Why do you think so? I would personally like more people who are actively talking about their good and bad sides, although I’m not sure if I’d do that in an interview, because it might mean they don’t know what appears to be the most effective strategy.
I think, just like you have been recommended to assume the person conducting the interview is not rational, that person has as a default you are not rational. To expand: in general someone filling a job position will have many applicants. They will go through a negative search procedure: looking for ways to quickly discard applications. Since most applicants are overconfident, sounding less confident means you are perhaps less skilled than the overconfident applicants. Furthermore, employees who are confident about their deadlines (and meet them of course) are most valued. To rephrase colloquially: if you aren’t confident about your skills/accomplishments/whatever, why should the person making the hiring decision be confident in them, when they know less about you than you do?
Yes you should be as confident as possible.
In interview, you can admit that you used to have flaws, which you identified and corrected, but this is as close as you can get.
Why do you think so? I would personally like more people who are actively talking about their good and bad sides, although I’m not sure if I’d do that in an interview, because it might mean they don’t know what appears to be the most effective strategy.
I don’t know man, but that weird habit of humans drives me up a friggin wall.
I think, just like you have been recommended to assume the person conducting the interview is not rational, that person has as a default you are not rational. To expand: in general someone filling a job position will have many applicants. They will go through a negative search procedure: looking for ways to quickly discard applications. Since most applicants are overconfident, sounding less confident means you are perhaps less skilled than the overconfident applicants. Furthermore, employees who are confident about their deadlines (and meet them of course) are most valued. To rephrase colloquially: if you aren’t confident about your skills/accomplishments/whatever, why should the person making the hiring decision be confident in them, when they know less about you than you do?