I wrote this out for my husband who will soon be joining me from the US. He said it was really useful so posting it here in case it helps someone else as I'm really grateful to this forum and would like to give back Practice the standard job interview and questions - this was the best one (IMO) that I found:
https://www.themuse.com/advice/how-to-answer-the-31-most-common-interview-questions - they are bulls**t but knowing the answers will help you with your confidence as well as selling yourself. Make sure you do this.
Learn how to do a concise summary of you and your work history, an elevator pitch of yourself.
Include an outside of works interests or extracurricular activities in your CV as everyone is obsessed with “culture fit” and showing you are human seems to be more important in London at the moment.
Do ALL of the above BEFORE you meet recruiters.Register and meet some recruiters but try not to do too many (although this depends on the job you are going for). Remember that Recruiters will meet anyone. They probably have new job seekers database quotas to fill, and you could just be another # to fill their quota.
Recruiters are not your friends. Treat them as a prospective employer. Ultimately they are salespeople and want to see if you are a saleable product. Be confident and don’t ever show vulnerability with them, be human but save your frustrations etc to discuss with family and friends.
Before you go to interview print off the job description, or save it on your phone and go through it and focus on any
keywords that pop out. Be sure to drop those in on your interview.
While the STAR approach can be overdone, it is worth doing this for questions like ‘what are your weaknesses?’ Remember that employers and recruiters are not mind readers and will probably only spend 2 minutes looking at your CV so be sure to get the points a cross.
Try and be positive, calm, alert and engaged in each interview (with a recruiter or employer). Sometimes this is hard after your 10th crappy interview, but drink an espresso, or take an energy supplement or jump up and down. Confidence is KEY in interviews. However, think humbly confident not Kanye West.
Always have a couple of questions to ask at end of an interview. ALWAYS. This is hard when they go over everything but even ‘What do you think the biggest challenge in this role will be?’ ‘Why do you love working here?’ ‘What are the biggest strengths someone could bring to this role?’
Jot down notes when you come out of interviews for your own memory.
Travelling around London is expensive. If you are doing a full weeks travel, use contactless as it caps out weekly as well as daily. If you are only interviewing some days a week, use your Oyster, which caps out daily. Additionally, save money and time and travel off-peak on weekdays between 09:30 and 16:00. If you can schedule your interviews to fall between these periods (allowing for travel time to get there). If you have a lot of time, take the bus as its only £1.50 with free transfer to another bus within the hour; take a book, noise-canceling headphones (trust me on this one) and water.
London to me seems to be devoid of public toilets. M&S, Heals and other big department stores are your best friend. This works even better if you are in a suit because they seem to treat you better, even if you are just waltzing in and out to use the loo. M&S café has free wifi and a good place to grab a cup of tea / kill time before interviews. If desperate McDonalds also has loos and aren’t too bad.
Eating out all the time while job hunting adds up, so don’t be afraid to grab a sandwich at Boots, Sainsburys, M&S, Tescos Express, and go sit in a park. Pret and Eat are good but add up also remember that not all of Pret/Eat etc have toilets so don’t be afraid to walk out of one and in to another to grab something to eat/drink, use the loo.
Keep an excel spreadsheet of the jobs you’ve applied for, which will help when you get a call about a job you applied for 3 weeks ago but don’t recall. Include the date, job title, company, link to job description (save a PDF of it as well as links die), when you applied. The last part is important because when you are going through job-hunting despair this will help keep it in perceptive. Additionally, keep a separate tab of job leads – these are jobs you are interviewing for – whether they are calls, CV being put forward for, etc
Interviewing is tough, so be sure to take some time to do ANYTHING else, because the constant selling yourself, scrutiny by recruiters and interviewers can hurt your confidence, which you really need. So spend some time at least once or twice a week doing something completely not job interview related that is fun and enjoyable. Volunteering is a really good way to do something that’s not focused on you. Get outside and enjoy nature – walking is really good for clearing the mind.
In order to ace interviews you really need to approach every interview as if you really want it, but the flip side of that is if you don’t get it hurts you harder. You will also need to practice patience, which is harder for some of us than others!
GOOD LUCK and you've got this!