It might surprise you to know that asking questions of your own during your health care sales job interview is just as important as answering Them. Candidates spend a lot of time on interview preparation, and they should. Doing your research on the company, bringing your 30/60/90-day plan, and preparing compelling answers to interview queries (as well as having some stories to back ‘em up) are guaranteed ways to have a good interview. But one thing that will make you stand out from other candidates is asking queries.
Asking questions tells you what you got to know.
After all, you’re interviewing the company, too. Is it going to be a good fit for you? Is it going to be somewhere you’ll be able to grow and advance your career? To find out these answers, you’ll ask questions about the company, the mission, the typical work day, journey schedules, and so on—just don’t ask about the salary or the vacation!
Asking questions gives you better answers to interview queries.
Do you want to know what the hiring manager wants to hear? Ask him. Say something like, “What are you looking for in a candidate?” or “Tell me about your most successful employee.” Or ask, “What tasks will define success for this position?” You can even ask, “What would sink an employee in this career opportunity?” Any of these questions will define for you what the hiring manager is looking for so that you can show him how you will deliver these qualities and skills he needs when you answer his queries.
Asking questions uncovers doubts the hiring manager might have about you.
When you ask questions like “Do you see any reason you wouldn’t move me forward in this process?” or “Is there any reason you wouldn’t hire me?” the manager will tell you what he sees as your weak spots. It might be a real one that you can provide a plan for correcting, or it might just be a misconception on his part because you didn’t give him the answer he was looking for in a previous question. Once you’ve uncovered those issues, you can correct them and possibly save the interview.
Asking questions turns the interview into a conversation.
Conducting a conversation, rather than participating in a ping-pong-style Q&A session, helps to establish rapport. It becomes a give-and-take between professionals. It makes you seem confident, and capable of thinking strategically. And, it makes you seem more enthusiastic and interested in the job.
You can’t go wrong by asking questions. Here’s a link to mind blowing queries for a clinical revenue interview.
If you’re not comfortable with this, discover an interview coach to role-play the interview with you. It’s worth it if it increases your confidence and gives you a smoother, more successful interview.
Article courtesy of Peggy McKee - Owner / Senior Headhunter at the nationally
recognized clinical and pharmaceutical revenue recruiting team of PHC Consulting.
© Copyright 2008 PHC Consulting | All rights reserved
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If you are a sales professional or want to become one, or if you are looking for a new sales job, you will face one of the toughest interview processes of any job seeker.
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