you may look back on and say,
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that was one of the best jobs ever, or it was one of the worst jobs ever.
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But you need to have a story.
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The resume gets you in the door.
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Resumes don't get anybody jobs,
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it's how you sell yourself in the job interview that does now.
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You hear the word selling and people say, well, I'm not some high pressure salesman,
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I'm an expert in law, or public health, or this.
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I'm not asking you to be a high pressure salesperson.
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But in fact, the best salespeople don't ever use high pressure.
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They simply present information that's interesting,
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that's useful, that's relevant, in a memorable way.
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That's all you're doing when you are selling yourself.
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So when that job interviewer says, can you tell me about yourself?
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You need to hop right into something that demonstrates your passion for
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a particular subject area, and then weave that into how it's relevant to this job.
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What you don't want to do is the full chronology of your life.
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Well, I was born in Pittsburgh, and at age five, I moved to Charlotte,
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North Carolina, and I went to Starmount Element, boring.
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You got to be a better editor.
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That's not a story.
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That's just basic facts on a timeline.
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So what seems like a hard question, tell me about yourself,
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is actually the easiest question in the world.
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It's a softball.
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It's a way for you to sell yourself, to convince this person that you have
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the right background, that you have the right interest, that you have
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the right skills, the right experiences, and the interest for this job.
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So it's not the hardest question in the world,
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it's actually the easiest question if you have your story straight.
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Now, a lot of people get confused about story, and they think it has to be so
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dramatic, and you save the world, or you went to war.
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No, all it has to be is you telling about something that happened to you,
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perhaps a problem, how you solved it,
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how it used some of the skills that are relevant to this job.
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And how it led you to this spot in your life where you're applying for
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this job now.
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Do that and you'll make your resume come alive, and
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you will make it easier for the person interviewing you to remember you,
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because here's the big problem most people face in job interviews.
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It's not that they say the wrong thing, and the person is sitting there and
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scratching you off, well, they're gone now.
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That's not the danger most people have.
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It's also not a situation where you're asked the so-called tough question,
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and you're like, oop, you failed to answer that, off you go.
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That's not what gets most people scratched off in job interviews.
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The big problem most people have is their resume is fine,
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it's like everyone else's who made the cut.
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They may be perfectly articulate, they may be dressed well.
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But when that interviewer interviews five more people today, and
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three more people tomorrow, and two people on Tuesday, and now it's a week later,
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and they're thinking, hmm, who did I like best?
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Who were the top three candidates?
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They just don't remember you, because nothing stood out.
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That's the real danger most people face when they're in a job interview.
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So you've gotta figure out how can you make yourself stand out?
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How can you make your resume come alive so
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that people associate you with the skills you claim you have?
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Because everybody's resumes claim they have great skills.
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That's your challenge.
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How can you stand out?
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Having a good story, having a good answer to this question,
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can you tell me about yourself, is absolutely essential.
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