A behavioral job interview is a popular interview tactic in the medical sales arena. It focuses on finding out how the candidate handled (behaved in) specific job-realted situations. In healthcare revenue, pharmaceutical sales, medical diagnostics sales, medical device sales, biotech sales, clinical laboratory sales, imaging revenue, or medical revenue, customer interaction is key—so how you handle people in a wide variety of situations, under pressure, in different circumstances, becomes a critical factor to hiring managers.
To help you, here’s a link to a movie scene that I made about how to handle behavioral interviews. Some of the main things to keep in mind are to have lots of stories ready that highlight how skilled you’re, and it’s important that you are able to quantify your examples whenever possible. (What happened when you had an unhappy customer? How did you increase sales and by how much? How did you save the company X amount of dollars?) I’ve also provided a link to How to Survive a Behavioral Interview for more tips, and a lengthy list of possible behavioral interview queries for you to think about.
Important tip: make sure you’ve a brag book and a 30/60/90-day plan ready to go. A brag book will demonstrate how you handled particular situations, since you’ll hopefully include letters or e-mails from satisfied customers or happy managers, successfully completed projects, and lists/charts of how much money you’ve saved or made for the company. A brag book covers what you’ve done in the past…a 30/60/90-day plan covers what you’ll do in the (immediate) future. It’s a list, segmented in 30-day time spans, of what you’ll do to get tutored and up-to-speed in your new company so that you can be a successful hire for Them as fast as possible. For more information, click here. For a template of exactly how to do one, click here.
Precious luck.
Article courtesy of Peggy McKee - Owner / Senior Recruiter at the nationally
recognized pharma and medical sales recruiting team of PHC Consulting.
© Copyright 2008 PHC Consulting | All rights reserved

If you are a sales professional or want to become one, or if you are looking for a new sales job, you will face one of the toughest interview processes of any job seeker.
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