Tuesday 6 March 2012

Prepare Your Self To Be A Leader

 
The GROW Model
A well coordinated, efficient and effective team is any leader’s dream. A leader can play a role of a coach and create the dream team rather effortlessly.

As "Maruti Placement Services", you will guide your team members to solve problems conservatively, make better decisions, learn new skills, grow both in professional and personal domain.Very few leaders in India are fortunate enough to get formal training as coaches, most of them do not. A lot depends on personal beliefs and casual tea table conversations.

Sunday 29 January 2012

Tips to Improve Interview Skills


1. To be successful in any interview focus on one industry at a time so that you can become knowledgeable in your specialist area before the interview. To be successfull in any job interview read and subscribe to relevant blogs, trade journals magazines, and newspapers.

2. To be successful in job interviews use web feed subscription tools such as Google reader to keep up-to-date on industry news.

3. Before attending any interview knows what impression you want to make. you need to know what added value you can offer to the company if they hire you.

4. Know your competences and transferable skills this will dramatically improve your CV. Competences are the specific skills which are needed to perform the job and are usually outlined in the job application pack or advertisement. Transferable skills are your unique skills which you’ve developed through other jobs and personal interests and can differentiate you from the competition.

5. Be careful with your social media profile. Before attending any interview checks that your social media profile is consistent with your CV profile as many employers now check out applicants online to know more information about you. For example, Orkut, Facebook, Twitter and Linked-in Social networks can also be used effectively to network for work opportunities.

5. Work as a volunteer, you can use the experience to broaden your skills and demonstrate self-motivation.

6. Join a local business or social network. They offer a great opportunity to practise social skills with strangers such as starting up a conversation, smiling, actively listening to others, asking questions and promoting yourself. These are key interpersonal skills which will improve your confidence in a job interview.

7. Be clear about your career goals and take a step by step approach to achieve your dream job. Learn your personal career barriers and how to overcome them.

8. Improve your self confidence when searching for a job. also improve your communication skills as Communication skills are an essential competence for most jobs so be prepared to interview ten of the most common communication questions before you go to the interview

9. Don’t bluff on your CV; Keep your CV relevant and consistent with what they’ll discover in an interview. Focus on your competences that match the competences outlined in the job application form. Include transferable skills on your CV as these strengths can give you a competitive edge. Tailor your CV for each job application and use the best format for the job depending on your experience.

10. Prepare answers to interview questions. Draw up a list of interview questions which challenge every claim you’ve made on your CV. If it says on your CV that you managed a College function. Ask yourself, How did you manage the function? What did i learn from that event? Acknowledge a genuine weakness or failure if any in a project.

11. Be well prepared for questions asked such as ‘Why do you want to work for us?’ and ‘What will you be doing in 3 years time?

12. Be prepared to ask questions to the interviewer otherwise it looks like you’re not interested in the job. For example ask, ‘How will my performance be measured?’, How will you know if I’m doing well?’, ‘Are there any aspects of my application where you need further evidence? .

13. Know how to dress for an interview. Spend some time on personal grooming on the day of the interview. This will help you feel more confident and relaxed.

14. Practise your answers to the questions and Video yourself in a mock interview. This will help you to check your body language. Maintain good Eye contact with the interviewer.

15. Double check all interview arrangements a day before the interview.

16. On the interview day relax and be cool,  Smile and go in to the interview looking to build up a rapport. Generally it’s not your qualifications or experience that will get you the job but what the interviewer thinks of you as a person. Even if you don’t get this job, if they like and trust you, they may call you back for another role in Future.

17. Follow up the interview with a short letter saying that you’re enthusiastic about being offered this job and determined to demonstrate the contribution you can make to their company. Reinforcing your commitment could help you get your dream job.

9 Tips for Successful Career Planning


Before we start Career Planning with anything, there are pretty a few points related to career planning that we need to look into. Consider these few easy points to help you choose what your plan of action should be towards shaping your future successfully.

9 Tips for Successful Career Planning
Career planning should be a rewarding and positive experience. Here, then, are 9 tips to help you achieve successful career planning.

1. Decide your Values:
Simply put what’s important to you? Do you value freedom? Do you like independence? Or working as a member of a team? Do you like structure? Or lack of structure? Working a lot of hours? Or working flexible hours? Do you want a job with a considerable pay check? Or a job that provides significance to your life? These are all crucial questions that you must be able to answer because they will impact both your short and long-term happiness. Often people are able to answer these questions with greater conviction once they’ve experienced a sampling of various work environments and situations.

2. Know Your Strengths:
Before you consider whether you have an aptitude for a profession, ask yourself it is something you could enjoy doing for a long time. Determine what a job would have to be like to keep you satisfied and then look for jobs that can give you most of what you need. By choosing a career that you enjoy, you won’t feel like you are “working” as much.

3. Research, Research, Research!
Too often people choose the wrong careers because they don’t know the myriad of vocations that exist within their field of study. This often results in misemployment and disenchantment. Time spent properly researching the profession that you intend to undertake, and the field you wish to enter, is vital. Part of this study should include conducting informational interviews with people who do what you would like to do for a living, visiting websites that contain blogs that are written by people in your elected field, and reading employment magazines that contain stories about the movers and shakers in your industry.

4. Finding the Right Atmosphere:
When choosing a career, think the sort of atmosphere that you feel most joyful in. Are you the kind of person who works better with people or with objects? Do you prefer motion and activity, or calm and quiet?

You’re more likely to do well in your career when you are in a comfortable environment.

5. Make Your Plan:
The most important advantage of having a plan is that it gives you a sense of direction in helping you reach your goals. In real life career planning, we choose the paths that we believe will take us to our destinations, but we have to be open to embarking upon new paths which may come out in the course of our journey. Just as having a plan is important, so is the importance of career planning to be flexible? It will keep you open to a realm of possibilities and help you arrive at your rightful destination.

6. Expose on Your Likes and Dislikes Needs and Wants:
Change is a factor of life; everybody changes, as do our likes and dislikes. Something we loved doing two years ago may now give us irritation. So always take time to reflect on the things in your life – not just in your career – that you feel most strongly about.

Make a two-column list of your most important likes and dislikes. Then use this list to examine your current job and career path. If your job and career still fall mostly in the like column, then you know you are still on the right path; however, if your job activities fall mostly in the dislike column, now is the time to begin examining new jobs and new careers.

Finally, take the time to really think about what it is you want or need from your work, from your career. Are you looking to make a difference in the globe? To be legendary? To become financially independent? To effect change? Take the time to understand the motives that drive your sense of success and happiness.

7. Set Career and Job Goals:
Build up a roadmap for your job and career achievement. Can you be successful in your career without setting goals? Of course. Can you be even more successful through goal-setting? Most research says yes.

A main component of career planning is setting short-term (in the coming year) and long-term (beyond a year) career and job goals. Once you begin this process, another component of career planning becomes reviewing and adjusting those goals as your career plans improvement or change – and developing new goals once you complete your earlier goals.

8. Get Some Experience:
Simply put: there is no alternate for experience. You need to get as much of it as rapidly as you can. Interning is a win-win plan for you and a prospective employer because they get free labour, and you get valuable experience. Without this experience, you remain idealistic if not unrealistic about the true-to-life rigors of the profession, and of the industry you want to work in. Gaining experience will help to prove your interests and pursuits, or help to re-direct them. Interning is by far the smartest thing to do in a tight job market while you seek full-time employment.

9. Career Planning Research Sources:
To find out more about different careers, use the following research tools:

·        Government employment agencies such as the Department of Labour or local employment office.
·        Department of Labour publications on employment options and career outlooks, such as Occupational Outlook Handbook and the Dictionary of Occupational Titles. These can be found at your local library.
·        The Internet. Look at employment/job sites, employment forums, and sites run by temporary agencies and head-hunters.

These simple steps can help you get the maximum understanding with respect to how to start career planning ahead of time as to what can be a good career option for you and how you can go about it in the best possible way.

Best of luck in all of your career endeavours!