Connection
Your interview will take place online. Some hate it, some love it. This difference in preference tells a lot about the differences between online and in person communication. It all revolves around connection.
During on site interviews a personal connection is a given. As soon as you enter the room, all the tools evolution has equipped our species with to understand, like and trust each other kick in. Our eyes, ears, and even noses are able to detect the subtlest signals that tell us how to value the person we stumble upon. As a candidate you can play these mostly subconscious processes. You can look the panel members in the eye, you can use body language and facial expressions, you can walk around and adapt to what’s happening in the room. It makes it easier to land in the social situation.
Online interaction is stripped away from most of this. From within the Brussels’ meeting room you appear as a thumbnail during the presentation. Practically what remains of you is slides with a voice over. If you stop sharing your screen after the presentation, you might appear bigger than life, but still are devoid of your three-dimensionality and most of your body will be outside the frame.
Meanwhile, you are talking to the tiny electrical eye above your screen. You see the panel members as a U-shaped group. Telling who is who is impossible, and you cannot tell who asks the questions. Nor can you tell if they copy. And, you have no clue about the ’vibe’ in the room.
In other words: we are not built for online communication. Recognizing this fact is a first step. The next one is to create an experience that takes the pitfalls, but also the advantages into account. So, start designing for online.
In the following lessons our video coach Marjolein Stoop shares her tips and tricks for a professional performance.