A Quick Glance

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    Interview people with confidence

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    Participate in role-playing exercises to test your skills

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    Manage the recruitment process effectively

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    Know the right questions to ask

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    Understand methods for making ideal job reports

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    Controlling the talent of inquiring and investigating

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    Evaluate the legal factors that every executive should know

This Interview Skills for Managers course has been designed to support managers develop their hiring process and become self-assured at management those tough and emotionally demanding interviews like discharges and disciplinary interviews. This training course is intended for those managers who want to know how to appoint the best fit for their business. By using aptitudes tests, all skills-based hiring errors can be removed, and therefore interviews can be deliberate around hiring for cultural fit and coachability. If your delegate has the right attitude for your business and the critical skills that the role demands, then they can be coached to expand their level of knowledge and develop into an indispensable asset for your company.

Who should take this course

Executives, supervisors, managers and leads who participate in the interviewing and hiring process.

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Prerequisites

There are no prerequisites for this course

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What Will You Learn

  • Improve an interviewing plan and to start and finish an interview
  • Uncover the areas in which the interviewee needs development and has strengths
  • Shape relationship through an interview and clarify why this is significant
  • Invite aptitude through advanced job sources
  • Engage in and manage face-to-face interaction
  • Recognise the assets and boundaries of a meeting
  • Practice inquisitive and searching skills to reveal behavioural sign
  • Make real and easy interview planning stages
  • Found a choice standard for employment
  • Managing Elimination
  • Department a goal-directed interview and expose more comprehensive data about the candidate
  • Sharpening up your Interviewing way
  • Know and obey with EEO and lawful procedures and process
  • Implement consistent enrolling, communication and hiring procedures
  • Knowing Interview Dynamics
  • Taking Care of the Interviewer
  • Clarify how the competency-based interview fits into the general appointment course
  • Becoming a Covered 'Story-Teller
  • To define job needs and settings to contest your business, purpose and a detectable position
  • Understanding the Dynamics Around the Table
  • Dressing for Interview Success
  • The right queries to ask by learning how to develop effective targeted questions to identify the best-qualified applicant
  • Handling Difficult Interview Questions
  • To become accomplished at searching and obtaining more reliable evidence and fewer set responses
  • Creating the Right Chief, Additional or Third Impression
  • To improve your interviewing facilities with right practice during the platform
  • Use critical incident questioning
  • Practise using the behavioural interviewing techniques
  • Produce a person plan which matches task and culture
  • Design behavioural interviewing questions
  • Use an assessment process which provides objective, unbiased results
  • Use the competency-based approach to interviewing
  • Learn how to promote a favourable impress of yourself and your organisation
  • Follow the process of recruitment and fulfil your responsibilities
  • How to securely and correctly grip subtle areas that will keep you out of “hot water.”
  • Learning how to Tackle Interview Nerves
  • Feeling at Home in the Interviewing Arena
  • Taking Care of the Interviewer
  • Understanding Interview Dynamics
  • Getting the Most of your Interview Preparation
  • Making the Right First, Second or Third Impression
  • Getting the Most of your Interview Preparation
  • Different hiring processes with a detailed study of the behavioural way to quizzing
  • To growth your effectiveness by learning an interview classical and format to use each time you talk
  • Learning how to Tackle Interview Nerves
  • Feeling at Home in the Interviewing Arena
  • Assess applicants to make fair, valid selection decisions and objective
  • How to plan and conduct a reasonable, organised interview
  • Practice interviewing skills and receive feedback
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What's included

  Course Overview

This Interview Skills For Managers training course is essential for managers who want to know how to hire the finest candidate for their business. By using skills tests, all skills-based hiring mistakes can be eliminated, and therefore interviews can be designed around hiring for cultural fit and coachability.

Exam:

  • Exam Type: Multiple Choice Questions
  • Duration: 90 minutes
  • Pass Percentage: 45 

 

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  Course Content

1 - Planning and preparing

  • Preparing for an interview
  • Parsing a candidate’s resume
  • Identifying lead questions
  • Identifying sample point questions
  • Preparing an agenda
  • Customising an interview
  • Preparing for an interview
  • Making the office
  • Ensuring privacy
  • Defining personality styles

2 - Fundamentals of interviews

  • Importance of interviewing skills
  • Identifying types of interviews
  • Understanding pre-employment testing
  • Success factors
  • Identifying success factors
  • Setting a job
  • Analysing and establishing the culture
  • Writing success factors
  • Using the Success Factor Worksheet
  • Finalising success factors

3 - Handling and conducting

  • Handling an interview
  • Identifying types of candidates
  • Understanding the importance of silence
  • Doing an interview
  • Opening the interview
  • Gathering information
  • Closing the interview
  • Taking notes
  • Identifying Effective communication techniques

4 - Evaluating and deciding

  • Evaluating a candidate
  • Identifying types of bias
  • Evaluating a candidate
  • Making a decision
  • Ranking a candidate

5 - Following up

  • Following up after an interview
  • Finding the appropriate candidate
  • Identifying steps to follow up
  • Understanding self-evaluation

6 - EEO guidelines

  • EEO guidelines
  • Understanding EEO laws
  • Conducting pre-employment inquiries
  • Identifying general principles
  • Identifying critical EEO terms
  • Non-discriminatory interview questions
  • Identifying appropriate questions
  • Disqualifying candidates

7 - Federal laws

  • Americans with Disabilities Act
  • Understanding Americans with Disabilities Act
  • Understanding reasonable accommodation
  • Identifying key points
  • Identifying permitted and prohibited questions
  • Answering questions
  • Immigration Reform and Control Act
  • Hiring employees
  • Understanding the Form I-9

8- Preparing for the Interview

  • The interviewing panel
  • Responsibilities of before the interview
  • Responsibilities of during the interview process
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Interview Skills for Managers Enquiry

 

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Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Dublin

Dublin

Dublin is the largest city and capital of Ireland. Dublin is located in Leinster province on the east coast of Ireland at River Liffey mouth. The Urban population of the Dublin is 1,345,402. The population of Greater Dublin Area according to 2016 is 1,904,806. After the Invasion, of Normans, Kingdom of Dublin became a principal city of Ireland. Dublin expanded rapidly in the 17th century and is the second largest town in British Empire. Dublin became the capital of Irish Free State after the partition of Ireland in 1922.

City council administers Dublin. It is listed by World Cities Research Network and Globalization as a global city with a ranking of Alpha. Dublin is historic and a major centre for arts, education, industry, administration and economy.

History

During 18th century, Dublin city grew more rapidly because many districts and buildings were added. Districts added was Merrion Square, Royal Exchange and Parliament House. In 1757 beginnings of City Corporation was created. In 1759, Ireland’s famous Guinness Stout was first brewed. In 1779 Grand Canal was built and in 1786 police force was established. At the end of the century, Kilmainham Goal and O Connell Bridge was built. The population was grown to 180,000 in 1800. Overpopulation brought poverty and diseases.

In 19th-century street lighting was introduced in Dublin.  Dublin suffered economic as well as political decline. Things changed rapidly in the 20th century with 1916 Easter Rising.  Dublin was setting for many significant events during Irish struggle for independence. In mid-1990’s economic boon in Dublin brought massive expansion and development to the city. It included the creation of Dublin’s new landmarks, Spire monument on O Connell Street. Dublin is the only largest conurbation in Ireland. In Greater Dublin Area  1.2 million people live. This area population comprises 28% of country’s total population.

The boom brought many new ethnic groups in the city and created an international feel in the north inner city.

Economy

Ireland Economic Centre is Dublin. During Celtic Tiger period in 2009, Dublin was at the forefront of country’s economic expansion. Dublin is listed as the fourth richest city in the world by power and 10th richest by personal income. It is also a 13th most expensive city in the European Union and 58th expensive place to live in the world. Around 800,000 people employed in Greater Dublin Area. Out of this population, 600,000 were employed in the service sector and 200,000 in an industrial sector.

Various traditional industries in Dublin like food processing, brewing, textile manufacturing and distilling declined. In 1990’s Dublin attracted a various global information, communications and pharmaceutical technology companies. Companies like Amazon, Google, Paypal, Microsoft, Facebook, Twitter, Accenture, Yahoo!, eBay and Pfizer now have headquarters and operational bases in Dublin.  Various enterprise clusters like Silicon Docks and Digital Hub are located in this city.

After the establishment of Dublin’s International Financial Services Centre in 1987, financial services became important to Dublin. Under IFSC programme, 500 operations were approved. This centre is also host to world’s top 20 insurance companies and top 50 banks. Various international firms established their headquarters in a city like Citibank and Commerzbank. Irish Enterprise Exchange, Internet Neutral Exchange and Irish Stock Exchange are located in Dublin.

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