How do I handle a video interview?
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Karen James Chopra, LPC, MCC, NCC, has been counseling career clients since 1999 and has helped hundreds of clients change careers, find new jobs and deal more effectively with workplace challenges.
In addition to her private practice, she has worked for two national corporate outplacement firms: Lee Hecht Harrison and Resource Careers. These are the organizations that help people who have experienced a layoff or downsizing to find new jobs, and their programs are usually considered the gold-standard of job search technique.
Ms Chopra is a regular presenter on career issues, having taught career theory at the graduate level, designed and delivered numerous workshops, and served as a regular guest commentator on WMAL’s career radio show “Your Career Life.”
She is a career-changer herself. Before entering the counseling field, she worked for nearly a decade as a trade negotiator for the United States Government, first at the Department of Commerce and then at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.
Ms. Chopra holds a number of relevant licenses and certifications: licensed professional counselor (LPC) in the District of Columbia; Master Career Counselor (MCC), a designation of the National Career Development Association (NCDA); and National Certified Counselor (NCC), a designation of the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC). She belongs to all of the relevant national and local associations involved in career counseling, including the American Counseling Association (ACA), the National Employment Counselors Association (NECA), the National Career Development Association (NCDA) and the Washington Metropolitan Area Career-Life Planning Network (MAC-LPN).
Her B.A. is from the University of Virginia, and she received a masters of science in foreign service from Georgetown University, and a masters in community counseling from George Washington University.
How do I handle a video interview?
Host: How do I handle a video interview?
Karen Chopra: Video interviews are becoming more and more common. The first thing to do is to be ready for technical glitches, because no matter how good the technology is something is always going to go wrong, there will be video but no audio, there will be audio but no video. So bring your patience along and be ready for sort of multiple fault starts.
Transcripts
Host: How do I handle a video interview?
Karen Chopra: Video interviews are becoming more and more common. The first thing to do is to be ready for technical glitches, because no matter how good the technology is something is always going to go wrong, there will be video but no audio, there will be audio but no video. So bring your patience along and be ready for sort of multiple fault starts.
The other thing is to make sure that you have lots of contact information for the person on the other end. As well as contact information for the technical people who are going to be helping you setup the video conferencing. Just in case there is any problems or confusion on the data, because that is often something that happen. Then when you sit down in front of the screen, take a deep breath and try to be as relaxed as you possibly can be. There is often sort of an awkwardness that happens when you are talking by a video and there is sometimes a little bit of a delay as the information goes back and forth.
So make sure you have a good listening face because even though they are not there in the room with you, they are going to be able to see what you are looking like as the interview is going on. So stay alert and don't take your focus off for a second. Even though the people aren't in the room with you.
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