Renaissance GroupA Super Structures company
Getting Your First Job

Acing the Interview

Acing the Interview
pixelsandme · CC BY-SA · Openverse

Acing the Interview

Trades interviews come down to one question in the employer's mind: can I count on this person?

What employers want to see

Do this

Going Deeper (Intermediate)

A trades interview is largely a reliability and attitude test. Show up early, appropriately dressed, with a good attitude; emphasize dependability, willingness to learn, and a safety mindset; make eye contact, and ask questions about the work.

Advanced / Pro-Level

Give employers what they actually want:

Practice Challenge

In a trades interview, what do most foremen value more than impressive technical skill, and how do you show it? (Answer: reliability and attitude (showing up on time, working hard, safe, teachable) — show it with a punctual arrival, professional demeanor, concrete examples of dependability, references, and genuine interest; skill can be taught, but the foreman is betting on whether you'll show up and fit the crew.)

In Practice

Two candidates, same skills: one shows up five minutes early, clean, makes eye contact; the other is ten minutes late on their phone. The first gets hired. The interview is mostly about reliability.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Takeaway: Show up early and prepared, and prove one thing: they can count on you to show up, work hard, and stay safe.

Educational content — general guidance; confirm tax, financial, and program specifics with the appropriate professional or authority.

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