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8 CEO interview tips for C-Suite executive jobs - YouTube
Channel: Don Georgevich
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Hey, everybody.
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Don Georgevich here with Job Interview Tools.
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Today, I want to talk to you about how you
can ace an interview with a CEO.
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So, if you have a job interview coming up
and as with the CEO of a company or a director
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or vice president, you want to ace it?
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Go ahead, hit the “Like” button on this
video and dive right in.
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I'll show you how.
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So, CEOs are going to interview from a different
perspective than a regular hiring manager
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or someone in HR.
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They are going to hit you from a side that
you just have not been hit from before.
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They're not going to ask you all the common
questions, like “Tell me about yourself
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and what are your accomplishments?
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What are your weaknesses?”
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Now, we're going to dig a little bit deeper.
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And here's what you need to be like in the
interview.
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So, first thing, you need to be passionate
and enthusiastic about the job and the company.
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And that needs to just resonate; that energy
from inside you just need to resonate in the
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interview, so they can just see it and feel
it.
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And it can't just be in your voice.
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It has to be in your body language and your
posture and everything else.
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You need to be passionate and enthusiastic
about the job and everything about that company
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and the value that you can bring to them.
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Most important, you want to show them that
you are aligned with their company vision,
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that you understand them and that you can
make a difference.
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Number two, talk about related accomplishment.
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Don't just talk about your job description
duties.
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You want to talk about things that you have
done in your last job that are related to
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this position.
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You don't want to talk about stuff that isn't
related because it doesn't mean anything;
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it has no value.
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You are trying to connect your past experience
to what this company is looking for.
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So, the best way to do this is first get a
good understanding of that job description;
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what they're looking for specifically.
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Then you go through your own past experience
and you look for related accomplishments that
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they might be interested in hearing that connect
with what their needs are.
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And that way you can go in there and you can
be on the same level when you're talking to
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them.
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Make sense?
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All right.
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Number three, understand the company and the
job that you are applying to.
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Do some research on this company.
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Look them up, study them.
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And don't just look on their website.
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Google their name, see if they're mentioned
in any other magazines or write ups or articles.
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Learn as much as you can about them.
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What's important to them?
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What's their vision?
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What's their mission?
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So, you can go in there and talk to them like
you have an idea of what they're doing, what
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they're facing, what their reputation is in
the industry.
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And you should be prepared if they ask you,
“What do you know about our company?”
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And if you just say, “Well, I kind of know
that you guys are a great place to work.”
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That isn't going to cut it.
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You're going to have to give them some meat
that you understand and that you know and
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that you've read about them.
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And it would also help if you knew a little
bit about the person that you were interviewing
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with.
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Looking them up on LinkedIn.
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Read that CEO's bio.
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Read all the places that they've worked.
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That way, when you go in there, you can say,
“Well, Mr. Jones, I see that you worked
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at General Electric 15 years ago.
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How did you like that?” or “Why did you
move from there to here?”
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Little questions like that, engaging the person
that you're interviewing with is another thing
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that they're looking for.
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And you're asking them about their own personal
career choices.
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They're going to be happy to talk about that.
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People love talking about themselves and they
love it when people ask them questions about
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themselves.
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All right, moving on here.
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Number four, challenge them.
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Ask them questions that challenge them.
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Don't just sit there and answer all their
questions.
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I mean, an interview is a conversation and
you want to challenge them on things.
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You want to challenge them on the direction
that they're going or products that they have.
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Ask them about failed products that they had.
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I mean, if they're a public company, they're
probably in the news.
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So, you can ask them questions about, “Why
your stock price so low right now?” or “Do
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you think you guys are going to recover from
that?”
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Push them.
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Make them sell you on working there.
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That's really what an executive is going to
expect from you.
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You need to challenge them to a point where,
not that they're necessarily defending themselves,
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but they're kind of explaining themselves
to you.
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And at the same time, they're trying to sell
you on themselves.
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So, if you're not pushing in, challenging
them and going into some rough waters with
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them, they're just going to think you're weak
and CEOs are looking for strong minded, driven
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people.
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Number five, let them know what makes you
tick.
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What motivates you?
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What gets you out of bed in the morning?
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Let them know why you do what you do.
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Let them know that you're excited about your
work.
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And not only that, you're excited, but why
you're excited.
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Why it gets you out of bed in the morning.
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Why you are passionate about it.
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Don't just say, “I love what I do.”
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Dig deep and show them who you are, why you
are and how you've come to this point in your
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career.
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When you're really dealing with a CEO, you're
interviewing for a leadership position.
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So, you need to demonstrate to them that you're
a leader.
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Why are you a leader?
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I mean, if you're going to leave a hundred
people, what's motivating you to lead those
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hundred people?
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Those hundred people are going to look to
you for leadership.
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So, you're going to have to motivate them.
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And if you don't have anything that motivates
you or you can't express that, then you're
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not cut out for the C-Suite.
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Make sense?
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All right, moving on here to number six.
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Be a great conversationalist.
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Talk.
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Engage.
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Show them that you're interested in what they
do.
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You're interested in that individual.
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You're interested in their vision, their mission,
the people and everything about them.
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And talk to them, humanly.
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Don't just think this is an interview where
are you going to sit there and answer all
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of their questions.
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Engage them back.
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Talk to them.
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Have a meaningful conversation.
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Show them that you can carry on a conversation
with them.
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Show them that they can challenge you and
you can challenge them back.
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When you first go into the company, strike
up a conversation with the receptionist.
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Strike up a conversation with maybe the Human
Resources Director or anybody else that you
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meet along the way.
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Because all of those people are going to weigh
in on the decision to hire you.
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And if they think you're a great conversationalist
and you're interested in other people and
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you're talking, that's going to help them
gauge as to whether you're going to be a fit
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around here.
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And I can pretty much assure you that the
person who goes in there and doesn't say anything
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and just holds everything they have to say
until they get the interview, those people
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kind of come across as a little bit flat.
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And you want to show them that you are willing
and openly engaging and conversing with other
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people.
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And that's how people get to know you.
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I mean, when you start talking, all these
other people, they're like, “Oh, that Don
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guy.
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He's so nice.
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He was so pleasant.
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He was asking about me.
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He was asking about my office.”
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Whatever.
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That's how you win with CEO.
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Number seven; culture fit.
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I mean, you can have all of the experience
in the world.
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You can be the perfect match.
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You can have everything they need.
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But if you don't blend or gel with their culture,
you're out.
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And there's a reason for that.
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If you're not going to fit in with their culture,
that means that there's just one tiny piece
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about you that isn't quite right.
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That means you're not on the same page as
all of these other people.
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And chances are, if they bring you in, that
you're not going to understand the people
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that already work there and they're not going
to understand you and they're going to have
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this kind of this mismatch there of management
and employees.
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And that doesn't work.
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So, culture fit is everything; you need to
be aligned with who they are, where they're
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going.
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And you need to believe in it.
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You need to believe in their mission, their
goals, whatever they are.
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You need to be passionate about that.
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And we've already covered passion in one of
these other ones.
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And if you notice a lot of these different
steps, there's a little bit of overlap in
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each one that carries on to the next.
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Last one here I have here is number eight.
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CEOs are going to hire the least risky candidate.
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That's right; the candidate who poses the
least risk to the organization.
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Not the most qualified, not the most experienced,
the one they think they can get the job done,
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the most talented individual that they think
can do the job that also poses the least risk.
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I mean, think about it.
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If they bring you into the company and you're
not a 100 percent culture fit, other people
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who are working with you might not like to
work with you because you're not on the same
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level.
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If you're not on the same level, they might
leave.
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They may like, “Oh, my gosh.
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I don't like this new Don guy; this new vice
president.
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He's such a jerk.
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He doesn't understand us.”
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And then those people, their own high-performing
A players, end up quitting.
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So, that's why a CEO is going to hire the
least risky candidate; one that poses the
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least risk to the organization, the mission,
the vision and the people who already work
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there.
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And you need to keep that in mind; it's not
all about the experience and what you know.
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It's are you going to work out long-term?
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They don't want to hire somebody who's just
going to come in and work six months to a
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year and then is gone.
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They want someone who's going to work there
two years, three years, five years, 10 years,
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and they're going to hire the person that
poses the least risk to that position, the
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employees, the company and everything else.
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All right, my friend.
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It's all I got for you today.
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And one more thing.
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Before your next interview, you go ahead and
grab a copy, even though this is with the
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CEO.
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This little book here.
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This little top 10 book is going to teach
you how to answer some of the common questions.
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I mean, CEOs still might ask you, “So, Don,
tell me a little bit about yourself.”
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But they're not going to ask you necessarily
all of these questions.
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But learning how to answer these questions
is going to help you, in the interview, answer
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all their questions that they ask.
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It's going to kind of give you the right framework
to use in your answers.
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All right.
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So, you can get that free book from jobinterviewtools.com/top10.
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Now, if you like what we're doing here, you'll
like this video, you like this channel, please
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subscribe to my channel and like this video.
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And I'll see you in the next video.
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Bye now.
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