Tuesday, November 19, 2019
Lessons Learned Listening As a Critical Skill in an Interview
Lessons Learned Listening As a Critical Skill in an Interview Lessons Learned Listening As a Critical Skill in an Interview Asking the right question - and paying close attention to the answer - can be key to your success.Whether youâre selling a multimillion dollar advertising idea or applying for a job, the strategy is the same - make sure you give your audience what they want. In the pilot episode of AMCâs âThe Pitchâ this week, two advertising agencies - The Ad Store from New York City, and SK+G from Las Vegas - sparred over a major account with Waste Management.After a week of preparation, which started with a briefing about what the company was looking for in the ad campaign, SK+G landed the account because of one principle. Simply put: They had better listening skills.Waste Management executives wanted to rebrand their company from a tradition garbage-hauling and recycling service to an innovative producer of biofuels. Both agencies nailed this aspect of the mission. The second part proved to be more critical - make it a modern and edgy campaign utilizing social media with a strong in teractive component.This is where SK+G hit its pitch out of the park. The Las Vegas company took a catchy âTurning Waste into Wowâ slogan to that next level by soliciting people - real, everyday, garbage-producing people - to submit video sound bites on a smartphone promoting Waste Management initiatives. The clips, presented as close-ups of peopleâs lips, were then displayed against celebritiesâ faces to comically look like the celebrity was speaking.This innovative approach was exactly what the Waste Management executives wanted, and SK+G won the account - despite all their backroom bickering and obvious dysfunction during the final presentation.The Ad Store had a great campaign too. They came off as clever and confident. Ad Store CEO Paul Cappelliâs line, âI have to believe that Iâm better than they are,â exhibits exactly the type of confidence job seekers need to project during a highly competitive job search. But he missed the mark by not giving the client wh at it wanted.Thatâs what interviewing for a job is like, except without all the tension and bickering among your partners. Hiring managers are looking for particular things. As the candidate, itâs up to you to offer that.Sometimes, the desired skill sets are spelled out on a job board. Often, though, itâs up to the candidate to discover key elements by asking the right questions. The critical difference was that only one agency met that need in its pitch.When applying for a job, take a lesson from âThe Pitchâ and make sure your pitch meets the companyâs needs. It could be the deciding factor that seals the deal for your next great job.
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