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First Job: Interview - Communications (1)

本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛The other day, I had to send my daughter to school. We're a little late so she was worried that her school might lock her out. I asked: when does your school lock the door? She said: the door is always locked. Then I asked: so how do students get in? She said: well, they open the door in the morning to let students in. So I asked again: so when do they lock the door? Finally she said: I don't know.

I always feel that communication skills are important, probably more important than technical skills. We grew up spending more time with books than with humans. Our parents only cared about our grades. Fighting our way into university, we neither received any education in communications, nor did we get much chance to practice. Compared to whites and Indians, we're much weaker in this area. As a result, we lose out in the competition for jobs and for advancement.

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Ironically, the most important thing in a good communicator is not his ability to talk, rather it's his ability to listen. Most of us are not good listeners. Instead of listening to what others have to say, we tend to think about what we'd say next. Instead of learning about other people's concerns, we're pre-occupied with our own concerns. So we interrupt others, we misunderstand them and we ignore their questions.

It's strange that my daughter failed to answer a simple question. My guess is that she wasn't listening. She's so worried about being locked out that she didn't realize exactly what I was asking. Instead of answering my concern - "when they'll lock the door", she simply spoke out loud her fear - "the door is locked", probably with some displeasure and exaggeration.

Last few days, I posted some opinions on Rolia about adapting your resume to job requirements. My points are simple and clear: IT skills are transferable from one product to another; it's unreasonable for employers to demand exact match of skills; most employers make such demands and it's made worse by the recruitment industry; therefore, it's reasonable for job seekers to make up experiences in their resume as long as they can back them up with skills.

A lot of people oppose my position. Some on moral grounds which I sincerely respect. Some on the grounds that fake people hurt employers and hurt the reputation of peers. This is a mild case of not listening before speaking: I advocated fake work experience, but not fake skills. The most severe case of not listening is the people who accuses me of encouraging others to stay at low levels. This accusation is so baseless that it doesn't even deserve a reply. Why do people distort the other side so much? Most likely because overwhelming emotions, such as fear, contempt, hate, etc, blinded their senses. One guy even assumed I'm a loser many times over:)

My first professional job in Canada was secured by an UNIX command. After carefully listening to the interviewers, especially the big boss, I realized they didn't care much about my strong education or my keen understanding of software design principles. The only thing they cared was if I could do it. So I climbed down from my higher ground and started to tell them what I knew and what I could do. At last, the big boss took me to an UNIX workstation and said he'd show me their product. He typed a command and we waited a few seconds. Nothing showed up on the screen. He typed the command one more time and we waited a bit longer. Still nothing. No error messages. Instead of standing there waiting, I started to think about the problem. And I asked the big boss for the keyboard. And I typed a command. And I reissued his command. And a window popped up on screen. I knew right there I got the job. And it's all because of one UNIX command.

The older I get, the more I understand that people are often different from my perceptions about them. They don't care what I think they care. They don't fear what I think they fear. They don't like what I think they like. My deepest fear is often a non-issue to an employer. My biggest pride may not be worth a dime. Yet things I think trivial might be the key to them. Therefore, the #1 thing in communications is to listen carefully. Throw away assumptions. Hold down your fear, your prejudice, and your ego. Talk less. Stop thinking about your next sentence. Stop the urge to talk at all. Just listen. Ask questions. Paraphrase. Encourage the other side to give more details. People will appreciate you more and what you finally say will be a lot more effective.

------ to be continued

(use the link to see my other articles on job search)更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
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  • 工作学习 / 事业与工作 / First Job: Interview - Communications (1)
    • 说的不错。可惜我大学毕业以来面试的次数可以用一个手掌数清楚,真是惭愧,惭愧。
      • 谢老猫。你回的真快,我连改一下都来不及。
    • 很认真地看了你一系列的文章,诚恳而有见地。不过还是要说一句,case by case. 有的老板喜欢多说的人,有的喜欢干活的人。
      • There is a big difference between "能说" and "多说". Capability is one thing, desire is another. It's always helpful to acquire the capability. On top of that, execise it with good judgement.
    • emm, this is a high quality post
    • People like wincity are a truly valuable asset of this community!
      • ...even though I would take slight exception with him on the other debate.:-)
        • You make a lot of good points too. I don't mind different opinions.
      • 他连他自己闺女都没有搞定
        • ?
          • 他家闺女都没有 listening 他
            • 闺女不听话,老爸也没法。
        • 我感觉WINCITY连基本的党,国家,政府,正义,道德这些词汇都搞不清,,,感觉很像一个义和团和红卫兵移民到了加拿大,,,而且是会说英文的红卫兵,,,
          • 你连标点符号都没搞清,还好意思教育俺。
    • 说你爱听的就是good communicator,说你不爱听的, 就是bad listener. 你一把年纪, 心智却跟teenager 没什么区别,还有这么些马甲双手互搏。你说吧你理解别人多少?你为什么不能算作loser?
      • 他比TEENAGER厉害多了,,,,他的狡辩功夫比李敖都厉害,,,呵呵
        • 和李熬比,那差太.....那个了。不过这老哥还有一杀手茧,说不过你就删你的贴。就不能干出一点事表明自己不是个loser? 至少不是个彻底没救的loser.
          • 你俩是不是认识呀。要是的话,那就算打情骂俏了(或者是互相调侃:-))。没别人什么事。要不的话,您的跟贴有点刻薄。至少人家是好意在帮忙呀。不是每个人都愿意分享经验的。您也是成功人士了。要不您来也发一个?
            • 本来是近来得空找乐子才来的。看不惯多说了几句,这坛子里屁滇屁滇的还真不少。浮燥,自我,鼠目寸光,自以为是。“成功人士”?你说笑了,这坛子的定义不适用于小我。那点小九九,拿出来分享,误导别人,倒不如不讲。
              • 浮燥,自我,鼠目寸光,自以为是, 其实谁敢说他/她在人生某个点上没有过这些毛病呢?看个乐就算了。
    • 看不懂,先支持一下
    • "make up experiences" --- Won't support it.
      • 牛哥当然不用了。俺只是写给小老百姓看的。
    • Excellent article, hoho, which could inspire many Chinese ppl, with all due respect, one fact that I can't agree is "make up experience", we should never fabricate our experience, because it is simply illegal, we can dress up our resume by
      taking the courses or obtaining the certificates, but, we should not create anything that did not happen in the past of our work experience, the bottom line is not to create the company that we did not work for, not to extend the length of service time for the specific company
      • "which I sincerely respect", but respectfully disagree.
    • Excellent! Looking forward to next one.
    • I sincerely respect you for going the extra miles to help out our fellow Chinese IT immigrants. I salute you for that. But to me, there are some principles I stick to. Integrity is one of those principles.
      Just been through a series of interviews recently, here are two examples of how I handled situations with integrity.

      One employer asked for JSF, I told him straight that I'd read about JSF and played with JSF sample applications, but never worked on a real project. HOWEVER, a big however, that I've had 10 years of JSP/Servlet and 5 years of Strusts and Spring MVC, and I'm confident I can work with JSF in your project.

      Another employer asked for Dojo, again I told him similar things that I've had extensive experience with JavaScript and two other AJAX libraries. Then, he took my line and said "I'm sure you can pick up Dojo in no time." Voila.

      If the employer you are dealing with doesn't buy in, then it's his loss, not yours. I don't wanna work for stupid employers like that anyway.
    • Good writing! Valuable opinion! Worth reading! Thank you very much for sharing.