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What should I do if I receive an interview from Shanghai Huadong Architectural Design and Research Institute and Tongji Planning Institute?

I am also an architect. I work in Tongji Design Institute and have been to modern interviews, so I can share some feelings.

1 frequently asked questions. First of all, I think it is necessary to make preparations, such as introducing myself briefly, introducing the portfolio or one of the projects. People from other places may ask you why you chose Shanghai, why you came to our hospital, or whether the hospital is doing a certain kind of project, hoping to know whether you have experience, think you are good at planning or want to draw construction drawings.

Resume, portfolio papers, etc. Bring something that you think will show your strength. The portfolio, report card and resume required by the company are essential. There are also some tips. Some of our classmates will bring their own hand-drawn drawings, while others will bring their own study notes extracted for many years. It varies from person to person, as long as you think you can show your strengths. What the unit values most is learning ability. I don't know if the landlord is a fresh graduate, but it would be much better if I had practical work experience.

3 dresses. You don't have to dress too formally. You can wear a suit, tie or business suit, but you'd better be decent and have a little taste. The designer's dress will make you feel your taste and temperament at first sight.

4 talk. The most important purpose of an interview is to know what you can't see on your resume, temperament, conversation and so on. The architect is the person in charge of each discipline internally, and will contact Party A externally in the future, so he should have good speaking habits. Since I entered the interview, it shows that the unit is very recognized by the landlord's hardware, so don't worry about being nervous. Just show your modesty and confidence in your speech.

Sharing some mixed feelings, I have a feeling of reviewing past experiences. Both of them are state-owned courtyards, and the platform projects are good. I hope everything goes well (ps personally thinks that East China Institute will be better for its own development, after all, it is biased towards architecture, and the buildings made by the Planning Institute are biased towards the general plan, so there may be less opportunities to contact the construction drawings).

I am also an architect. I work in Tongji Design Institute and have been to modern interviews, so I can share some feelings.

1 frequently asked questions. First of all, I think it is necessary to make preparations, such as introducing myself briefly, introducing the portfolio or one of the projects. People from other places may ask you why you chose Shanghai, why you came to our hospital, or whether the hospital is doing a certain kind of project, hoping to know whether you have experience, think you are good at planning or want to draw construction drawings.

Resume, portfolio papers, etc. Bring something that you think will show your strength. The portfolio, report card and resume required by the company are essential. There are also some tips. Some of our classmates will bring their own hand-drawn drawings, while others will bring their own study notes extracted for many years. It varies from person to person, as long as you think you can show your strengths. What the unit values most is learning ability. I don't know if the landlord is a fresh graduate, but it would be much better if I had practical work experience.

3 dresses. You don't have to dress too formally. You can wear a suit, tie or business suit, but you'd better be decent and have a little taste. The designer's dress will make you feel your taste and temperament at first sight.

4 talk. The most important purpose of an interview is to know what you can't see on your resume, temperament, conversation and so on. The architect is the person in charge of each discipline internally, and will contact Party A externally in the future, so he should have good speaking habits. Since I entered the interview, it shows that the unit is very recognized by the landlord's hardware, so don't worry about being nervous. Just show your modesty and confidence in your speech.

Sharing some mixed feelings, I have a feeling of reviewing past experiences. Both of them are state-owned courtyards, and the platform projects are good. I hope everything goes well (ps personally thinks that East China Institute will be better for its own development, after all, it is biased towards architecture, and the buildings made by the Planning Institute are biased towards the general plan, so there may be less opportunities to contact the construction drawings)