Interview etiquette counts

Graduates need to know that business and interview etiquette is extremely important. It shows you know how to handle yourself in important situations. Your first interview might be the most important interview of your career…the one that gets you in the door.

Consider these points of etiquette:

  1. Always arrive early…never late
  2. Your demeanor comes under scrutiny from the beginning…the moment your walk in the door
  3. First impressions mean everything. Be courteous to the receptionists and shake hands like you mean it
  4. Smile, it shows confidence
  5. Leave your cell phone in your purse or briefcase – TURNED OFF
  6. Don’t be chewing gum, eating or carry a drink
  7. Wait for the interviewer to sit down before you do
  8. Don’t address the interviewer by his/her first name unless told to
  9. Listen to the interviewer carefully
  10. You are making a presentation, so know what you are going to say
  11. Maintain eye contact throughout the interview, sit up straight, no slouching and speak clearly
  12. When you are in your interviewer, focus 100%. Put everything else out of your mind

Remember, poor etiquette shows poor judgment

markewicken: Mark Wicken is a marketing professional with over 30 years of advertising, communications and strategic planning experience within the retail and packaged goods industries. He has been a senior member of agency management teams with both account and brand management responsibilities. His strengths have always been on innovative thinking, solid organization and strong interpersonal skills. Starting in the advertising agency industry, Mark held senior account management positions at several multinational agencies including Leo Burnett, Foster, Caledon, Vickers & Benson and Saffer Advertising, and has been responsible for the management of accounts like IBM, McDonald’s, Esso and General Motors. Mark moved from his agency roles to the Client side and held the position of Divisional Vice President of Marketing for Domino’s Pizza International and Director of Marketing for KFC, Hardee’s and Sbarro restaurants in the Middle East. In 2002 he established The Mark Wicken Group, a business specializing in executive search, training and consulting within the marketing, advertising and communications industries. In addition to executive search, Mark has devoted much of his lifetime to teaching, education and youth development. He is President of MusicFest Canada ‘The Largest Annual Music Festival in North America’ and has been an instructor at the International Academy of Design and The Toronto Film School since 1998. Mark graduated from The University of Toronto, took post-graduate studies at Northwestern University, and is married with two sons.