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Dressing for interviews

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Dressing for interviews

Applicants (L-R) Sarah Connell, Miguel Alvarez, Mark Grandek, Kristina Schnetter and Siobhan Jeffs waiting for their interview at mass job interview session at Hilton Hotel in Sydney.

Picture by Getty Images Inc.
By: Kate Southam, Editor

Whether you’re going for a blue collar job or a white collar job, a creative role or a business role, there is one general rule when it comes to what to wear: dress up.

The general consensus amongst the career crowd is that dressing to impress for that first job interview not only tells the interviewer you are serious about the job but also that you’re serious about yourself.

Read the full article @ CareerOne:

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key selection criteria

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Article From: CareerOne.com.au

Applying for a job involving selection criteria is something of an art.

CareerOne Editor Kate Southam advises that there are specialist books on the subject that you can buy or ask your local library to get in for you.

The Selection Criteria Toolkit by Dawn Richards and published by Woodslane is a good example. A CareerOne contributor, Dawn’s latest book is Get that Government Job.

Amanda McCarthy of AJM Solutions is another CareerOne contributor. A few years back Amanda kindly wrote a detailed article on selection criteria that you will find below. It is very long but still relevant so take a look.

Background

In the private sector the resume is commonly used to cull and shortlist candidates for jobs. In the public sector, the most important thing is how well a candidate addresses the selection criteria.

If your written responses don’t address the requirements you may not get an interview even if you have the most dazzling resume.

It’s generally a requirement for public sector panels to use at least one “screening” and one “selection” tool to assess candidates against the selection criteria. The most common selection tools used in the public sector include the written application and the interview.

Selection criteria are standards that measure a candidate’s “abilities”, “skills” and “knowledge”. They are generally contained within the job description or may appear in the online advertisement. Both the selection criteria and job duties outline the minimum requirements necessary to do the job.

There are two types of selection criteria “essential” and “desirable”

Read the full article @ CareerOne
key selection criteria

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