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#1 Posted : 26 August 2006 14:33:00(UTC)
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Posted By DebiJ
I have secures an interview for a job with a prestigious firm of electrical and mechanical engineers, and gone into panic mode! They have seen my CV, and obviously like what they see, so I must have a head start! My strengths are, Policy, procedure, implementation, audit, review, environment and generally empowering operational staff to make H&S a user friendly subject, rather than a pariah of the workplace, lol!! I am posting to ask if anyone has any tips, buzzwords or ideas that might make me less nervous if armed with them? I really want this post! Thanks guys! Debs.
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#2 Posted : 26 August 2006 14:41:00(UTC)
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Posted By KEVIN O'KANE
Debi, if you look at the statistics for interviews, the chances are that you are up against 4 others, 1 of which will not turn up, the remaining candidates might be H&S dinosaurs who think paperwork is managing safety - the complete opposite to your beliefs. Therefore my advice for what it's worth is the key to any interview is appearance and enthusiasm, enthusiasm, enthusiasm and yes I can understand that within the realms of H&S this can be difficult....!LOL....take some samples along of the work that you have previously done, comparing and contrasting the old version with your new version. You've converted the staff at your present company, so just prove to them that you want the challenge of doing this again.....

Good luck
Kevin
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#3 Posted : 26 August 2006 15:50:00(UTC)
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Posted By Anwar Afzal
Hi

There is no buzzword or magic spell, the answer is can you do the job well, do you know the right answers, can you implement your knowledge into practice and if the answer is yes without any mutters or jitters then the job is yours

Best of luck
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#4 Posted : 26 August 2006 16:30:00(UTC)
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Posted By Mat
If i was you I wouldnt bother turning up for the interview, just reading your posting you come across as a Know it all and you over sell yourself, a recipe for disaster.

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#5 Posted : 26 August 2006 16:39:00(UTC)
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Posted By Merv Newman
Ignore Mat. He must be on a bad-hair-day.

From what you say you have a good chance but there are never any gaurantees.

Remember that safety is not just getting it right but getting it even righter ! (I know that should read "better")

When people are getting it right, or even just a bit better than before - tell them about it.

Recognition, Reward, Re-inforcement.

And the Reward need only be a few pleasant words.

Have a nice interview and tell us how it goes - pass or fail

Merv
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#6 Posted : 26 August 2006 17:01:00(UTC)
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Posted By naomi
Hi
I wish you all the best in your interview, be yourself and be honest, if they ask you a question you don't know be honest and say I'm not to sure of the answer, they will respect you more for it.

As for Matt there is nothing wrong with knowing you are suitable for the job, as the last poster stated "having a bad hair day" or just sour grapes?
This forum is supposed to help people not put them down!
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#7 Posted : 26 August 2006 17:17:00(UTC)
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Posted By Amjad Ata

Debi, being shortlisted is the half way to it.

For me, they are shortlist you because you have what the want (or the base to do what they want), then you have to prove what you wrote in your CV this by accurate responding to thier questions. (Job Requirements)

"when one goes interview, his answer must not exceeds what the asked question seeks".

other related issues should be also considered (salary negotiation, presentation, other professional skills .. etc)

Good luck,

Amjad
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#8 Posted : 26 August 2006 17:44:00(UTC)
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Posted By Bill B
Ok,

As someone who has recruited people for H&S positions in various organisations for my own team over the years (inc last week!), some pointers:-

Your technical qualifications / experience will have got you on the short list, so don't be surprised if these are not mentioned in anything other than a confirmation perspective (but have the certificates with you ready to support your CV!)
Be yourself, no matter how much you want the position, you are likely to be counted / discounted simply by virtue of your personality or manner. If you are a confident person (as you seem) by nature then this should be no problem.
Look at your CV, where you claim to have a certain traits, have an example ready of when you actually did this, nothing worse than "if I were in that situation . . " comments, all they show is that you know the theory, not that you have had experience of putting it into practice
Be ready to answer the expected Qs re what are your strengths & weaknesses, again be honest, but consider this, a strength over played can become a weakness and vice verse i.e. inability to make a quick decision can be seen as taking time to weigh up the consequences, being a quick decision maker can be seen as not taking time to consider implications. You know where you are weak, so think about how to turn this around. In this example, "People often think I take too long to reach a decision, but I like to take my time to reflect on the options before proceeding"

Go in relaxed, deep breaths that sort of thing, smile a lot, throw in some anecdotes, relate tales of difficult decisions and how you faced up to them.

Good luck with it and please let us know how it goes.

Now a message for 'Mat' - I suspect you may be up against this young Lady for the same job, I hope for your sake the employing organisation doesn't look at the IOSH website or Google your name. I must admit, I do it when I'm looking for people.

Regards,

Bill
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#9 Posted : 26 August 2006 18:40:00(UTC)
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Posted By Mat
Message for bill B..... at least when i leave a response I am not afraid to do so under my full name and not an abbreviated one.
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#10 Posted : 26 August 2006 18:40:00(UTC)
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Posted By DebiJ
Thanks guys for all your feedback, you have boosted my confidence no end, and Bill, I am very grateful for your contribution as an experienced recruiter. I will let all know the result for sure. Thanks again. Debs.
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#11 Posted : 26 August 2006 22:19:00(UTC)
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Posted By Rob Yuill
Hi Debs, show passion for the job, convince them H&S is sexy and don't criticise even if their practices are outmoded and you really want to. Make 'em believe they can't survive without you!

... and the best of luck.

Rob
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#12 Posted : 27 August 2006 11:47:00(UTC)
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Posted By Charlotte Hazell
Just a little lighthearted footnote - why do you assume all your readers are 'guys'?? I don't think I have changed that much since joining the forum ... Hope you got the job.
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#13 Posted : 27 August 2006 12:36:00(UTC)
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Posted By DebiJ
Apologies if I have offended, "Guys" is a generic term that I use, as in "You guys" and I do not mean only males! Cheers, the very female Debs !
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#14 Posted : 27 August 2006 23:46:00(UTC)
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Posted By Peter Hamilton
Hi Debi.
All they know about you is your c.v. make sure you know that backwards and can back up every claim with practical examples. If they do not tell you in their opening remarks, you can always ask them why they want a H&S Manager, that has proven an useful way for me to grab some quick info in past interviews. (of course you have to think on your feet then but isnt that what being a practising H&S "guy" is a lot of the time?)
A few thoughts about possible areas for you. If they are elec/mech engineers they will be fully into primary engineering controls as their bread and butter safety stuff so unlikely that they need you for that. No doubt you will have researched their activity, work on 3rd party sites? commissioning/installation?project management/project safety reviews stuff?
Who knows, as I said at the start know your c.v. and be yourself.

Good luck
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#15 Posted : 30 August 2006 07:18:00(UTC)
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Posted By DebiJ
Had the interview! Lots of nerves, but having re-read the job description realised that I am experienced in all areas listed, so went in with my head held high! Answered all their questions, inc ISO 9000 + ISO 14001, and feel that I would really enjoy the job, so here;s hoping! Will find out next Wednesday if I've reached the next stage. Thanks for all your advice. Debs.
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#16 Posted : 30 August 2006 12:20:00(UTC)
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Posted By Dave Wilson
After the battle I know but remember most MD / CEO want to know how you can adapt and overcome a problem and take the business forward, not "well we will stop that brigade"
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#17 Posted : 30 August 2006 13:05:00(UTC)
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Posted By Merv Newman
Debs,
thanks for the feedback. Sounds good.

Merv
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#18 Posted : 10 September 2006 19:09:00(UTC)
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Posted By DebiJ
Quite update folks............got a call late Friday to say that I've made it to second stage. date TBC. Thanks for all your words of advice, will update afterwards. Debs.
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#19 Posted : 11 September 2006 15:02:00(UTC)
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Posted By Merv Newman
Debij

thanks for the update. Well done. Keep us posted

Merv
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#20 Posted : 11 September 2006 16:03:00(UTC)
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Posted By Chris Packham
Debs

Take a look at the comment I have made on the OH Coordinator thread. It might help you with the second stage, particularly since this will probably be a more in-depth interview.

Chris
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#21 Posted : 11 September 2006 16:14:00(UTC)
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Posted By James Perry
Debs,

This may be too late, but may also be useful for "second stage".

Adding to Bill's excellent advice above, I would emphasise the focus on attitude.

Employer's don't want to hear that they can't do something (just because we say its unsafe). What they really want to hear is "We can do this, we just need to do the following to make sure its safe".

As my old Safety Manager said "We're not just here to do the paperwork and say 'No' when we don't like something. We're here to get the job done and make sure everyone goes home, in the same condition that they walked through the gate this morning."

[Now I'm sure my colleagues will be horrified at the simplification of our role. But the sentiment has served me well.]

Best of luck.

Jim
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