SingUp Now Help Contact Home Page The One Resource for Firefighters and the Fire Service
 
Search:
  Login Login     My Profile My Profile  
Products:
Fire News Fire Products Fire Research Topics Fire-EMS Wildland Firefighting Fire Training Fire Jobs Firefighter Safety Fire Forums

Stories Get Badges



Print Talk BackRegister RSSWhat's This


Conquer Promotional Interviews
by 'Captain Bob' Smith

Stories Get Badges

By 'Captain Bob' Smith

Your success in a promotional assessment is all about presentation skills.

We encourage candidates in the assessment centers to lace their answers with personal life experiences.

A candidate's life experience stories are unique, fresh and convincing — and can make all the difference. 

Those who get positive results do so by putting simple techniques into action. They figured out how to maximize the points in their assessment centers and oral boards, and are now puffing their chests out with a new badge and taking home that raise that will go way into retirement.

They did it by lacing their answers to questions and segments of the assessment center with personal life signature stories that related to the topic to deliver the point.

Since scores are calculated in hundredths of points (82.15, 87.63, 90.87, etc), the goal is to keep building on a few hundredths of points here on this question, a few hundredths there on that answer with a signature story, and gaining a few more hundredths with their signature personalized life experience stories at the appropriate time.

The toughest thing for candidates to do in an oral is to be themselves. Your stories establish a natural bridge between you and the panel in segments of the assessment center. When you're being yourself, you become conversational because you are on your own turf. This alone can lower the stress and the butterflies. Everyone has butterflies. The trick is to get all the butterflies to fly in the same formation, which can make all the difference.

The oral interview
According to retired Hayward, Calif., Battalion Chief Dennis O'Sullivan, "The oral interview gets you the job! This is where you putt for dollars. Understand one very important thing here. If I'm on your interview panel and you're my kind of guy or gal, I will fill in some of the blanks to make up for your shortcomings. If you start off without establishing this natural bridge and being a know it all ass, I will never fill in any of your shortcomings. This is human nature."

Stories can create this natural bridge because firefighters love firefighter stories. During the interview process, the raters are often doing a lot of writing. Time after time, candidates tell me when they start telling one of their signature stories, the raters will stop writing, look up, put down their pens and are taken on a journey with the story. This adds energy and builds candidate confidence. 

Stories are more than facts. If you can recreate the excitement, emotion, the color and magic to relive the actual event, you will capture the interest and a top score on that question. A big part of getting this job is convincing the oral board that you can do the job before you get it. Stories are convincing evidence that can demonstrate your experience that you not only know the answer to a question, but you have already lived it!  

One reason stories work effectively is because they go directly to the brain and entertain. They do not require the mental processing of more formal nonfiction writing. Stories have heart and ring true.

Collect illustrative stories from your career and life experiences as you're collecting facts, quotations and other information for your signature stories.

Often you will be asked why you took the action you did. You can answer the question in a 1-2-3 approach.  First, we have an SOP covering this issue. Two, this is why the SOP was established. Three, tell a story about how you have already experience this issue and how you handled it.

Practice those stories with a tape recorder. Condense them down to a couple of minutes or less. Don't go on a journey — the oral board is not packed for the trip. You won't have time and it's not appropriate to use a signature story for every answer. Tell the story. Make the point. Move on. Once you answer an oral board with a signature story, you can marry the rest of your answer with those clone answers you have been using. Try it and see the amazing difference.

If in need of extra inspiration, our special report, "Conquer the Promotional Interview," might spark a personal experience story you can use during your next test.

Start establishing your personalized stories. When you start lacing your answers with your personalized experiences, you start to shorten that gap between you and that infamous badge.

Remember, you can't control the wind, but you can adjust your sails.

 Discuss this article at FireRescue1 Forums
To sign up for Captain Bob's free newsletter and to receive a special bonus, go to www.eatstress.com/promointro.htm. To learn more about promotional interviews, visit www.eatstress.com/promo.htm or contact Captain Bob via email at Captain.Bob.Smith@FireRescue1.com. "Captain Bob" Smith has helped countless entry level and promotional candidates obtain their badges. He's gained experience from more than 175 oral boards, is a coach, publisher, and author. The captain uses simple tools to uncomplicate the testing process. "Captain Bob" is a retired 28-year California fire captain, speaker/author of the CD/DVD programs "Conquer the Job Interview," "It's Your Turn in the Hot Seat!," and the books, "Becoming a Firefighter—The Complete Guide to Your Badge," "Fire Up Your Communication Skills," and "Eat Stress For Breakfast," which have been translated in 24 countries and regions including South Korea, Latin America and China.



Print Talk BackRegister RSSWhat's This





Back to previous page


 Most Popular
Firefighters face roadside vest regulations Fire chiefs send medal to sacked UK 'fat' firefighter Fla. firefighter union chief fails in bid for arrest Md. fire chief retires again The (not so) big bang theory: Safe and Sane fireworks
All Popular Articles


Featured Product Categories
CPR Communications Pumps Protective Eyewear Air Products
View All Categories


Today's Top Stories
undefined, July 6, 2008
Twin fires raging along California central coast Pilot program schools fire chiefs in spotting department arsonists Fire chiefs send medal to sacked UK 'fat' firefighter Ohio warehouse fire forces evacuation Fla. firefighter union chief fails in bid for arrest Md. fire chief retires again
All of Today's News
Submit News

Line-Of-Duty Deaths
Michael MacDonald - 07/01/2008 - [Missoula, Montana] Gary L. Studer - 06/30/2008 - [Whitehouse, Ohio] Jeff Powers - 06/27/2008 - [Marin, California]

Submit information on fallen firefighters in your area.

Line of Duty Deaths

FireRescue1 Exclusive
Full Story...
Firefighters face roadside vest regulations
Firefighters may have one more thing to consider when tackling car fires and other roadway incidents from next year on – the use of a safety vest.
Full Story
Past Exclusives

Featured Columnist
James Augustine
Rehab and Revitalize
Fire Rehabilitation: Who is Taking Your Pulse? Fire Rehabilitation: Fitness Matters Winter Incident Rehab and Response
All Columnists






FIRERESCUE1 TOPICS
Fire Resources | Fire News | Fire Products | FR1 Video | Fire-EMS | Fire Careers | Firefighter Safety | Wildland Firefighting | Fire Video News | Fire Grants |

FIRERESCUE1 NETWORK
FlashoverTV.com | FireGrantsHelp.com | FireRehab.com | VolunteerFD.org | EMS1.com | PPE101.com | PraetorianGroup.com | Homeland1.com |

© Copyright 2008 - FireRescue1.com. All Rights Reserved.