We’ve established that confidence is the magic word when it comes to interviewing skills and career advancement.
But what is confidence? Self-confidence is extremely important in
almost every aspect of our lives, but in a professional work context it
is the belief that you can do the job and succeed. As with any trait,
you need to develop and master a healthy balance; too little confidence
will prevent you from taking risks and seizing opportunities. Too much
confidence will make you come off as arrogant.
Confident people inspire confidence in their bosses, their
co-workers, and their customers. Gaining the confidence of others is a
pre-requisite to career advancement and success.
The good news is that self-confidence can be developed. It can be built in two key ways at work:
1. Mastering job competencies and achieving goals in job
functional areas. When we work hard in a particular area and acquire and
master job skills, we'll succeed. We can then build upon the initial
success to accelerate learning, growth, and future success.
2. Believing that we can cope with any workplace changes and
challenges; any unexpected curve balls. It is a belief that we can
compete successfully to keep our jobs and get progressively better jobs.
Building confidence in 3 steps:
Step 1: Foundation
Define who you are, your strengths, your passion/values, and what you’ve achieved (experience, skills, and accomplishments.)
Step 2: Destination
Articulate what is really important to you and set yourself targets/ goals.
Set small goals and achieve them.
Step 3: Commitment
Get in the habit of setting goals, achieving them, and celebrating that success.
Recognize and celebrate your successes!
Commit to changing your thoughts and taking purposeful actions.
Positive thinking followed by positive actions will result in positive
outcomes. Success is the best way to build confidence. The more you
achieve, the more confident you’ll become.
Interview Question (Confidence): Describe an unexpected situation you encountered in the past. How did you face it?
Tip: Your level of self-confidence can show in many ways: your behavior, your body language, what you say, and how you speak.
I invite you to record and share your answer with me via Google
Drive, Dropbox, or your favorite collaboration platform. I will respond
to everyone within 3 business days but can commit to providing detailed
feedback only to the first 5 who contact me.
More about interviewing skills in my next blog posts. Be sure to
follow the savvy professional series for job search and interviewing
tips and offers for free feedback and critique.
Email me at info@choicefulpath.com.
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