If you received a call after your job interview inviting you to come back in for a second interview, congratulations. In most cases, an invitation for a second interview means that the employer is seriously considering you for the position. That’s good news.
However, if you’re like most job seekers, you might be uncertain about what to expect. Will different topics be covered? Will you meet with different people than in the first interview? Should you prepare differently?
There’s no one answer to this because different companies and different managers do things differently. A second interview could be for any of the following reasons.
— To have you meet with additional people. These could be higher-up decision-makers, such as the boss of the person whom you’d be reporting to, potential peers or even people you’d be managing if you got the job.
— To probe more in-depth. While the first interview might have covered the basics, the second interview might be designed to probe more deeply — to ask more rigorous questions, probe more deeply into your background and past experiences and to talk more in-depth about challenging aspects of the work.
— To better assess areas where the hiring manager still has questions or concerns. If your first interview left your interviewer with some questions or worries, a second interview can be the place she’ll try to address them. For example, your interviewer might have realized that she needs a better understanding of your experience with X or your approach to Y.
— Simply to get a better sense of who you are and what you’re all about. Sometimes second interviews are intended simply to get a deeper impression of you. In these cases, the conversation might be mostly light and without the rigorous question-asking you often find in first-round interviews.
It can be hard, if not impossible, to know ahead of time which of these categories your second interview will fall into, and it may fall into more than one category. The best thing you can do is to prepare just as vigorously as you would for a first interview. Don’t make the mistake of thinking, “They’ve already asked the tough questions, so this is just to rubber stamp the decision.”
That means that in preparing for a second interview, you should take the following actions.
— Do the same sort of practice and preparation you did last time. Hopefully, that means making sure you’re very familiar with the company and the job posting, reflecting on common interview questions and how you’ll answer them and practicing your answers to particularly tricky questions, such as those about salary or why you left your last job. This might feel unnecessary. After all, you already did all this for the first round. But you want to be just as prepared and have your answers just as fresh in your head as they were last time. You don’t want to perform worse the second time around.
— Come up with new questions of your own. You probably asked some of your most basic questions in the first interview. But now you know the job and the company a bit better, and you probably have questions based on that greater knowledge. This is the time for more nuanced questions about the work, the culture and the team.
— Research anyone who you know you’re meeting with if you were given names ahead of time. This doesn’t mean compiling a detailed dossier. It just means that you want to know what their role is, how long they’ve been with the company, and in some cases, what their professional history was before this job.
— Dress as well as you did for the first interview. Sometimes people show up at an interview in a suit, see everyone else in jeans and figure they can dress down for the second interview. But in most fields, interview dress is different than what you might wear day-to-day on the job. Most fields continue to expect job candidates to show up in suits. Don’t blow the second interview by showing up looking like you didn’t take it seriously.
— Don’t be thrown off if you’re asked the same questions that you were asked last time. This might happen if you’re talking to new people, and it even might happen if you’re talking to the same person as earlier because people may have go-to questions and forget that they’ve already asked you them. Don’t sound annoyed or give an abbreviated answer on the assumption that they can get the details from someone else. And definitely don’t say, “Well, I explained that to Larry.” Answer pleasantly and thoroughly, the way you would the first time the question was asked.
— Go with the flow. This is always a helpful attitude to take with interviews, but it’s especially true with second interviews, where there are a number of directions the employer could take the conversation and no way to know in advance how it will play out.
And remember, a second interview almost certainly means that you did well enough in the first interview that the employer thinks there’s a good chance that you could be the right hire. It’s not a guarantee and you shouldn’t take it as one — but it should boost your confidence to know that you did well enough the first time around to warrant continuing the conversation.
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How to Prepare for a Second Interview originally appeared on usnews.com
