Soft Skills for Job Interviews: Why They’re Important

Soft skills are personal attributes and behaviors that facilitate a person to relate and interact effectively and harmoniously with other people. These skills do not emanate from a particular job or profession; rather, they are universally useful in any workplace. Hard skills are discrete, teachable abilities or knowledge sets, relatively easy to measure like coding, data analysis, etc.


This content originally appeared on HackerNoon and was authored by Yan Levin

Most of the time, while preparing for job interviews, most candidates try to demonstrate their technical abilities or hard skills. Hard skills are no doubt essential, but soft skills play an equally important role and can literally make or break an opportunity. Learning and working on soft skills will not only help in acing an interview but will also lay the foundation for long-term success in any career field.

What Are Soft Skills?

Soft skills, along with being referred to as interpersonal or people skills, are personal attributes and a set of behaviors that facilitate a person to relate and interact effectively and harmoniously with other people. These skills do not emanate from a particular job or profession; rather, they are universally useful in any workplace. Some of the basic examples of soft skills include the following:

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  • Communication: the ability to clearly convey information to others and listen attentively;
  • Teamwork: the capability to work in cooperation with others for some common objective.
  • Problem-solving: ability to spot issues, and arrive at resolutions that work.
  • Time management: distribute the use of time wisely according to priorities.
  • Adaptability: be ready to change or adapt to new situations and challenges.
  • Leadership: art of guiding and encouraging others to fulfill a goal.

Why Are Soft Skills Important?

  1. Better collaboration: The modern workplace calls for collaboration on every level. Effective communication and team working skills are the doors to better collaboration, hence improved productivity, and enhanced atmosphere at the workplace.

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  2. Enhanced problem-solving: Employers are looking for candidates who can think creatively and seriously about problems at hand. With good problem-solving skills, you will take less time trying to sort the issues effectively.

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  3. Better Adaptability: The modern workplace is constantly in flux. Any employee who will be able to adapt to new technologies, processes, or roles is invaluable to any organization.

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  4. Increased Leadership Potential: To be a leader means not only managing people but also inspiring and motivating your team. Good leaders possess strong soft skills that help build trust and move their teams forward toward success.

Soft Skills vs. Hard Skills

While hard skills are discrete, teachable abilities or knowledge sets, relatively easy to measure like coding, data analysis, etc. Soft skills are more subjective and harder to quantify. Both types of skills are imperative, and it is often the soft skills that become differentiators. The reasons why this is so are expounded in the following points: Soft skills don't prove easy for one to undervalue or belittle over hard skills.

  • Interpersonal Interaction: Even the most technically skilled individual will not perform so well in a role if he/she lacks the ability to communicate or collaborate with colleagues and clients.

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  • Adaptability to Change: That's the thing: hard skills can get outdated as technology and methodologies change. Soft skills, however, stay the same no matter what.

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  • Holistic Development: The employer seeks people who have depth and have not only the technical ability to get the job done but could also enhance company culture.

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  • Ease of Teaching: Hard skills are always easier to be taught by senior colleagues, whereas soft skills—like effective communication, teamwork, and adaptability—require more of a fundamental change in behavior and mindset; hence, they are extremely hard to inculcate in a work environment. Hence, people with already high quotient soft skills have a considerable edge over others.

Developing Soft Skills

Developing soft skills takes time and conscious effort. Some of the strategies to enhance your soft skills are enumerated below:

  1. Self-Assessment and Feedback: Begin by knowing one's weaknesses, and asking peers, mentors, and supervisors about the changes they would like them to develop. Self-assessment tools and personality tests prove quite helpful in this regard.

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  2. Active Listening: Listen actively by giving full attention to the speaker, asking questions for clarification, and summarizing their points to be certain that one has understood them.

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  3. Effective Communication: Verbal and non-verbal communication is important. It encapsulates clear articulation, good body language, and active engagement in conversations.

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  4. Conflict Resolution: Learn techniques of conflict resolution to handle disagreements or misunderstandings professionally.

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  5. Time Management: Tools and techniques for managing time will consist of to-do lists, calendars, and priority frameworks.

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  6. Continuous Learning: Participate in workshops, seminars, and courses to develop soft skills. Read books and articles on leadership, communication, and personal development.

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  7. Networking: Engage in networking activities to make relations and test one's interpersonal skills in different environments. Attend meetups, join conferences, and take part in other sector-specific events that will help you introduce yourself to colleagues. These contacts will assist not only in widening the circle of professional society but will also work towards developing communication and social skills.

Conclusion

Soft skills are very vital in a job interview and for your all-round career development. Whereas hard skills show that you are competent technically, soft skills reflect one's inter-relationship abilities, flexibility to change, and leadership skills. Much of your employability and potential career growth depends on the investment you put into building your soft skills.

\ After all, it is not what you know but how you have to galvanize it within a team-oriented environment at work, where things seem to go at a blurry pace.


This content originally appeared on HackerNoon and was authored by Yan Levin


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