Can I take my research material with me to an interview?

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Karen Chopra
Licensed Professional Counselor
www.ChopraCareers.com  
 

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.

Can I take my research material with me to an interview?

 

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Host: Can I take my research material with me to an interview?

Karen Chopra: You should absolutely take your research material with you to the interview. It's another way of demonstrating to the employer that you've done your research. If you have highlighted it and ask question, and pull it out in the interview and say, you know in the annual report, you highlight this new program and I would like to know more about it.

That's going to do nothing but impress them. So there is no problem with bringing the research along and unless we are talking an enormous folder full of it. But if it's just a few pieces of paper, key things that you've printed off the website. Go ahead and include that and I usually recommend that you just bring along a binder that has a place for papers on the left-hand side and a notepad and a pen and they can just flip your research next to copies of your resume in there.

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