I have an upcoming interview and wanted to get some opinions and thoughts on this. When you are doing the individual interview and you meet the interviewer(s) and start the interviewing process. Should you begin with a thank you for their consideration for inviting you for an interview? And when the interview ends, how should you say thank you for their time? I just want to show how appreciative of them to consider me.
Tips? pointers? thoughts?
Thanks!
First and most importantly
Do not wing anything No matter what you think of yourself, unless your name is Obama, or some other equally skilled orator, you are NOT good at winging it, trust me.
Lack of preparedness shows through like a giant spaghetti stain on your shirt screaming "Well I put on my nice shirt for you, but I didn't bother cleaning it"
Introduction:
Firm handshake, eye contact, and a strong "Good morning/afternoon" and a "Thank you for the oppurtunity"
--I would avoid going through credentials and whatnot in the intro, save this for the interview and closing - its largely pointless as you've probably already covered it in your application and will again cover it when answer questions--
Closing:
Them: "Is there anything else you'd like to add"
--This is your opportunity to summarize why you are the student they are looking for. Use points made during the interview, your credentials, and things you know about the school to tie everything together--
fake example: "In closing I would like to touch on what you said earlier about "A student is only as good as the teacher". I agree whole-heartedly and additionally feel that at these early stages of the education of our future pharmacists, more than just strong teachers are needed, we need strong student leaders. Based on my experience as a student body president/shift manager at dairy-queen/red cross volunteering/etc, etc, etc, I feel that I can make an impact to this school not just statistically, by achieving in the classroom, but qualitatively through the contributions I hope to make to the student body by volunteering time and experience where needed. While I make no assumptions in terms of the level of leadership, I hope that through hardwork and a dedication to the school and students, I can make an impact. Thank you again for meeting with me today."
And finally:
Yes, you need to fully prepare and memorize your closing statements. It's called an elevator speech, this is your oppurtunity to sum yourself up in 10-20 seconds, so don't get caught stumbling. When it comes time to actually deliver your closing, it's up to you to take queues and parts of the interview and work them in to make it smooth.
I've been a hiring manager for years, and have gone through hundreds of interviews both as an interviewee and interviewer.
Preparedness is the key - find every possible pharmacy interview question out there and create and memorize an answer to it. You should spend a minimum of 3-4 hours preparing for your interviews. Know who the staff are, recent accomplishments at the school, news etc.