Author Topic: Any tips on getting ready/what to do for a job interview?  (Read 1954 times)

1: Suit.
2: Don't look stupid.
3: Don't do anything stupid.
4: Speak the minimum amount possible.
5: Avoid wiseass comments.

1: Its the movie theater, not a law attorney.
2: In accordance to who? You? Just don't dress like an starfish.
3: He means to say "Don't forget your dog."
4: Makes you seem disinterested. Speak like a normal person.
5: Again, speak like a normal person.

Also, don't call back every day despite what your parents say. Businesses don't like that stuff.

Interview is in like 2 hours, any last second tips?

Interview is in like 2 hours, any last second tips?

you'll do fine :^)

Sweet, they accepted me

 Thanks guys


How long did you have to hold the hostages before he hired you


dankehttp://www.rep-am.com/news/local/doc55d2273c70778528752613.txt

What kind of job were you going to that involved going to an interview in someone's home?




( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

What job did you get?
Ticket ripper?  Cashier? what

He's the one who entertains the paying customers
« Last Edit: August 17, 2015, 07:32:37 PM by XR-7 »

What job did you get?
Ticket ripper?  Cashier? what

What kind of job were you going to that involved going to an interview in someone's home?




( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
research star
exhibitionist
What job did you get?
Ticket ripper?  Cashier? what
They never specified, I assume I'll be doing all of them, probably changing positions weekly

Also, don't call back every day despite what your parents say. Businesses don't like that stuff.
There's a fine balance because some people may find not calling back at all to be disinterest

Depends on the job though, someone hiring for a movie theater most likely doesn't have time to drag it out like that, they'll often just grab a couple interviews and make a decision within a few days. Deciding on the spot to hire the first good candidate isn't uncommon either


Also, a lot of the interview advice things you find online seem more oriented towards career positions, unskilled/part-time/minimum wage positions usually aren't like that. The interview for my first job was basically just basically just like 5 minutes getting to know me, then "ok this is the position I have, do you want it?"
« Last Edit: August 17, 2015, 07:40:31 PM by Headcrab Zombie »

I'm preparing to interview for a new job. My old one was an office job, so it wasn't that bad, but there was A LOT of down-time. There were days when I'd go in and have nothing to do all day, or days I'd go in and have too much to do and have to stay later. It all depends.

I'm preparing to interview for a new job. My old one was an office job, so it wasn't that bad, but there was A LOT of down-time. There were days when I'd go in and have nothing to do all day, or days I'd go in and have too much to do and have to stay later. It all depends.
What job are you applying for?

1: Its the movie theater, not a law attorney.
2: In accordance to who? You? Just don't dress like an starfish.
3: He means to say "Don't forget your dog."
4: Makes you seem disinterested. Speak like a normal person.
5: Again, speak like a normal person.

Also, don't call back every day despite what your parents say. Businesses don't like that stuff.

This guy gets it.

Dress and speak like a person who is ready to work. That's it. You'll either get it or you wont. There is no perfect formula.