What are Your Strengths?
How to Identify Your Strengths
Original article by the authors of best-job-interview.com
"What are your strengths?" is one of the most common job interview questions and difficult to answer. Prepare before the interview by using simple guidelines to identify your strengths.
Before you can answer the job interview question "What are your strengths?" you need to understand your specific strengths.
What is a strength?
A strength can be defined as a combination of talent, behavior, skills and knowledge that you apply consistently to produce a successful result.
To identify your strengths you need to look at four criteria.
What activities make me feel involved and engaged?
Ask yourself these questions:
- When I am busy with this activity do I think about other things and when it will be over or am I totally concentrated on the task at hand?
- Do I look forward to doing this activity again?
What are my spontaneous reactions to the situation and activity?
Ask yourself:
- When do I feel a sense of "rightness" and enjoyment?
What activities give me a sense of satisfaction?
What activities consistently produce the desired results?
Ask yourself:
- Where do I perform at a high level?
- What provides a consistent pattern of successful results?
- What seems to be done well and effortlessly?
Where and when do I experience rapid learning?
Ask yourself:
- What activities and tasks have I been able to learn quickly?
- In what areas and activities have I experienced quick insight and understanding?
Use the strengths-finder list below to identify possible activities/skills/knowledge-areas/behaviors that can be translated into strengths by answering the questions above.
What are Your Strengths?
activating, adapting, administering, analyzing, arranging
budgeting, building, briefing, balancing
communicating, controlling, co-ordinating, creating, checking
deciding, detailing, developing, directing, devising
empathizing, evaluating , examining, explaining
finding, fixing, formulating, finalizing
guiding, gathering, generating
helping, handling, hosting
imagining, implementing, influencing, initiating, innovating, improving
judging
keeping
learning, listening, locating, launching
managing, mentoring, monitoring, motivating
negotiating, navigating
observing, organizing, overhauling
persuading, planning, preparing, presenting, problem-solving
questioning, qualifying
researching, resolving, reporting, recording, repairing
scheduling, selling, setting -up, supervising, simplifying, speaking
teaching, team-work, trouble-shooting, training, tracking
understanding, uniting, upgrading, updating
verbalizing, volunteering, verifying
writing, working
If it feels good when you are performing an activity the chances are that you are using a strength. Your strengths are things that come naturally and relatively easily to you.
Once you have identified your strengths it is important to understand what they mean on a practical, work-related level in order to answer the question What are Your Strengths?. Relate your strengths to the tasks and activities involved in the job you are interviewing for.
Source info: best-job.com