Games waste everyone’s time.
Every week I see this pattern. Every week people nod, agree, then do exactly what they were doing before. Maybe you’ll be different.
Probably not. But here it is anyway.
The Communication Problem
I ask people what they want. Half can’t tell me. Ask what they’re good at. They recite job descriptions. Ask why they’re leaving. Corporate non-answers.
If you can’t clearly articulate what you want, why you’re qualified, why you’re moving – you’re not ready.
Clear communication isn’t optional. It’s the foundation. Without it, skills don’t matter because nobody knows you have them.
What Actually Works
After thousands of placements, I know what works. It’s not complicated. Just consistently ignored.
First, research like your job depends on it. Because it does. Know the company. Know the role. Know the interviewer. Know the industry. Know competitors. Know challenges.
Second, communicate clearly. Short sentences. Direct answers. Specific examples. No rambling. No corporate speak. No vague platitudes.
Third, follow up. Once is polite. Twice shows interest. Three times is too much. Learn the rhythm.
Fourth, be honest. About experience. About motivations. About what you want. Lies catch up.
Why Nobody Tells You This
Recruiters don’t say this – don’t want to hurt feelings. Hiring managers don’t – no time. Friends don’t – they’re friends.
So here I am.
Your CV probably needs work. Interview skills need polish. Follow-up inadequate. Research superficial. Attitude might be off.
Not definitely. But probably. These are problems in 90% of people not getting results.
Common Objections I Hear
‘But I’m an introvert.’ Introverts can prepare thoroughly, answer concisely, and ask thoughtful questions. Introversion isn’t an excuse.
‘But I’m not good at self-promotion.’ Nobody’s asking you to brag. They’re asking you to clearly explain what you’ve accomplished. Facts aren’t bragging.
‘But the market is terrible right now.’ The market is the same for everyone. Some people still get jobs. Be one of them.
‘But I don’t have enough experience.’ Then get creative about how you frame what you do have. Transferable skills exist.
Objections are comfortable. Results require discomfort. Pick your discomfort.
The Employer Perspective
I work both sides. Here’s what hiring managers tell me when I ask why they passed on candidates:
‘They didn’t seem interested.’ (Translation: they didn’t ask questions.)
‘They couldn’t explain their experience clearly.’ (Translation: rambling answers with no structure.)
‘Something felt off.’ (Translation: body language or energy was wrong.)
‘They didn’t research us.’ (Translation: asked questions that were answered on the website.)
Notice what’s NOT on this list? ‘They weren’t qualified enough.’ Qualifications get you in the door. Everything else determines whether you stay.
Interview skills are skills. They can be learned, practiced, and improved. Stop treating interviews like personality tests. Start treating them like performances you prepare for.
The Bottom Line
You can ignore this. Most do. Prefer believing the problem is external – market, economy, discrimination, bad luck.
Maybe true in your case. Probably not.
People who get results look honestly at themselves, identify what’s not working, fix it. No excuses. Just changes.
Your choice.
Clear communication. Thorough preparation. Honest self-assessment. Consistent follow-up. That’s the formula. Simple to understand. Hard to do.
Start today. Or don’t. Market keeps moving either way.
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