Job-seekers: Here Are Ways to Find Your Stories

Comments (0)

Don’t know how I managed to miss this post from Shawn Callahan of Anecdote from January of this year since storytelling in the job search is my “thing.”

Shawn suggests several excellent ways to find stories you can use in your job search, especially in interviews:

  • Draw a timeline of your career with significant events and your feelings about them.
  • Recount remembered events out loud to yourself, or someone else. (I would advise framing the events as accomplishments.) If you write down the events, avoid recounting them the way you’ve written it because they will sound unnatural, Shawn says.
  • Look at random images to see if they jog your memory about other professional experiences.
  • Listen to the stories of others. “Make notes about any anecdote that springs to mind about your own experiences at work focusing on the ones that set you apart,” Shawn advises.
  • Always carry a story notebook to jot them down because memories may creep up on you by surprise, and, Shawn says, “I will guarantee you will forget it instantly if you don’t either write it down of have the opportunity to tell the story a couple of times.”

Now, for ways to polish your ability to tell these stories in interviews, Shawn advises:

  • Practicing stories, which will most likely at first sound “rambling and, quite frankly, boring.” If you tell the stories to others, you’ll learn what to edit out based on their responses — “facial expressions, comments.”
  • Be specific and avoid generalizations. … The story has to about a specific individual (you!) “trying to achieve something, ideally with some obstacle that [you] eventually overcame.”
  • Help people visualize what’s happening. “The best stories are ones that the listener can picture vividly in their mind’s eye,” Shawn says.

Shawn says to aim for about a dozen stories you can tell in interviews. Although I have found that a stockpile of as few as five stories can be adapted in response to most interview questions, I advise shooting for a goal of about 20.

Leave a comment

About
A Storied Career

A Storied Career explores intersections/synthesis among various forms of
Applied Storytelling:
  • journaling
  • blogging
  • organizational storytelling
  • storytelling for identity construction
  • storytelling in social media
  • storytelling for job search and career advancement.
  • ... and more.
A Storied Career's scope is intended to appeal to folks fascinated by all sorts of traditional and postmodern uses of storytelling. Read more ...
Subscribe to A Storied Career in a Reader
Email Icon Subscribe to A Storied Career by Email

About
Dr. Kathy Hansen

Kathy Hansen, PhD, is a leading proponent of deploying storytelling for career advancement. She is an author and instructor, in addition to being a career guru. More...

emailicon.jpeg

Email me


EBooks
Free: Storied Careers: 40+ Story Practitioners Talk about Applied Storytelling

$2.99: Tell Me MORE About Yourself: A Workbook to Develop Better Job-Search Communication through Storytelling




Storytelling
Tweets in the
Twitterverse
« »

 


 

Pages

The following are sections of A Storied Career where I maintain regularly updated running lists of various items of interest to followers of storytelling:

TwitterStoryFollowList.jpg
story_events_small.jpg
story_wisdom_small.jpg
story_writings_smaller.jpg
storytellers_small.jpg
story_practitioners_small.jpg

Links below are to Q&A interviews with story practitioners.


The pages below relate to learning from my PhD program focusing on a specific storytelling seminar in 2005. These are not updated but still may be of interest:

January 2012

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31        

Shameless Plugs and Self-Promotion

Katharine Hansen
My Teaching Portfolio

KatharineHansenPhD.com

My PhD Page

 

twit8.png
Personal Twitter Account My personal Twitter account: @kat_hansen
Tweets below are from my personal account.
« »

AStoriedCareer Twitter account My storytelling Twitter account: @AStoriedCareer

KatCareerGal Twitter account My careers Twitter account: @KatCareerGal

 

View my page on
Worldwide Story Work

 

Kathy Hansen's Facebook profile

 

 

BlogNotionBadge

 

resume-writing service

 

Quintessential Careers

 

QuintZine

 

My Books

 

Cool Folks
to Work With

Find Your Way Coaching

 

 

career advice blogs member

 

Blogcritics: news and reviews

 

Geeky Speaky: Submit Your Site!

 


Storytelling Books